Abstract

Rat tracheal epithelial cells were cultured for 72 hr and then exposed for 3 hr to a range of test chemicals, including non-carcinogens, and direct-acting and activation-dependent carcinogens. The cells were then washed and cultured in fresh medium without the test chemicals for a further 24, 72 or 120 hr. Nuclear size measurements were then made. At 72 and 120 hr after exposure, those cultures treated with the non-carcinogens pyrene and anthracene had distributions of nuclear area similar to those of the solvent controls. All cultures treated with activation dependent carcinogens ( N-nitrosopyrrolidine, N-nitrosodimethylamine, benzo[ a]pyrene, dimethylbenz[ a]anthracene or 4-nitroquinoline- N-oxide) or direct-acting carcinogens (nitrogen mustard or methylmethanesulphonate) showed a shift in distributions to the right, indicating enlarged nuclei. These results indicate that carcinogen-induced nuclear enlargement can occur in cultures of rat primary tracheal epithelial cells, and that this may be a useful indicator system for respiratory carcinogens.

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