Abstract

Mutagenesis by the human bladder carcinogen 4-aminobiphenyl (ABP) was studied in single-stranded DNA from a bacteriophage M13 cloning vector. In comparison to ABP lesions in double-stranded DNA, lesions in single-stranded DNA were approximately 70-fold more mutagenic and 50-fold more genotoxic. Sequencing analysis of ABP-induced mutations in the lacZ gene revealed exclusively base-pair substitutions, with over 80% of the mutations occurring at G sites; the G at position 6310 accounted for 25% of the observed mutations. Among the sequence changes at G sites, G-->T transversions predominated, followed by G-->C transversions and G-->A transitions. In order to further elucidate the mutagenic mechanism of ABP, an oligonucleotide containing the major DNA adduct, N-(deoxyguanosin-8-yl)-4-aminobiphenyl (dG(8-ABP)), was situated within the PstI site of a single-stranded M13 genome. After in vivo replication of the adduct containing ABP-modified and control (unadducted) genomes, the mutational frequency and mutational specificity of the dG(8-ABP) lesion were determined. The targeted mutational efficiency was approximately 0.01%, and the primary mutation observed was the G-->C transversion. Thus dG(8-ABP), albeit weakly mutagenic at the PstI site, can contribute to the mutational spectrum of ABP lesions.

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