Abstract

Genotoxic carcinogens are regulated under the policy that there is no threshold or safe dose. It has been pointed out, however, that self-defense mechanisms, such as detoxification, DNA repair, and error-free translesion synthesis, may protect chromosome DNA from genotoxic insults, thereby constituting practical threshold. In this study, we examined dose responses of chromosome aberrations induced by three oxidative genotoxins, that is, hydrogen peroxide (H2 O2 ), menadione and paraquat, with or without DNA polymerase kappa (Polκ) activities and mismatch repair capacities in human cells. Polκ is involved in translesion synthesis across DNA damage and mismatch repair is responsible for correction of base-base mismatch in DNA. Polκ activity of the cells was inactivated either by point mutations in the catalytically essential amino acids (catalytically dead or CD) or by deletion of the POLK gene (knockout or KO). In the absence of mismatch repair, frequencies of chromosome aberrations induced by H2 O2 and menadione were not significantly different among CD, KO, and the wild type (WT) cells. In the presence of mismatch repair, however, cytotoxicity and clastogenicity were enhanced and Polκ modulated the sensitivity of the cells. No-observed-genotoxic-effect-levels (NOGELs) for H2 O2 and menadione were CD = KO < WT cells. In contrast, the sensitivities of the cells to paraquat were not significantly affected by the status of mismatch repair or Polκ activity. The results suggest that mismatch repair and Polκ coordinately modulate NOGELs for the clastogenicity of H2 O2 and menadione and also that DNA lesion(s) responsible for paraquat-induced chromosome aberrations are different from those induced by H2 O2 and menadione. Environ. Mol. Mutagen. 61:193-199, 2020. © 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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