Abstract

Mustard gas (MG) is a mutagenic and carcinogenic alkylating agent, and is a known risk factor for occupational lung cancer. Our hypothesis is that lung cancers from MG workers contain mutations (G:C to A:T transitions) as the result of MG-produced DNA promutagenic adducts in the p53 tumor suppressor gene. We analyzed 12 primary lung cancers from Japanese MG factory workers and 12 lung cancers from non-exposed individuals. Genomic DNA was isolated from archival paraffin-embedded tissues. Exons 5-8 were amplified by polymerase chain reaction using p53-specific primers, and sequenced by dideoxy termination methods. Six out of 12 lung cancers from MG workers contained a total of eight somatic point mutations: two cases had double G:C to A:T transitions; one had a G:C to T:A transversion; one case had an A:T to G:C transition; and two cases had single base deletions. Four of the six mutated purines occurred on the non-transcribed, DNA-coding strand. Out of 12 unexposed cases, there were six single base mutations in six cancers, and no double mutations. The p53 mutational frequency in the MG-exposed cases is similar to the non-exposed controls and the usual smoking-related lung cancers reported previously. However, the distinctive double mutations (G:C to A:T transition) observed in two cases are unusual and may be related to MG exposure.

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