Abstract

Juices of Brassica vegetables are mutagenic and form characteristic DNA adducts in bacteria and mammalian cells. In this study, we examined whether such adducts are also formed in vivo in animal models. Rats fed raw broccoli ad libitum in addition to normal laboratory chow for 5 weeks showed one major adduct spot and sometimes an additional minor adduct spot in liver, kidney, lung, blood and the gastrointestinal tract, as determined by 32P-postlabelling/thin-layer chromatography. Adducts with the same chromatographic properties were formed when herring sperm DNA (or dG-3’-phosphate) was incubated with 1-methoxy-3-indolylmethyl glucosinolate (phytochemical present in Brassica plants), in the presence of myrosinase (plant enzyme that hydrolyses glucosinolates to bioactive breakdown products). UPLC–MS/MS analysis corroborated this finding: 1-Methoxy-3-indolylmethyl-substituted purine nucleosides were detected in the hepatic DNA of broccoli-fed animals, but not in control animals. Feeding raw cauliflower led to the formation of the same adducts. When steamed rather than raw broccoli was used, the adduct levels were essentially unchanged in liver and jejunum, but elevated in large intestine. Due to inactivation of myrosinase by the steaming, higher levels of the glucosinolates may have reached the large bowl to be activated by glucosidases from intestinal bacteria. In conclusion, the consumption of common Brassica vegetables can lead to the formation of substantial levels of DNA adducts in animal models. The adducts can be attributed to a specific phytochemical, neoglucobrassicin (1-methoxy-3-indolylmethyl glucosinolate).

Highlights

  • Juices of various Brassica vegetables have shown mutagenic activity in bacteria and mammalian cells in culture (Kassie et al 1996; Baasanjav-Gerber et al 2010; Wiesner et al 2014)

  • 32P-postlabelling analyses demonstrated the presence of one or two DNA adduct spots in 11 out of 13 tissues isolated from rats fed raw broccoli in experiment I

  • We demonstrated that feeding raw and steamed Brassica vegetable to rats leads to the formation of characteristic DNA adducts that are absent in control rats

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Summary

Introduction

Juices of various Brassica vegetables have shown mutagenic activity in bacteria and mammalian cells in culture (Kassie et al 1996; Baasanjav-Gerber et al 2010; Wiesner et al 2014) This mutagenicity was associated with the formation of characteristic DNA adducts in the target cells (BaasanjavGerber et al 2010). Archives of Toxicology various genotoxic effects are mediated by breakdown products of glucosinolates (GLs) (Baasanjav-Gerber et al 2011a, b; Wiesner et al 2014). These findings raised the question whether GLs may form DNA adducts in vivo after the consumption of brassicaceous crops. We fed broccoli and cauliflower to rats and analysed various rat tissues for GL-derived DNA adducts

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