STABILITY AND CAPACITY OF DIMETHYLNITROSAMINE-INDUCED O-6-METHYLGUANINE REPAIR SYSTEM IN RAT-LIVER

  • 1 January 1983
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 43  (12) , 5808-5814
Abstract
Repeated administration of dimethylnitrosamine (DMN) (2 mg/kg for 3 wk) to BD IV rats results in an increased capacity for the liver to repair O6-methylguanine in DNA, whereas other DNA adducts (7-methylguanine and 3-methyladenine) are not affected. In the experiments reported here, data on the rapidity of action of the enhanced system, its capacity after different challenging doses of [14C]DMN (0.2, 2.0 and 20 mg/kg), and the persistence after cessation of the DMN pretreatment are described. After a dose of [14C]DMN (2.0 mg/kg), the increased activity acts very rapidly (10 min) repairing O6-methylguanine as soon as it is formed and, by 2 h, 65% of the O6-methylguanine generated in liver DNA has already been removed. Very little removal of O6-methylguanine occurs within this time in control rats not receiving any DMN pretreatment. The DMN-induced repair activity is of limited capacity, since its effect can be detected after DNA damage induced by 0.2 or 2.0 mg of [14C]DMN/kg, whereas this activity has little impact on the O6-methylguanine generated in liver DNA by 20 mg of [14C]DMN/kg. Upon cessation of the DMN pretreatment, the enhanced repair activity, as determined also by the in vitro activity of the O6-methyltransferase, decays slowly, but after 25 days, the repair activity is still higher than control values. No correlation was observed between increased [3H]thymidine incorporation in liver DNA and increased O6-methylguanine repair, indicating that liver cell proliferation is not necessarily coupled with an elevated methyltransferase level.