Brinkworth M H, Anderson D, Hughes J A, Jackson L I, Yu T W, Nieschlag E
Institute of Reproductive Medicine of the University, Münster, Germany.
Mutat Res. 1998 Jan 16;397(1):67-75. doi: 10.1016/s0027-5107(97)00196-6.
1,3-Butadiene is a known male mouse germ-cell mutagen, to which humans may either be occupationally or environmentally exposed. Prolonged exposure to moderate or high doses in male mice can cause dominant lethal mutations and one report has indicated that 10 week inhalation administration of low doses can result in the production of malformed foetuses. The present study had dual purposes: (a) to attempt to clarify the suspected ability of sub-chronic (6 h/day, 5 days/wk, 10 weeks) low-dose exposure to 1,3-butadiene to induce heritable mutations in mouse male germ cells: (b) investigation of the relationships between testicular DNA damage, testicular DNA repair and foetal outcome. Adult male mice were exposed to low or moderate doses of 1,3-butadiene by inhalation sub-chronically or for a single 6 h period and either used for mating (sub-chronic exposure only) or for studies of DNA damage and repair. Litter size, dominant lethality and numbers of abnormal foetuses were determined the day preceding the normal day of parturition. Testicular DNA damage and repair were assessed by the Comet assay (for DNA damage) and the unscheduled DNA synthesis assay (for DNA repair). 1,3-Butadiene caused a statistically significant increase in dominant lethality at 125 ppm but not 12.5 ppm. No significant increase in DNA repair was found with either dose level or exposure period while only 6 h exposure to 125 ppm caused a small but significant increase in DNA damage as detected by the Comet assay. These effects demonstrate the reproductive genotoxicity of (125 ppm) 1,3-butadiene but do not confirm its ability to cause abnormalities in the offspring via the sperm. It is suggested that the relationship between 1,3-butadiene-induced DNA damage, DNA repair and heritable defects in the offspring may depend on the pattern of metabolites produced.
1,3 - 丁二烯是一种已知的雄性小鼠生殖细胞诱变剂,人类可能在职业或环境中接触到它。雄性小鼠长期暴露于中等或高剂量的该物质可导致显性致死突变,并且有一份报告指出,低剂量吸入给药10周可导致胎儿畸形。本研究有两个目的:(a)试图阐明亚慢性(每天6小时,每周5天,共10周)低剂量暴露于1,3 - 丁二烯是否能诱发小鼠雄性生殖细胞的可遗传突变;(b)研究睾丸DNA损伤、睾丸DNA修复与胎儿结局之间的关系。成年雄性小鼠通过亚慢性吸入或单次6小时暴露于低或中等剂量的1,3 - 丁二烯,然后用于交配(仅亚慢性暴露组)或用于DNA损伤和修复研究。在正常分娩前一天确定窝仔数、显性致死率和异常胎儿数量。通过彗星试验(用于DNA损伤)和非程序性DNA合成试验(用于DNA修复)评估睾丸DNA损伤和修复情况。1,3 - 丁二烯在125 ppm时导致显性致死率有统计学显著增加,但在12.5 ppm时未出现。两种剂量水平或暴露时间均未发现DNA修复有显著增加,而只有暴露于125 ppm 6小时导致彗星试验检测到的DNA损伤有小幅但显著的增加。这些效应证明了(125 ppm)1,3 - 丁二烯的生殖遗传毒性,但未证实其通过精子导致后代异常的能力。有人提出,1,3 - 丁二烯诱导的DNA损伤、DNA修复与后代遗传缺陷之间的关系可能取决于所产生代谢物的模式。