| Literature DB >> 7151257 |
J W Allen, R Langenbach, S Nesnow, K Sasseville, S Leavitt, J Campbell, K Brock, Y Sharief.
Abstract
In vivo and/or in vitro mammalian cell systems were used to evaluate sister chromatid exchange (SCE) induction and gene mutagenesis effects following exposure to ethyl carbamate (urethane), vinyl carbamate, ethyl N-hydroxycarbamate, and 2-hydroxyethyl carbamate. Although ethyl carbamate caused dose-dependent increases in SCE when injected into mice, it was ineffective for inducing SCE and gene mutation (6-thio-guanine resistance) in Chinese hamster V-79 cells cultured with or without the addition of S9 enzyme mix during treatment. Chemical-specific patterns of genotoxicity were evident for the known or suspect metabolites under test: only vinyl carbamate consistently (in vivo and in vitro) revealed strong activity for the genetic endpoints. SCE induction levels of 5-8 times baseline were observed after animal or cell culture exposures to vinyl carbamate. Doses required to produce this effect in V-79 cells in the presence of S9 mix were approximately 100 times lower than those needed when S9 was absent. The extensive gene mutagenesis (approaching 600 mutants/10(6) survivors) noted was completely dependent upon the presence of S9 mix. These observations are consistent with current theory holding that vinyl carbamate is a metabolic intermediate of ethyl carbamate, and is converted to the ultimately reactive species (presumably, vinyl carbamate epoxide) which is responsible for ethyl carbamate carcinogenesis.Entities:
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Year: 1982 PMID: 7151257 DOI: 10.1093/carcin/3.12.1437
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Carcinogenesis ISSN: 0143-3334 Impact factor: 4.944