Abstract

The formation of DNA adducts from the carcinogenic environmental pollutant benzo[ a]pyrene (BaP) was investigated in liver of English sole ( Parophrys vetulus), a fish species that exhibits a high prevalence of liver neoplasms in several polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH)-contaminated areas of Puget Sound, WA. Analysis by the 32P-postlabeling assay of hepatic DNA digests from English sole exposed parenterally to BaP showed the presence of BaP-diol epoxide (BaPDE)-DNA adducts. When English sole were injected with 2–15 mg BaP/kg body wt., one major adduct was detected and was identified as the anti-BaPDE-DNA adduct. Moreover, in English sole sampled at 1, 28 and 60 days post-exposure to 15 mg BaP/kg body wt., there was no significant change in the level of the anti-BaPDE-DNA adduct. The autoradiographs of 32P-labeled hepatic DNA digests from fish exposed to 100 mg BaP/kg body wt. showed an elongated spot suggesting the presence of more than one adduct. Chromatography on large polyethyleneimine sheets (20 × 20 cm) showed 2 spots with the same chromatographic characteristics as those of syn- and anti-BaPDE-deoxyguanosine adduct standards. Mild acid hydrolysis of hepatic DNA of English sole, exposed to 100 mg BaP/kg body wt., also revealed the presence of tetrols derived from both anti- and syn-BaPDE, thus confirming the presence of syn- and anti-BaPDE. In fish exposed to 2–100 mg BaP/kg body wt., a linear (0.996) dose response for anti-BaPDE-DNA adduct formation was observed. The results from this study offer the first direct evidence for the formation of the suspected ultimate carcinogen, BaPDE, in liver of English sole exposed to BaP in vivo and thus further support the hypothesis that exposure to PAHs is an important factor in the etiology of hepatic neoplasms in English sole from contaminated sites.

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