• 1 January 1983
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 43  (6) , 2654-2658
Abstract
The binding of oral benzo[a]pyrene (BP) to the DNA of mice was investigated. With a single dose of 1 .mu.g, levels of DNA binding were highest in the liver, followed by the intestine, colon, and stomach. In all organs, the majority of DNA-associated radioactivity was in the form of adducts which did not release ethyl acetate-soluble BP tetrols on acid hydrolysis. In both stomach and liver, the formation of acid-hydrolyzable and non-acid-hydrolyzable BP-DNA adducts was linearly related to dose, over a carcinogen dosage range of 10-8-10-3 g (liver) or 10-7-10-3 g (stomach). Repair or removal via cell turnover of liver BP-DNA adducts over a period of 7 days proceeded with the same efficiency when the dose of the administered carcinogen was varied over a range of 100,000-fold. In vivo the initial interaction between DNA and ingested BP takes place in the same manner both at high doses typical of laboratory carcinogenesis experiments and at low doses typical of human exposure.