Analysis of DNA and hemoglobin adducts and sister chromatid exchanges in a human population occupationally exposed to propylene oxide: A pilot study

Czene, K; Osterman-Golkar, S; Yun, X; Li, G; Zhao, F; Pérez, HL; Li, M; Natarajan, AT; Segerbäck, D

HERO ID

3794415

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2002

Language

English

PMID

11895884

HERO ID 3794415
In Press No
Year 2002
Title Analysis of DNA and hemoglobin adducts and sister chromatid exchanges in a human population occupationally exposed to propylene oxide: A pilot study
Authors Czene, K; Osterman-Golkar, S; Yun, X; Li, G; Zhao, F; Pérez, HL; Li, M; Natarajan, AT; Segerbäck, D
Journal Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers and Prevention
Volume 11
Issue 3
Page Numbers 315-318
Abstract Propylene oxide (PO), a simple alkylating agent used in the chemical industry, is weakly genotoxic and induces nasal cavity tumors in rodents on inhalation at high air concentrations. DNA adducts, hemoglobin adducts, and sister chromatid exchanges (SCE) were analyzed as biomarkers of exposure in a group of eight PO-exposed workers and eight nonexposed subjects. 1-2-Hydroxypropyladenine (1-HP-adenine) in DNA of WBCs was analyzed using a hypersensitive (32)P-postlabeling assay. HP-valine in hemoglobin was measured using gas chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry. Air measurements indicated PO levels in the range of 1-7 ppm. All three biomarkers showed significantly increased levels in the exposed workers. 1-HP-adenine was recorded in seven of the exposed workers (mean 0.66 mol/10(9) mol nucleotides) but was not detected in any of the control subjects. HP-valine was found in all subjects (means of 2.7 and 0.006 pmol/mg globin in exposed workers and controls, respectively). The average frequencies of SCE were 3.7/cell in exposed workers and 2.0/cell in controls, respectively. DNA and hemoglobin adducts were correlated (r = 0.887), as well as DNA adducts and SCE (r = 0.792) and hemoglobin adducts and SCE (r = 0.762). The present study is the first demonstrating PO-DNA adducts in human individuals. It is also the first study indicating cytogenetic effects in humans from PO exposure, although confounding effects from other sources cannot be excluded.
Pmid 11895884
Wosid WOS:000174561600015
Url http://cebp.aacrjournals.org/content/11/3/315.article-info
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
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