Abstract

The possible roles of cytochrome P450 (P450) enzymes in the metabolic activation of N-nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA) and N-nitrosodiethylamine (NDEA) by rat liver microsomes have been examined in a system containing the bacterial tester strain Salmonella typhimurium NM2009, a newly developed strain showing high O-acetyltransfer activities. The DNA-damaging activity could be determined by measuring expression of the umu gene in a plasmid containing the fused umuC-lacZ gene construct in the bacteria. The following lines of evidence support the view that both NDMA and NDEA are principally oxidized to reactive products by P450 2E1 in rat liver microsomes. First, NDMA and NDEA were activated by rat liver microsomes in a protein- and substrate-dependent manner and the former chemical was more active than the latter; both activities were induced in rats treated with P450 2E1 inducers such as ethanol, acetone and isoniazid and by starvation. Second, activation of NDMA and NDEA were both inhibited significantly by antibodies raised against rat P450 2E1 and by P450 2E1 inhibitors such as diethyldithiocarbamate and 4-methylpyrazole in rat liver microsomes. Finally, in reconstituted monooxygenase systems containing purified rat P450 enzymes, P450 2E1 gave the highest rates of the activation of both NDMA and NDEA; the addition of rabbit cytochrome b5 to the system caused about a 1.5-fold increase in both reactions. In separate experiments we also found that N-nitrosomethylacethoxymethylamine, a compound that reacts with DNA after ester cleavage, is more genotoxic in S.typhimurium NM2009 than in S.typhimurium NM2000, a strain that is defective in O-acetyltransferase activity. Part of the pathway involved in the activation of nitrosamines is suggested to be acetylation of alkyldiazohydroxides formed by P450 or acetylesterase, because the genotoxic activity of N-nitrosomethylacethoxymethylamine in S.typhimurium NM2009 could be inhibited by the O-acetyltransferase inhibitor pentachlorophenol. These results indicate that NDMA and NDEA are oxidized to gentoxoic products by rat liver microsomes and that a P450 2E1 enzyme plays a major role in the activation of these two potent carcinogens. The activation pathway of N-nitrosodialkylamines through acetylation by O-acetyltransferase has been proposed. This simple bacterial system for measuring genotoxicity should facilitate studies on the activation of N-nitroso alkylamines.

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