Abstract

In the 1970s it was shown that the monofunctional alkylating agent CB1954 (5-aziridino-2,4-dinitrobenzamide) kills the Walker rat carcinoma 256 in vivo and in vitro, but is inactive against several other tumours. In studies with bacteria, the large differences in survival in DNA-repair-proficient and deficient strains of Escherichia coli B treated with CB1954 were characteristic of a difunctional cross-linking agent. It was concluded that DNA was the only target large enough to receive significantly more than one lethal hit per molecule and that mono-alkylation alone could not account for the lethal effects of CB1954. In 1986 it was shown that CB1954 induced DNA interstrand cross-links in CB1954-sensitive cultured Walker 256 cells, but not in resistant Chinese hamster V79 cells, suggesting that the sensitivity of Walker cells results mainly from their activation of the drug to a difunctional agent by nitroreduction. To test this, we assayed the toxicity and mutagenicity of CB1954 in nitroreductase-plus and -minus strains of E. coli WP2uvrA. Agar-overlay assays showed that CB1954 was mutagenic to several strains of E. coli WP2, in a dose range 1-100 micrograms per plate, with slopes (mutants/nmol) of 7.1, 1.05 and 0.16 for WP2uvrA pKM101, WP2uvrA and WP2. Assays with nitrofurazone showed that these strains possessed nitroreductase activity. However, E. coli NFR-343, a nitrofurazone-resistant mutant of WP2uvrA which lacks nitroreductase activity was markedly less sensitive to the mutagenicity of CB1954, giving a mean slope of 0.12 compared with 1.15 for WP2uvrA. Aroclor-induced rat-liver S9 did not change these responses.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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