Abstract

Injections of aromatic amines (β-naphthylamine, benzidine, O-dianisidine or N-2-fluorenyl acetamide), tryptophan metabolites (3-hydroxyanthranilic acid, xanthurenic acid or LD-kynurenine sulphate), oestrone, and nicotine, which are known bladder carcinogens in man and some other mammals induced sexual reproduction (encystation) in Opalina sudafricana when injected into its host Bufo regularis. This may be used as a new biological assay for screening substances which induce bladder cancer in man and some other mammals. It is speculated that the metabolites of the injected carcinogenic substances used in this work are excreted in the urine of the host, hydrolysed by the hydrolytic enzymes and become carcinogenic. These carcinogenic metabolites reach the parasites in the rectum of the toads and induce them to divide mitotically to form small forms which eventually encyst. It is speculated that the presence of cysts in the rectum of the injected toads is indicative that a carcinogenic effect took place in the parasites. Oestrone is the only carcinogenic substance which induced encystation in the opalinids in vitro. Urine of toads injected with β-naphthylamine, benzidine, O-dianisidine, N-2-fluorenyl acetamide, 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid, xanthurenic acid, DL-kynurenine sulphate, oestrone and nicotine induced cyst formation in the parasites in vitro.

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