Abstract
1. Rats were given the hepatotoxin and carcinogen cycasin by stomach tube. In one experiment, rats whose RNA had previously been labelled with [(14)C]-formate were given the acetate ester of the aglycone form of cycasin, methylazoxymethanol, by intraperitoneal injection. 2. Incorporation of (14)C from l-[U-(14)C]leucine into the proteins of some organs was measured in cycasin-treated rats. Cycasin inhibited leucine incorporation into liver proteins but not into kidney, spleen or ileum proteins. This inhibition was not evident until about 5hr. after cycasin administration, but once established it persisted for the next 20hr. 3. Methylation of nucleic acids was detected in some organs of rats treated with cycasin or methylazoxymethanol. The purine bases of RNA and DNA were isolated by acid hydrolysis followed by ion-exchange column chromatography. The resulting chromatograms showed an additional purine base that was identified as 7-methylguanine. It was shown that, in animals treated with the toxin, liver RNA was methylated to a greater extent than was either kidney or small-intestine RNA. Also, as a result of cycasin administration, liver DNA guanine was methylated to a greater extent than was RNA guanine. 4. These results are discussed in relation to comparable experiments with dimethylnitrosamine. It is suggested that cycasin and dimethylnitrosamine are metabolized to the same biochemically active compound, perhaps diazomethane, but that various tissues differ in their capacity to metabolize the two carcinogens.
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