Turteltaub K W, Felton J S, Gledhill B L, Vogel J S, Southon J R, Caffee M W, Finkel R C, Nelson D E, Proctor I D, Davis J C
Biomedical Sciences Division, University of California, Livermore 94550.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1990 Jul;87(14):5288-92. doi: 10.1073/pnas.87.14.5288.
Accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) is used to determine the amount of carcinogen covalently bound to mouse liver DNA (DNA adduct) following very low-level exposure to a 14C-labeled carcinogen. AMS is a highly sensitive method for counting long-lived but rare cosmogenic isotopes. While AMS is a tool of importance in the earth sciences, it has not been applied in biomedical research. The ability of AMS to assay rare isotope concentrations (10Be, 14C, 26Al, 41Ca, and 129I) in microgram amounts suggests that extension to the biomedical sciences is a natural and potentially powerful application of the technology. In this study, the relationship between exposure to low levels of 2-amino-3,8-dimethyl[2-14C]imidazo[4,5-f]quinoxaline and formation of DNA adducts is examined to establish the dynamic range of the technique and the potential sensitivity for biological measurements, as well as to evaluate the relationship between DNA adducts and low-dose carcinogen exposure. Instrument reproducibility in this study is 2%; sensitivity is 1 adduct per 10(11) nucleotides. Formation of adducts is linearly dependent on dose down to an exposure of 500 ng per kg of body weight. With the present measurements, we demonstrate at least 1 order of magnitude improvement over the best adduct detection sensitivity reported to date and 3-5 orders of magnitude improvement over other methods used for adduct measurement. An additional improvement of 2 orders of magnitude in sensitivity is suggested by preliminary experiments to develop bacterial hosts depleted in radiocarbon. Expanded applications involving human subjects, including clinical applications, are now expected because of the great detection sensitivity and small sample size requirements of AMS.
加速器质谱法(AMS)用于测定在极低水平暴露于14C标记致癌物后与小鼠肝脏DNA共价结合的致癌物(DNA加合物)的量。AMS是一种用于计数长寿命但罕见的宇宙成因同位素的高灵敏度方法。虽然AMS在地球科学中是一种重要工具,但尚未应用于生物医学研究。AMS能够以微克量测定稀有同位素浓度(10Be、14C、26Al、41Ca和129I),这表明将其扩展到生物医学科学是该技术自然且潜在强大的应用。在本研究中,研究了低水平暴露于2-氨基-3,8-二甲基[2-14C]咪唑并[4,5-f]喹喔啉与DNA加合物形成之间的关系,以确定该技术的动态范围和生物测量的潜在灵敏度,以及评估DNA加合物与低剂量致癌物暴露之间的关系。本研究中的仪器重现性为2%;灵敏度为每10(11)个核苷酸1个加合物。加合物的形成与剂量呈线性相关,直至暴露量低至每千克体重500 ng。通过目前的测量,我们证明比迄今报道的最佳加合物检测灵敏度至少提高了1个数量级,比用于加合物测量的其他方法提高了3-5个数量级。开发贫碳细菌宿主的初步实验表明灵敏度还可再提高2个数量级。由于AMS具有极高的检测灵敏度和对小样本量的要求,预计涉及人类受试者的扩展应用,包括临床应用,将会出现。