Abstract

In some cases, the Salmonella mutagenicity assay may fail to predict the carcinogenic potential of PAH (and of complex mixtures containing PAH) because of nonoptimal in vitro metabolic activation parameters. In this study, 7 petroleum-derived complex mixtures, as well as a number of individual PAH which were representative constituents of such mixtures, were tested in a Salmonella prescreen using quadrant plates with rat or hamster S9 at concentrations approximately 2–8 times those used in the standard assay. Some PAH (perylene, quinoline, benzo[ b]chrysene, phenanthrene, anthracene) were optimally activated to mutagens by S9 at 400 μl/plate. Rat S9 was similar to hamster S9 for most tested PAH, but anthracene and quinoline mutagenicity was enhanced by hamster S9. All 7 complex mixtures were more mutagenic with 200–400 μl/plate S9; rat was generally slightly more efficient than hamster. Modifying this assay to include a prescreen using a range of S9 concentrations (and perhaps from species other than rat) may improve prediction of the potential carcinogenicity of complex petroleum-derived mixtures.

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