Abstract
Abstract Refined corn bran (RCB), a dietary fiber derived from the mechanical refining of corn hulls, effectively adsorbed various environmental mutagens. When RCB was added at a concentration of 10 mg/ml to an aqueous solution of dinitropyrene (DNP), 91.6% of the mutagenicity towards Salmonella tester strain TA98 disappeared. Under similar conditions decreases in mutagenicity of DNP using wheat bran and cellulose powder were 58.4% and 43.0%, respectively. The adsorption of DNP to the fibers appeared irreversible since little mutagenicity was recovered by washing the treated fibers with aqueous buffer solutions of various pHs. Even with an organic solvent (methanol: ammonium hydroxide 50: 1), only 2/3 of the mutagenicity of DNP was recovered. RCB could similarly adsorb mutagenic heterocyclic amines such as IQ, Trp-P-1, Trp-P-2, Glu-P-1, and Glu-P-2.
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