| Literature DB >> 31443125 |
Ruixue Chen1, Changhui Zhou2, Yiyi Cao1,3, Jing Xi1,3, Toko Ohira2, Liang He2, Pengcheng Huang2, Xinyue You1, Weiying Liu1, Xinyu Zhang1,3, Shuangcheng Ma3,4, Tianpei Xie3,5, Yan Chang2, Yang Luan1,3.
Abstract
A newly developed in vivo Pig-a gene mutation assay displays great potential for integration into genotoxicity tests. To obtain more evidence for application of the Pig-a assay, we integrated this assay, micronucleus test in peripheral blood (MN-pb test) and bone marrow (MN-bm test), as well as a Comet assay into a transgenic RasH2 mice carcinogenicity study. Fourteen male RasH2 mice and five wild-type (WT) mice were treated with a strong mutagen aristolochic acid I at a dose of 5 mg/kg/day for 4 consecutive weeks. Mice recovered in 5 weeks. Peripheral bloods were collected for Pig-a assay, MN-pb test, and Comet assay at several time points, while bone marrow and target organs were harvested for the MN-bm test and pathological diagnosis after mice were euthanized. Finally, 13 of the 14 RasH2 mice developed squamous cell carcinomas in the forestomach, while there were no carcinomas in the WT mice. Pig-a mutant frequencies (MFs) consecutively increased throughout the study to a maximum value of approximately 63-fold more than background. These frequencies were relative to the incidence, size, and malignant degree of tumors. Micronucleated reticulocytes increased from Day 1 to Day 49, before returning to background levels. No positive responses were observed in either the MN-bm test or the Comet assay. Results suggested that, when compared with the other two tests, the Pig-a assay persistently contributed to sustaining MFs, enhanced detection sensitivity due to the accumulation of Pig-a mutations, and demonstrated better predictability for tumorigenicity. Environ. Mol. Mutagen. 61:266-275, 2020.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990Pig-a assay; RasH2 mice; aristolochic acid I; carcinogenicity; comet assay; micronucleus test
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31443125 DOI: 10.1002/em.22325
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Mol Mutagen ISSN: 0893-6692 Impact factor: 3.216