Comparison of DNA‐Reactive Metabolites from Nitrosamine and Styrene Using Voltammetric DNA/Microsomes Sensors |
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Authors: | Sadagopan Krishnan Besnik Bajrami Vigneshwaran Mani Shenmin Pan James F. Rusling |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Chemistry, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT 06269‐3060, USA;2. Department of Cell Biology, University of Connecticut, Farmington, CT 06032, USA |
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Abstract: | Voltammetric sensors made with films of polyions, double‐stranded DNA and liver microsomes adsorbed layer‐by‐layer onto pyrolytic graphite electrodes were evaluated for reactive metabolite screening. This approach features simple, inexpensive screening without enzyme purification for applications in drug or environmental chemical development. Cytochrome P450 enzymes (CYPs) in the liver microsomes were activated by an NADPH regenerating system or by electrolysis to metabolize model carcinogenic compounds nitrosamine and styrene. Reactive metabolites formed in the films were trapped as adducts with nucleobases on DNA. The DNA damage was detected by square‐wave voltammetry (SWV) using Ru(bpy) as a DNA‐oxidation catalyst. These sensors showed a larger rate of increase in signal vs. reaction time for a highly toxic nitrosamine than for the moderately toxic styrene due to more rapid reactive metabolite‐DNA adduct formation. Results were consistent with reported in vivo TD50 data for the formation of liver tumors in rats. Analogous polyion/ liver microsome films prepared on 500 nm silica nanoparticles (nanoreactors) and reacted with nitrosamine or styrene, provided LC‐MS or GC analyses of metabolite formation rates that correlated well with sensor response. |
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Keywords: | Reactive metabolites Sensors DNA damage Liver microsomes Toxicity screening |
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