Abstract

Bloom's syndrome lymphocytes, which are characterized by a high incidence of sister chromatid exchanges (SCE: 80.6 per cell), were treated with mitromycin C (MMC) and the effect of the chemical on SCE frequency compared with that in normal cells. Raising the concentration of MMC from 1 × 10 −9 to 1 × 10 −7 g/ml led to about 10-fold increase (61.7 SCE per cell) in the SCE frequency over the base line in normal lymphocytes (6.4 SCE per cell), though chromosome aberrations remained at a relatively low frequency. MMC caused about a two-fold rise in SCE in cells of Bloom's syndrome (128.8 SCE at 10 −9 g/ml; 139.3 SCE at 10 −8 g/ml). The frequency of chromosome aberrations in Bloom's syndrome cells at concentrations of MMC of 1 × 10 −9 and 1 × 10 −8 g/ml was 0.350 and 0.825 per cell, respectively, and low when compared to the increased number of SCE. The increased frequency of SCE in normal and Bloom's syndrome cells is in contrast to the reported findings with cells from Fanconi's anemia and xeroderma MMC-treated normal cell correlates with that of spontaneous SCE in cells of Bloom's syndrome.

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