Abstract

Foetal mice of genotype AhbAhd (responsive to induction of metabolism of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons [PAH]) or AhdAhd (non-responsive) were exposed transplacentally on gestation day 17 to a single dose of 3-methylcholanthrene (MC, 5-175 mg/kg) with or without prior treatment on day 15 with beta-naphthoflavone (beta NF, 150 mg/kg). The mothers were themselves either induction-responsive [(C57BL/6 x DBA/2)F1] or non-responsive (DBA/2). Metabolism of [14C]MC by homogenates of livers from the transplacentally-exposed offspring was quantified at 9 months of age (first experiment) or 13 months (second experiment) with or without prior inducing treatment with MC. The foetal exposure to MC had a permanent effect on MC metabolism by the adult hepatic homogenates in both experiments. In most instances the effect was positive in direction and small in magnitude (15-30%). It was dose-dependent with regard to transplacental MC, occurred in both induced (AhbAhd) and non-induced (AhdAhd) individuals, and was significant only when the mother and/or the foetus was inducible. beta NF itself did not have a positive imprinting effect. In some cases it either reduced or potentiated the long-term imprinting effect of MC, depending on the MC dose and the phenotype of the mother. These results confirm that transplacental exposure to a carcinogenic PAH may permanently alter metabolism of the chemical in later life, and indicate that this imprinting action is dependent on induced metabolism of the chemical in the mother and/or foetus.

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