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. 1985 Aug;45(8):3497-502.

Quantitative and qualitative characterization of aflatoxin B1 adducts formed in vivo within the ribosomal RNA genes of rat liver DNA

  • PMID: 3926300

Quantitative and qualitative characterization of aflatoxin B1 adducts formed in vivo within the ribosomal RNA genes of rat liver DNA

T R Irvin et al. Cancer Res. 1985 Aug.

Abstract

We have examined the time course and patterns of covalent aflatoxin B1:DNA adducts produced within the ribosomal RNA gene sequences isolated from the liver nuclear DNA of aflatoxin B1-treated animals. Liver nuclear DNA was initially enriched in ribosomal DNA by cesium salt density centrifugation, and incubated under alkaline conditions to stabilize bound aflatoxin B1-DNA moieties. Alkali-treated DNA was hybridized to 18S and 28S rRNA, and the RNA:DNA hybrids were recovered by cesium chloride centrifugation. Ribosomal DNA sequences within nuclear DNA were found to be preferential targets for aflatoxin B1 modification. Over a 12-h period after administration of 1-mg [3H]aflatoxin B1/kg dose ribosomal DNA contained 4 to 5 times more aflatoxin B1 residues per mg DNA than did total nuclear DNA. Aflatoxin B1 residues bound to ribosomal DNA were also found to be removed more rapidly than from total nuclear DNA by a factor of 5.7 over the 12-h period postdosing. Levels of the principal aflatoxin B1 adduct, 2,3-dihydro-3-hydroxy(N7-guanyl)aflatoxin B1, as well as the stable formamidopyrimidine derivatives of the parent adduct were also determined. Nuclear DNA isolates were heated to induce depurination of the principal N7-guanine adduct, and differences in adduct levels between alkali-treated (stabilized) and depurinated DNA samples were taken as an approximation of initial levels of this aflatoxin B1:DNA moiety in ribosomal isolates. No differences in the proportions of these aflatoxin B1:DNA adduct species were found in ribosomal as compared to total nuclear DNA, and we conclude that the preferential formation and removal of aflatoxin B1:DNA moieties within ribosomal DNA is not associated with a pattern of adducts qualitatively different from that in total nuclear DNA.

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