Comprehensive investigation of the mutagenic potential of six pesticides classified by IARC as probably carcinogenic to humans
- PMID: 38936485
- DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2024.142700
Comprehensive investigation of the mutagenic potential of six pesticides classified by IARC as probably carcinogenic to humans
Abstract
Pesticides are significant environmental pollutants, and many of them possess mutagenic potential, which is closely linked to carcinogenesis. Here we tested the mutagenicity of all six pesticides classified probably carcinogenic (Group 2A) by the International Agency of Research on Cancer: 4,4'-DDT, captafol, dieldrin, diazinon, glyphosate and malathion. Whole genome sequencing of TK6 human lymphoblastoid cell clones following 30-day exposure at subtoxic concentrations revealed a clear mutagenic effect of treatment with captafol or malathion when added at 200 nM or 100 μM initial concentrations, respectively. Each pesticide induced a specific base substitution mutational signature: captafol increased C to A mutations primarily, while malathion induced mostly C to T mutations. 4,4'-DDT, dieldrin, diazinon and glyphosate were not mutagenic. Whereas captafol induced chromosomal instability, H2A.X phosphorylation and cell cycle arrest in G2/M phase, all indicating DNA damage, malathion did not induce DNA damage markers or cell cycle alterations despite its mutagenic effect. Hypersensitivity of REV1 and XPA mutant DT40 chicken cell lines suggests that captafol induces DNA adducts that are bypassed by translesion DNA synthesis and are targets for nucleotide excision repair. The experimentally identified mutational signatures of captafol and malathion could shed light on the mechanism of action of these compounds. The signatures are potentially suitable for detecting past exposure in tumour samples, but the reanalysis of large cancer genome databases did not reveal any evidence of captafol or malathion exposure.
Keywords: Captafol; Chemical-specific mutational signature; DDT; Glyphosate; Malathion; Whole genome sequencing.
Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.
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