DNA adducts formed by ring-oxidation of the carcinogen 2-naphthylamine with prostaglandin H synthase in vitro and in the dog urothelium in vivo

74Citations
Citations of this article
10Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

The presence of relatively high levels of prostaglandin H synthase (PHS) in the dog urinary bladder and its ability to mediate the activation of carcinogenic arylamines to DNA-bound products in vitro suggests the involvement of this enzyme in arylamine-induced bladder carcinogenesis. Since the PHS-dependent metabolism of 2-naphthylamine (2-NA) had been shown to yield both ring- and N-oxidation products in vitro, we compared the reactivity of 3H-labeled N-hydroxy-2-naphthylamine (N-OH-2-NA), 2-nitrosonaphthalene, and 2-amino-1-naphthol (2-AN) toward DNA and protein. In the PHS-incubation system, all three derivatives bound at high levels to protein, but only N-OH-2-NA and 2-AN bound appreciably to DNA. Though ring-oxidation has usually been considered a detoxification pathway, the covalent binding of [3H]2-AN to DNA was found to occur readily under aerobic conditions and was enhanced at acidic pH. At pH 5 in air, the reactivity of [3H]2-AN with nucleic acids and protein was in the order: serum albumin > tRNA > poly G > poly C > DNA > poly A > rRNA > poly U. Enzymatic hydrolysis of DNA reacted with [3H]2-AN and subsequent analysis by h.p.l.c. indicated the presence of several carcinogen-nucleoside adducts. The major product was characterized as N4-(deoxyguanosin-N2-yl)-2-amino-1,4-naphthoquinoneimine; and two minor products were tentatively identified as N4-(deoxyadenosin-N6-yl)-2-amino-1,4-naphthoquinoneimine and a deoxyguanosin-N2-yl adduct of a naphthoquinoneimine dimer. These adducts accounted for ∼60% of the total DNA binding obtained by incubation of [3H]2-NA with PHS in vitro and for ∼20% of the [3H]2-NA bound to dog urothelial DNA in vivo. The remaining adducts were identical to those previously reported as products of the reaction of N-OH-2-NA with DNA. These results suggest that a minor proportion of the DNA adducts found in vivo may be formed by PHS-activation of 2-NA in the target tissue. Furthermore, the reactivity of 2-AN with cellular nucleophiles, presumably through formation of 2-imino-1-naphthoquinone or a protonated 4-naphthocarbenium ion, indicates that ring-oxidation products of arylamines and of other carcinogenic aryl compounds should be evaluated as proximate carcinogenic metabolites. © 1985 IRL Press Limited.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Yamazoe, Y., Miller, D. W., Weis, C. C., Dooley, K. L., Zenser, T. V., Beland, F. A., & Kadlubar, F. F. (1985). DNA adducts formed by ring-oxidation of the carcinogen 2-naphthylamine with prostaglandin H synthase in vitro and in the dog urothelium in vivo. Carcinogenesis, 6(9), 1379–1387. https://doi.org/10.1093/carcin/6.9.1379

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