Tobacco smoke-associated N7-alkylguanine in DNA of larynx tissue and leucocytes

36Citations
Citations of this article
13Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

The presence of N7-alkylguanine adducts in DNA was analysed in a group of 46 patients with larynx tumours. All patients were subjected to laryngectomy and the tissues accessible for analysis by 32P-post-labelling assay were larynx tumour, larynx non-tumour and peripheral blood leucocytes. N7-Alkylguanine adducts were detected in all the studied DNA samples. The average level of N7-alkylguanines was 26.2/107 nucleotides in tumour cells, 22.7/107 in non-tumour cells and 13.1/107 in blood leucocytes. There was a significantly higher level of N7-alkylguanines in the larynx tissues in males than in females. The effect of tobacco smoking on DNA adduct levels was shown by an increase in the average levels of N7-alkylguanines in the subject groups classified according to their smoking habits. A moderate age-related increase in levels of N7-alkylguanine was demonstrated in larynx tumour tissue. The levels of N7-alkylguanine adducts in larynx cells were compared with that of aromatic DNA adducts. Pearson correlation coefficients (0.28 for tumour tissue and 0.30 for non-tumour tissue) indicate independent formation and removal of N7-alkylguanine and aromatic DNA adducts resulting from tobacco smoke exposure.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Szyfter, K., Hemminki, K., Szyfter, W., Szmeja, Z., Banaszewski, J., & Pabiszczak, M. (1996). Tobacco smoke-associated N7-alkylguanine in DNA of larynx tissue and leucocytes. Carcinogenesis, 17(3), 501–506. https://doi.org/10.1093/carcin/17.3.501

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free