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Mutagenesis vol. 19 no. 3 pp. 245-250, May 2004
© 2004 UK Environmental Mutagen Society/Oxford University Press

Comparative study in the Ames test of benzo[a]pyrene and 2-aminoanthracene metabolic activation using rat hepatic S9 and hepatocytes following in vivo or in vitro induction

Katalin Jemnitz1,3, Zsuzsa Veres1, Geza Torok2, Eva Toth2 and Laszlo Vereczkey1

1Department of Biochemical Pharmacology, Chemical Research Center of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, H1525 Budapest, Hungary and 2Environmental Mutagenesis Laboratory, Fodor Jozsef National Center for Public Health, National Institute of Environmental Health, H1097 Budapest, Hungary

We studied the replacement of hepatic S9 with in vivo and in vitro induced hepatocytes as a metabolic activation system with the aim of broadening the possibilities of mutagenic assays. Rats were pretreated with ß-naphthoflavone (BNF), phenobarbital (PB), 3-methylcholanthrene (MC) and a combination of BNF and PB (BNF + PB). Mutagenic activation of benzo[a]pyrene (BP) and 2-aminoanthracene (2AA) by hepatic S9 and hepatocytes was determined in the Ames test. Primary rat hepatocytes were used for in vitro induction and were used as the activating system in the Ames test. In vivo BNF treatment greatly increased the metabolic activation capacity of hepatic S9 and hepatocytes towards BP. With regard to 2AA activation, S9 and hepatocytes showed different BNF induction profiles. PB treatment reduced the mutagenicity of both compounds. Although ethoxyresorufin O-dealkylase (EROD) activity of S9 from BNF + PB-treated animals was almost 30-fold greater than the control, its effectiveness in activation of 2AA was below the control level. A large part of the EROD activity of control cells was lost during culture, together with the ability to activate 2AA, however, 72 h of MC induction increased EROD activity to 200-fold of the control, which corresponds to 28% of that of in vivo induced hepatocytes. The mutagenic potential of BP activated by in vitro induced hepatocytes was 10-fold above the control, which is 47% of the mutagenicity detected following in vivo induction. In vitro induced hepatocytes increased 2AA mutagenicity to 14.6-fold over the control, which corresponds to 68% of in vivo induction. Our results suggest that primary culture of hepatocytes provides a useful model for the study of the role of metabolic activation processes concerning enzyme activity of cytochromes P450 and other metabolic enzymes and induction profiles of different inducers.

3To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel: +36 1 4384141; Fax: +36 1 3257554; Email: jemnitz{at}chemres.hu

Received on December 22, 2003; revised and; accepted on March 11, 2004


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