Abstract

In order to investigate the relationship between aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase (AHH) activity and smoking or lung cancer, AHH activities in fresh lungs (normal tissue, tumorous tissue, and surrounding tissue of tumor) obtained from lung cancer patients and non-lung cancer patients were measured. There were no differences in lung AHH activity in the lung lobes. In the non-lung cancer patients, AHH activities ranged from 0.13 to 2.37 (pmol 3 hydroxybenzo[ a]pyrene/20 min/mg protein), and whereas in the normal tissues of the lung cancer patients they ranged from 0.19 to 5.05. Lung AHH activities showed normal distribution, and a large variation (26 times) was observed in normal tissues in the lung cancer patients. In most cases, AHH activities in the tumorous tissues and the surrounding tissue of the tumor were lower than those in the normal tissues of the lung cancer patients. In the non-lung cancer group, the means of AHH activity of the nonsmoker subgroup (NN) and the smoker subgroup (SN) were 0.62 and 0.96, respectively. On the other hand, in the lung cancer group the means of AHH activity of the nonsmoker subgroup (NC) and smoker subgroup (SC) were 0.85 and 1.05, respectively. Statistically significant differences were observed between NN and SN, NN and NC, and NN and SC. These results suggest that human lung AHH activity was increased by cigarette smoke as in rodent lungs, and the distribution of basal AHH activity in lung tissue of the nonsmokers group in the lung cancer patients shifted toward high levels compared to the nonsmokers group in the non-lung cancer group. The effect of the histological cell types of the lung cancer on the AHH activity was not observed in this study.

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