Doolittle D J, Rahn C A, Riccio E, Passananti G T, Howard G, Vesell E S, Burger G T, Hayes A W
Cellular/Molecular Biology Division, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, NC 27102.
Food Chem Toxicol. 1990 Sep;28(9):639-46. doi: 10.1016/0278-6915(90)90172-j.
Measuring the mutagenicity of urine is widely viewed as a means of evaluating human exposure to potentially genotoxic materials. Diet and cigarette smoking have both been reported to affect the mutagenicity of human urine, but the relationship between smoking status and the expression of diet-related urinary mutagenicity is unknown. It has been reported that some promutagens are more active in in vitro assays when tested in the presence of urine from smokers than when tested in the presence of urine from non-smokers. We aimed to determine whether the differences in urinary mutagenicity between smokers and non-smokers result from increased urinary mutagenicity from dietary heterocyclic amine mutagens in smokers compared with non-smokers. Groups of smokers and non-smokers (6-12) were given identical diets, previously shown to be low in heterocyclic amines and very low in mutagenicity. The diet consisted exclusively of raw food and of food cooked in boiling water. After a 2-day dietary stabilization period, 24-hour urine samples were collected for three consecutive days. The regimen was repeated in the following week. For comparison, both groups were also placed on a "western" diet, consisting of a variety of foods prepared by several cooking methods, designed to reflect what a typical United States family might consume. Urine was concentrated using XAD-2 resin and then assayed for mutagenic activity in the Ames test. The urine of smokers was significantly more mutagenic than that of non-smokers when on both the raw/boiled and the "western" diets. These results indicate that the increased urinary mutagenicity observed in smokers compared with non-smokers is not due to enhanced mutagenicity of diet-related heterocyclic amine mutagens in the urine of smokers.
测量尿液的致突变性被广泛视为评估人类接触潜在基因毒性物质的一种方法。据报道,饮食和吸烟都会影响人类尿液的致突变性,但吸烟状况与饮食相关尿液致突变性表达之间的关系尚不清楚。据报道,一些前诱变剂在体外试验中,与在非吸烟者尿液存在下进行测试相比,在吸烟者尿液存在下进行测试时活性更高。我们旨在确定吸烟者和非吸烟者尿液致突变性的差异是否源于吸烟者尿液中饮食相关杂环胺诱变剂的致突变性增加,而与非吸烟者相比。将吸烟者和非吸烟者分组(每组6 - 12人),给予相同的饮食,之前已证明该饮食中杂环胺含量低且致突变性极低。饮食完全由生食和水煮食物组成。经过2天的饮食稳定期后,连续三天收集24小时尿液样本。下周重复该方案。为作比较,两组还采用了“西方”饮食,该饮食由多种通过几种烹饪方法制备的食物组成,旨在反映美国家庭的典型饮食。使用XAD - 2树脂浓缩尿液,然后在艾姆斯试验中测定致突变活性。在生食/水煮饮食和“西方”饮食两种情况下,吸烟者的尿液致突变性均显著高于非吸烟者。这些结果表明,与非吸烟者相比,吸烟者尿液中观察到的致突变性增加并非由于吸烟者尿液中饮食相关杂环胺诱变剂的致突变性增强。