Abstract

Liver microsomal enzymes are essential for the detection of benzo[ a]pyrene (B[ a]P)-mediated mutagenesis in the Salmonella/mammalian microsome mutagenicity test and, furthermore, this mutagenicity is considerably enhanced by induction of hepatic enzymes involved with drug metabolism. Although Aroclor 1254 is most commonly used for induction of S9 enzymes, DDT is also capable of this induction. This paper reports a comparison of liver S9 fraction induced by the two agents: there is a marked difference in their concentration optima for metabolism of B[ a]P; greater numbers of revertant colonies are seen with Aroclor-induced S9, which is optimal at a concentration of 10% (v/v), whereas DDT-induced S9 is optimal at 2.5% (v/v); Aroclor induces aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase (AHH), cytochrome P-450 and epoxide hydrase while DDT induces only AHH, to about half the level detected in the Aroclor-induced S9 fraction. A comparison of metabolite distribution for Aroclor- and DDT-induced hepatic microsomes reveals quantitative differences only. DDT-induced microsomes yield a greater proportion of B[ a]P-4,5-oxide and its metabolic product B[ a]P-4,5-dihydrodiol than do Aroclor-induced microsomes. Time course studies on the mutagen half-life measured on the agar plate provides good evidence that metabolities responsible for mutagenicity were different for each inducer.

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