Abstract

The mutagenicity of the base analogue, 2-amino- N 6-hydroxyadenine (AHA), was tested in Salmonella typhimurium TA100 and TA98 and in Chinese hamster lung (CHL) cells. AHA showed very potent mutagenicity in TA100 without S9 mix, inducing 25,000 revertants/μg. The mutagenicity increased about 2-fold upon addition of S9 mix containing 10 μl S9. AHA was found to be one of the strongest mutagens for TA100. Addition of S9 mix containing 100 μl S9 induced no significant increase of revertants with AHA at amounts up to 50 ng per plate. AHA was also mutagenic for the frameshift mutant, TA98, without S9 mix, the mutagenicity for TA98 being about 1 1000 of that for TA100. When the mutagenicity of AHA was tested in CHL cells, with diphtheria toxin resistance (DT r) as a selective marker in the absence of S9 mix with a 3-h treatment of cells, DT r mutants increased dose-dependently at concentrations of 2.5–15 μg/ml. When cells were incubated with AHA for 24 h, a 200-fold increase in the number of DT r mutants was observed; the mutagenicity was 500-fold higher than that of ethyl methanesulfonate. This marked increase of mutagenicity by prolonged incubation may indicate that AHA induces mutations mainly after incorporation into DNA. The addition of a small amount of S9 increased the mutagenicity obtained with a 3-h treatment 2-fold, but a larger amount of S9 decreased the mutagenicity as was found with S. typhimurium TA100.

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