In this study the possible protective effects of water-soluble sulfur-free lignin biopolymer and vitamin E (alpha-tocopherol) on DNA in human VH10 cells and hamster V79 cells exposed to H2O2 and N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) were investigated. The level of DNA damage (DNA strand breaks) was measured using single-cell gel electrophoresis, i.e., comet assay. Lignin biopolymer and vitamin E exhibited a protective effect against the overall DNA damage induced after H2O2 treatment. If H2O2-treated human cells were incubated for 90 minutes to ligate frank breaks of DNA, two lesion-specific enzymes, endonuclease III and formamidopyrimidine DNA glycosylase (FPG), significantly increased the level of DNA strand breaks originating from oxidized pyrimidines and purines. Preincubation of cells with lignin or vitamin E reduced mainly the level of oxidized pyrimidines. Reduction of oxidized purines was less evident. In addition, lignin biopolymer exhibited a protective effect against MNNG-induced DNA damage, whereas vitamin E exhibited a protective effect only against H2O2-induced DNA damage. These findings suggest that the antioxidant nature of lignin biopolymer enables a reduction of the level of frank breaks and of oxidized DNA bases in H2O2-treated cells, and its adsorptive capacity enables binding of nitroso compounds and reduction of alkylation in MNNG-treated cells.
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