Huh N H, Satoh M S, Shiga J, Rajewsky M F, Kuroki T
Department of Cancer Cell Research, University of Tokyo, Japan.
Cancer Res. 1989 Jan 1;49(1):93-7.
The detection and quantitation of carcinogen-DNA adducts in human cells are the key parameters in the molecular dosimetry of human exposure to environmental carcinogens. For investigating the possible relevance of alkylating N-nitroso compounds as causative agents in human carcinogenesis, we have quantitated O4-ethyl-2'-deoxythymidine (O4-EtdThd) in human liver DNA obtained from 33 autopsy specimens, i.e., 13 cases with primary liver cancer (LC), 8 with cancers other than liver cancer (OC), and 12 with noncancerous diseases (NC). None of the cases analyzed had a history of known occupational exposure to ethylating agents. The detection limit for O4-EtdThd was 3 X 10(-8) as a O4-EtdThd/dThd molar ratio in DNA, which was attained by the combination of prefractionation of DNA hydrolysates (= 20 mg of DNA/sample) by high performance liquid chromatography and competitive radioimmunoassay using anti-(O4-EtdThd) monoclonal antibody ER-01. Except for one case in each group, O4-EtdThd [or, alternatively, (an) unidentified structural modification(s) of DNA recognized by monoclonal antibody ER-01] was detected at mean (+/- SD) O4-EtdThd/dThd molar ratios of 39.9 +/- 40.2 x 10(-8), 53.5 +/- 74.0 X 10(-8), and 11.7 +/- 6.5 X 10(-8), respectively, in LC, OC, and NC. The difference of the O4-EtdThd content in DNA between LC and NC, or between LC + OC and NC, was statistically significant at P less than 0.05. These results suggest that humans are exposed to ethylating agents in vivo and that a premutagenic DNA lesion (O4-EtdThd) eventually accumulates in DNA, possibly to a biologically significant extent.