scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular dosimetry of the food-borne carcinogen MeIQx using adducts of serum albumin.

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
Despite an increase in sensitivity, compared with haemoglobin, it is unlikely that the sulphinamide adduct of MeIQx with human serum albumin can be used as a dosimeter for human aminoimidazoazaarene exposure.
Abstract
Incubation of mouse serum albumin with the food borne carcinogen [2-14C]-Amino-3,8,-dimethylimidazo[4,5-f]quinoxaline (14C-MeIQx) in the presence of mouse hepatic microsomes and an NADPH-regenerating system in vitro resulted in the formation of adducts of MeIQx with albumin, which increased proportionately with time for at least 120 min (approximately 1 pmol equivalents/mg of protein/min). We have previously shown in male Swiss Webster mice in vivo that 14C-MeIQx bound covalently to serum proteins and that the formation of adducts was dose dependent. 14C-MeIQx (100 mg/kg, i.p.) was administered to male (MF1) mice which were killed 24 h later. Serum albumin was purified by affinity chromatography and covalent binding of 14C-MeIQx was assessed. Total covalent binding of MeIQx to albumin was 14.0 +/- 5.2 pmol per mg albumin, which was 5-fold greater than to haemoglobin. Following mild acid hydrolysis, 1.25 pmol MeIQx per mg albumin was liberated as free amine, as determined by gas chromatography negative ion mass spectrometry (GC-MS). This represents 9% of total MeIQx adducted to albumin in vivo (cf 1.3% adducted to haemoglobin). These results suggested that adducts of MeIQx with serum albumin should provide a significantly more sensitive dosimeter than those with haemoglobin. We therefore investigated this approach with serum protein samples from three volunteers. Human serum albumin and non-serum albumin protein fractions were separated by affinity chromatography, before being subjected to GC-MS analysis for hydrolysable adducts of MeIQx. The levels of MeIQx in control samples, and from the release of the putative sulphinamide adducts in hydrolysed samples were below the limits of detection of the GC-MS assay (29 +/- 2.6 amol MeIQx/mg albumin). Despite an increase of 2 orders of magnitude in sensitivity, compared with haemoglobin, it is unlikely that the sulphinamide adduct of MeIQx with human serum albumin can be used as a dosimeter for human aminoimidazoazaarene exposure.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Metabolism and biomarkers of heterocyclic aromatic amines in molecular epidemiology studies: lessons learned from aromatic amines.

TL;DR: There is a critical need to establish long-term biomarkers of HAAs that can be implemented in molecular epidemiology studies, and the biochemistry of several prototypical carcinogenic aromatic amines and HAAs to which humans are chronically exposed is highlighted.
Journal ArticleDOI

Heterocyclic Aromatic Amines in Cooked Meat Products: Causes, Formation, Occurrence, and Risk Assessment

TL;DR: E Epidemiological results and human daily intake of HAAs obtained from questionnaires show a relationship between the preference for very well-done meat products with increased HAA levels and an enhanced risk of the incidence of cancer, besides other carcinogens in the diet.
Journal ArticleDOI

Toward an "omic" physiopathology of reactive chemicals: thirty years of mass spectrometric study of the protein adducts with endogenous and xenobiotic compounds.

TL;DR: It is foreseen that a holistic description of cellular functions will take advantage of new analytical methods based on time-integrated metabolomic measurements of a new biological compartment, the "adductome," aimed at better understanding integrated organism response to environmental and endogenous stressors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Heterocyclic aromatic amines in human urine following a fried meat meal

TL;DR: A method for the determination of HAAs was developed and 4'-Hydroxy-PhIP ¿2-amino-1-methyl-6-(4-hydroxyphenyl)imidazo[4,5-beta]pyridine¿ (4'-OH-Ph IP) was indeed found in meat as well as in urine, and there were rather large inter-individual variations in the amounts of excreted HAAs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biomarkers of exposure to heterocyclic amines: approaches to improve the exposure assessment

TL;DR: The use of PhIP in hair as a biomarker of exposure is promising, but needs validation, using other methods of exposure assessment.
Related Papers (5)