Suppr超能文献

1,3 - 丁二烯的遗传效应及遗传性损伤的相关风险

Genetic effects of 1,3-butadiene and associated risk for heritable damage.

作者信息

Pacchierotti F, Adler I D, Anderson D, Brinkworth M, Demopoulos N A, Lähdetie J, Osterman-Golkar S, Peltonen K, Russo A, Tates A, Waters R

机构信息

Section of Toxicology and Biomedical Sciences, ENEA, CR Casaccia, Rome, Italy.

出版信息

Mutat Res. 1998 Jan 16;397(1):93-115. doi: 10.1016/s0027-5107(97)00199-1.

Abstract

A summary of the results of the studies conducted in the EU Project "Multi-endpoint analysis of genetic damage induced by 1,3-butadiene and its major metabolites in somatic and germ cells of mice, rats and man" is presented. Results of the project are summarized on the detection of DNA and hemoglobin adducts, on the cytotoxic and clastogenic effects in somatic and germinal cells of mice and rats, on the induction of somatic mutations at the hprt locus of experimental rodents and occupationally exposed workers, on the induction of dominant lethal mutations in mice and rats, and on heritable translocations induced in mice, after exposure to butadiene (BD) or its major metabolites, butadiene monoepoxide (BMO), diepoxybutane (DEB) and butadiene diolepoxide (BDE). The primary goal of this project was to collect experimental data on the genetic effects of BD in order to estimate the germ cell genetic risk to humans of exposure to BD. To achieve this, the butadiene exposure are based on data for heritable translocations and bone marrow micronuclei induced in mice and chromosome aberrations observed in lymphocytes of exposed workers. A doubling dose for heritable translocations in human germ cells of 4900 ppm/h is estimated, which, assuming cumulative BD exposure over the sensitive period of spermatogenesis, corresponds to 5-6 weeks of continuous exposure at the workplace to 20-25 ppm. Alternatively, the rate of heritable translocation induction per ppm/h of BD exposure is estimated to be approximately 0.8 per million live born, compared to a spontaneous incidence of balanced translocations in humans of approximately 800 per million live born. These estimates have large confidence intervals and are only intended to indicate orders of magnitude of human genetic risk. These risk estimates are based on data from germ cells of BD-exposed male mice. The demonstration that clastogenic damage was induced by DEB in preovulatory oocytes at doses which were not ovotoxic implies that additional studies on the response of mammalian female germ cells to BD and its metabolites are needed. The basic assumption of the above genetic risk estimates is that experimental mouse data obtained after BD exposure can be extrapolated to humans. Several points exist in the present report and in the literature which contradict this assumption: (1) the level of BMO-hemoglobin adducts was significantly elevated in BD-exposed workers; however, it was considerably lower than would have been predicted from comparable rat and mouse exposures; (2) the concentrations of the metabolites DEB and BMO were significantly higher in mouse than in rat blood after BD exposure. Thus, while metabolism of BD is qualitatively similar in the two species, it is quantitatively different; (3) no increase of HPRT mutations was shown in 19 workers exposed on average to 1.8 ppm of BD, while in a different population of workers from a US plant exposed on average to 3.5 ppm of BD, a significant increase of HPRT variants was detected; and (4) data from cancer bioassays and cancer epidemiology suggest that rat is a more appropriate model than mouse for human cancer risk from BD exposure. However, the dominant lethal study in rats gave a negative result. At present, we do not know which BD metabolite(s) may be responsible for the genetic effects even though the bifunctional alkylating agent DEB is the most likely candidate for the induction of clastogenic events. Unfortunately, methods to measure DEB adducts in hemoglobin or DNA are only presently being developed. Despite these several uncertainties the use of the mouse genetic data is regarded as a justifiable and conservative approach to human genetic risk estimation given the considerable heterogeneity observed in the biotransformation of BD in humans.

摘要

本文介绍了欧盟项目“1,3 - 丁二烯及其主要代谢产物对小鼠、大鼠和人体细胞及生殖细胞遗传损伤的多终点分析”的研究结果总结。该项目的结果总结如下:检测DNA和血红蛋白加合物;研究小鼠和大鼠体细胞及生殖细胞中的细胞毒性和致断裂效应;检测实验啮齿动物和职业暴露工人hprt基因座处的体细胞突变;检测小鼠和大鼠中的显性致死突变;以及检测暴露于丁二烯(BD)或其主要代谢产物丁二烯单环氧化物(BMO)、1,2 - 二环氧丁烷(DEB)和丁二烯双环氧化物(BDE)后小鼠中的可遗传易位。该项目的主要目标是收集关于BD遗传效应的实验数据,以评估人类暴露于BD后生殖细胞的遗传风险。为实现这一目标,丁二烯暴露评估基于小鼠中可遗传易位和骨髓微核的数据以及暴露工人淋巴细胞中观察到的染色体畸变。估计人类生殖细胞中可遗传易位的加倍剂量为4900 ppm/h,假设在精子发生敏感期内BD累积暴露,这相当于在工作场所连续暴露5 - 6周,浓度为20 - 25 ppm。或者,估计每ppm/h的BD暴露导致可遗传易位的诱导率约为每百万活产0.8,而人类中平衡易位的自发发生率约为每百万活产800。这些估计有很大的置信区间,仅旨在表明人类遗传风险的数量级。这些风险估计基于暴露于BD的雄性小鼠生殖细胞的数据。DEB在未产生排卵毒性的剂量下诱导排卵前卵母细胞发生致断裂损伤,这表明需要对哺乳动物雌性生殖细胞对BD及其代谢产物的反应进行更多研究。上述遗传风险估计的基本假设是,BD暴露后获得的实验小鼠数据可以外推至人类。本报告及文献中有几点与该假设相矛盾:(1)暴露于BD的工人中BMO - 血红蛋白加合物水平显著升高;然而,其水平远低于根据大鼠和小鼠的类似暴露所预测的水平;(2)BD暴露后,小鼠血液中代谢产物DEB和BMO的浓度显著高于大鼠;因此,虽然BD在两种物种中的代谢在定性上相似,但在定量上不同;(3)平均暴露于1.8 ppm BD的19名工人中未显示HPRT突变增加,而在美国一家工厂平均暴露于3.5 ppm BD的另一组工人中,检测到HPRT变体显著增加;(4)癌症生物测定和癌症流行病学数据表明,对于BD暴露导致的人类癌症风险,大鼠比小鼠更合适的模型。然而,大鼠的显性致死研究结果为阴性。目前,我们尚不知道哪种BD代谢产物可能导致遗传效应,尽管双功能烷化剂DEB最有可能是诱导致断裂事件的候选物。不幸的是,目前仅在开发测量血红蛋白或DNA中DEB加合物的方法。尽管存在这些不确定性,但鉴于在人类中观察到的BD生物转化存在相当大的异质性,使用小鼠遗传数据被认为是一种合理且保守的人类遗传风险评估方法。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验