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Comparative Study
. 1996 Jan 15;56(2):287-93.

Aromatic DNA adducts in adjacent tissues of breast cancer patients: clues to breast cancer etiology

Affiliations
  • PMID: 8542582
Comparative Study

Aromatic DNA adducts in adjacent tissues of breast cancer patients: clues to breast cancer etiology

D Li et al. Cancer Res. .

Abstract

The etiology of the majority of human breast cancers is unknown. Environmental factors have long been suspected to play a role, but no specific causative agent has been identified. If the hypothesis that environmental carcinogen exposure contributes to human breast cancer is true, carcinogen-DNA adducts would be expected to be present in human breast tissues. To address this possibility, aromatic DNA adducts were measured in 87 surgical specimens of normal human breast tissues from 87 breast cancer patients undergoing mastectomy using the nuclease P1-enhanced version of the 32P postlabeling assay. Breast tissue samples from 29 noncancer patients undergoing reduction mammoplasty served as controls. Whereas aromatic DNA adducts were detected in all tissue samples examined, the total adduct levels in cancer patients were significantly higher than that in noncancer controls [mean +/- SEM, 97.4 +/- 23.4/10(9) nucleotides (range, 3.8-1737.1) versus 18.1 +/- 11.6/10(9) nucleotides (range, 5.6-56.7), respectively; P < 0.01, t test and Mann-Whitney test]. This difference was not affected by the age distribution of the two groups. The typical smoking-related DNA adduct pattern (i.e., a diagonal radioactive zone) was observed in 29 of 87 tissues (17 of 17 current smokers, 5 of 8 former smokers, 4 of 52 nonsmokers, and 3 of 10 patients with unknown smoking status) and in 2 of 10 control tissues. It was of interest that a benzo(a)pyrene (BP)-like DNA adduct was observed in 36 normal adjacent breast tissues (41%), 27 of which were from nonsmokers. Levels of this BP-like adduct were extremely high (> 100/10(9) nucleotides) in 5 patients (4 nonsmokers and 1 smoker) and moderately high (> 10/10(9) nucleotides) in 13 other patients (8 nonsmokers and 5 smokers). One patient exhibited this adduct at a level of 1500/10(9) nucleotides, which is comparable to the highest level of total adducts reported in human tissues related to carcinogen exposure (e.g., cigarette smoking). In contrast, this adduct was absent (< 1/10(9) nucleotides) in all of the control tissues. Cochromatography and rechromatography analysis of DNA samples from human breast tissues and from MCF-7 cells treated with BP revealed that this adduct could be generated by BP exposure but is not the major BP 7,8-diol-9,10-epoxide-deoxyguanine adduct detected previously in animal tissues and human mammary epithelial cells. These findings support the hypothesis that environmental carcinogen exposure, in addition to cigarette smoking, may be associated with the etiology of human breast cancer.

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