Abstract

Reactions of the benzo[a]pyrene (BP) and benz[a]anthracene (BA) metabolites, (+/-)-trans-7 8-dihydroxy-anti-9, 10-epoxy-7, 8, 9, 10-tetrahydro-BP (BPDE), (+/-)-trans-3, 4-dihydroxy-anti- 1,2-epoxy-1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-BA (BADE), (+/-)-BP-4,5-oxide (BPO), and (+/-)-BA-5, 6-oxide (BAO), were examined under pseudo-first-order conditions at varying Na+ (2.0-100 Mm) and native calf thymus DNA (ctDNA) concentrations. In 0.2 mM ctDNA and 2.0 mM Na+, at a pH of 7.3 most BPDE, BADE, BPO, and BAO (87-95%) undergo DNA catalyzed hydrolysis or rearrangement. For BPDE and BPO, overall, pseudo-first-order rate constants, k, in 2.0 mM Na+ and 0.2 mM ctDNA are 21-72 times larger than values obtained without DNA. For BADE and BAO, the rate constants are less strongly influenced by DNA; k values in 0.2 mM ctDNA are only 9-12 times larger than values obtained without DNA. Kinetic data for BPDE, BPO, BADE, and BAO and DNA intercalation association constants (KA) for BP and BA diols which are model compounds indicate that KA values for BPDE and BPO in 2.0 mM Na+ are 6.6-59 times larger than those of BADE and BAO. The greater DNA enhancement of rate constants for BPDE and BPO, versus BADE and BAO, correlates with the larger KA values of the BP metabolites. DNA adducts, which account for less than 10% of the yields, also form. For BPDE in 0.20 mM ctDNA, k decreases 5.1 times as the Na+ concentration increases from 2.0 to 100 mM. Nevertheless, the DNA adduct level remains constant over the range of Na+ concentrations examined. These results provide evidence that, for BPDE in 0.20 mM DNA and 2.0 mM Na+, ctDNA adduct formation follows a mechanism which is similar to that for DNA catalyzed hydrolysis. The pseudo-first-order rate constant for adduct formation, kAd, given approximately by kAd approximately equal to (kcat,AdKA[DNA])/(1 + KA[DNA]), where kcat,Ad is a catalytic rate constant. for BADE, BPO, and BAO, the influence of varying DNA and Na+ concentrations on k values is similar to that for BPDE, and provides evidence that the formation of adducts follows the same rate law.

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