Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:2.7.10.2 (
focal adhesion kinase
)
44,029
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The mutagenicity of
SRM
1649 and 1650 was tested in the presence of rat liver S9 mix which was induced by polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) or by the combination of phenobarbital and 5,6-benzoflavone. The S9 mix induced by PCB activated benzo[a]
pyrene
strongly. The S9 mix induced by phenobarbital-5,6-benzoflavone activated the complex mixtures to approximately the same extent as that induced by PCB. This finding indicates that phenobarbital-5,6-benzoflavone instead of PCB may be suitable as an inducer under some conditions. The preincubation procedure for the mutagenicity test was performed by preincubating the test compound, S9 mix and bacteria for 20 min in a water bath. This procedure was as effective as the plate incorporation test.
...
PMID:Influence of the microsomal inducer and the incubation system on mutagenicity of complex mixtures. 137 Jan 5
Malignancy is the result of multistep transformational changes of normal somatic cells. In the case of respiratory epithelial malignancies this process lasts for several years. Many methods have been explored to mimic this process in an extracorporal model. In the present investigation we combined several of these methods. Organ cultures were prepared from tracheal specimens and were then consecutively treated with human papilloma virus, benzo(a)
pyrene
, methylnitronitrosoguanine and tetradecanoyl phorbol acetate. Identical numbers of organ cultures from the same specimen were maintained without exposure to carcinogens. After 6 weeks these cultures were further cultivated either in mixed cultures (MC) with autologous isotopic fibroblasts or under the kidney capsule of the nude mouse (
SRC
). These two methods were combined after a few months: MC cells were transplanted under the
SRC
or
SRC
transplants were explanted in cell culture. This long-term selection procedure revealed striking differences between control and treated organ cultures. Three-dimensional structures containing epithelial cells were isolated from both organ cultures but survived more than 3 months only from treated cultures. Only MC from treated organ cultures produced nodules under
SRC
. The incidence and morphology of the nodules in the
SRC
were directly related to carcinogen treatment, with more nodules with pronounced epithelial cell atypia obtained from treated organ cultures. MC and
SRC
showed the importance of a time factor for selecting cells with changed growth behavior--increased time increased the incidence of such cells.
...
PMID:Induction of transformation of human respiratory epithelium in vitro. Preliminary investigation. 141 47
Previous studies have shown that polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) mobilize intracellular Ca2+ in human T cells by inositol trisphosphate-dependent mechanisms resulting from activation of phospholipase C-gamma by
SRC
-related protein tyrosine kinases, thereby mimicking antigen-receptor activation. Ca2+ appears to play an important second messenger role in growth factor control of cell proliferation in human mammary epithelial cells (HMEC), such as the epidermal growth factor receptor pathway. The purpose of the present studies was to determine if PAHs are able to increase intracellular Ca2+ in primary cultures of HMEC and increase cell proliferation. Two carcinogenic and two non-carcinogenic PAHs were tested for their ability to increase intracellular Ca2+ in HMEC. The carcinogenic PAHs dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA) and benzo[a]
pyrene
(BaP) were able to cause Ca2+ elevation in HMEC at early time points (2 h) and caused sustained alterations in Ca2+ homeostasis (18 h). DMBA showed maximal effects at early time points (2 h), while BaP showed maximal effects on sustained Ca2+ (18 h). 2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD), a potent dioxin and tumor promoter, produced maximal Ca2+ elevation at 2 h, with a return to near baseline levels by 6 h. The non-carcinogenic PAHs benzo[e]pyrene and anthracene did not significantly alter intracellular Ca2+ at any time point. alpha-Naphthoflavone significantly reduced the Ca2+ response induced by BaP treatment, but not by DMBA or TCDD, suggesting that P450 1A or 1B metabolism of BaP may be important in the sustained Ca2+ elevating response. In evaluating the effects of BaP on HMEC proliferation, BaP was found to increase the number of cells recovered after 4 days in culture in the absence or presence of various concentrations of epidermal growth factor. These studies provide initial evidence that Ca2+ signaling may be associated with mitogenesis in HMEC, which may play a role in tumor promotion and progression produced by PAHs.
...
PMID:Carcinogenic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons increase intracellular Ca2+ and cell proliferation in primary human mammary epithelial cells. 921
A panel of HepG2-derived cell lines (CAT-Tox [L] assay, Xenometrix), harboring stress genes consisting of a sequence for chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) under the transcriptional regulation from mammalian promoters and response elements, was exposed for 18-24 hr to aqueous suspensions of urban dusts (
SRM
-1648,
SRM
-1649, EHC-93) or PM2.5 particles (particulate matter < 2.5 micron). Expression of CAT protein was measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Induction of the CAT genes was verified with benzo[a]
pyrene
(CYP1A1, cytochrome P450 1A1 promoter; GSTYa, glutathione transferase subunit Ya promoter; XRE, xenobiotic response element), cadmium sulfate, and copper sulfate (HMTIIa, metallothionein IIa promoter; HSP70, heat shock protein 70 promoter). The urban dust suspensions were active on CYP1A1, GSTYa, and XRE cell lines.
SRM
-1648 and
SRM
-1649 were twice as potent as EHC-93 per unit mass in inducing the xenobiotic-dependent responses, which correlated with contents in polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. These three reference particles, as well as six PM2.5 preparations collected on hi-vol filters in the Great Lakes basin, were also found to induce HMTIIa and HSP70, the magnitude of the responses correlating closely with the amount of soluble copper in the particulate preparations. The results indicate that bioavailable chemical species in the unfractionated particles can directly and quantitatively induce xenobiotic, metal, and stress-dependent responses in a target cell model, resulting in patterns of gene induction consistent with the chemical compositions of the environmental materials. We propose that cell culture models could be helpful for toxicodynamic inferences in adjunct to environmental monitoring and exposure assessments.
...
PMID:Regulation of promoter-CAT stress genes in HepG2 cells by suspensions of particles from ambient air. 932 24
For laboratories involved in polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) analyses in environmental samples, it is very useful to participate in interlaboratory comparison studies which provide a mechanism for comparing analytical methods. This is particularly important when PAH analyses are routinely done using a single technique. The results are reported for such an interlaboratory comparison study, in which the four selected participating laboratories quantitatively analyzed several PAH compounds in diesel exhaust samples. The samples included particle and vapor phase extracts collected and prepared at Michigan Technological University (MTU PE and MTU VE, respectively), a diesel particle extract prepared by the National Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST,
SRM
1975), and a fully characterized diesel particle sample (NIST
SRM
1650). One of the laboratories used only HPLC-FLD, one used only GC/MS and two laboratories used both methods for the routine analysis of PAH in environmental samples. Data were obtained for five PAH compounds: fluoranthene,
pyrene
, benz[a]anthracene, benzo[a]
pyrene
, and benzo[g, h,i]perylene. The mean PAH levels found for
SRM
1650 were outside the range reported by NIST. The range in the reported means was from 24% lower than certified for benz[a]anthracene to 41% higher for benzo[g,h,i]perylene. For the previously uncharacterized samples in this study (
SRM
1975, MTU PE and MTU VE), two-thirds of the reported results were higher for the HPLC-FLD method than for the GC/MS. The range in differences between methods was from-54 to+31% calculated as the difference in GC/MS value relative to the HPLC value for each of the compared compounds. Coefficients of variation for the uncharacterized samples appeared to be higher, in most (but not all) cases, for the HPLC-FLD than for the GC/MS. The resolution of certain PAH isomers (e.g. benz[a]anthracene and chrysene, or the benzofluoranthenes), was better, as expected, for HPLC than for GC. Generally lower detection limits (by an order of magnitude or more) were reported for GC/MS than for HPLC-FLD. On the basis of this limited study, it seems as though significant differences may exist between laboratories, if not between methods, in the analysis of certain PAH compounds in real diesel samples by HPLC-FLD compared to GC/MS. If possible, measurements should be made using both methods. This is particularly important where potential interferences are undefined or subject to change, as is frequently the case with real environmental samples.
...
PMID:Interlaboratory comparison of HPLC-fluorescence detection and GC/MS: analysis of PAH compounds present in diesel exhaust. 1078 16
Pressurized Fluid Extraction (PFE) was evaluated for the extraction of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and nitro-derivatives from diesel particulate matter. Extraction conditions were set up by performing several tests in which temperature, solvent strength, pressure, and static time were gradually increased. The results obtained on a laboratory test material made of a "lean" (low content of soluble fraction) Diesel particulate matter indicate that very severe conditions were needed in order to obtain better recoveries of the higher molecular weight molecules. Moreover, extraction efficiency seems to be influenced by the amount of soluble matter in the particulate, so that a "lean" particulate appears more difficult to extract. Recoveries of the deuterated standards of certain PAHs (i.e. indeno[1,2,3- cd]
pyrene
) were incomplete even with the toughest conditions tested. Experiments carried out on a certified material (
SRM
1650 from NIST) also indicate that PFE can perform a better extraction of some of the PAHs than the method used for certification, but still incomplete. Comparison of results obtained on the
SRM
with different extraction techniques suggests that the composition of the extract varies considerably with the extraction technique and conditions. It is relevant to notice that recent Diesel engines produce leaner particulate: for future materials more drastic extraction conditions will be required.
...
PMID:Evaluation of the efficiency of extraction of PAHs from diesel particulate matter with pressurized solvents. 1261 Jul 16
In this study we compared the ability of extractable organic material from particulate and semivolatile fractions of gasoline emission to induce mutations in bacteria and form adducts with calf thymus (CT) DNA with corresponding data obtained from diesel exhaust. Exhaust particles from gasoline-powered passenger cars were collected on filters and semivolatile compounds were collected on polyurethane foam (PUF). The mutagenicity of the soluble organic fraction (SOF) was determined in Salmonella typhimurium strain TA98 and the DNA binding of aromatic compounds in the extracts was assessed by in vitro incubations with CT DNA and rat liver S9 (oxidative activation) or xanthine oxidase (reductive activation) followed by butanol-enhanced (32)P-postlabeling analysis. Semivolatile fractions of gasoline emission collected on PUF formed more CT DNA adducts than filter extracts under all reaction conditions, but showed a lower mutagenic potential than the corresponding particulate samples. This suggests that the capacity of PUF to collect exhaust particle-derived compounds and/or the efficiency of xanthine oxidase and enzymes in the rat liver S9 to activate these compounds to DNA binding metabolites was higher than expected. Gasoline extracts, benzo[a]
pyrene
and diesel particulate matter (
SRM
1650) formed more S9-mediated DNA adducts as their dose increased, although a linear dose-response was not observed for the gasoline exhausts. Lower concentrations of gasoline and diesel extracts bound to DNA with greater efficiency than did 8-fold higher doses, suggesting complex interactions and/or an inhibition of S9 enzyme activities by the high doses. Diesel extracts formed higher levels of adducts than gasoline extracts, especially with the reductive activation system, suggesting that diesel extracts contain high levels of nitro-polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (nitro-PAHs). The higher direct-acting Salmonella mutagenicity in diesel extracts in comparison with gasoline extracts is consistent with diesel extracts containing higher concentrations of nitro-PAHs. The results of this study indicate that diesel extracts are more mutagenic and form more DNA adducts than gasoline extracts and that the effects of extract dose on DNA adduct formation are complex.
...
PMID:Comparison of mutagenicity and calf thymus DNA adducts formed by the particulate and semivolatile fractions of vehicle exhausts. 1287 10
Particulate matter of vehicle exhaust is known to contain carcinogenic compounds such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) and is suggested to increase lung cancer risk in humans. This study examines the differences in diesel and gasoline-derived PAH binding to DNA in a human bronchial epithelial cell line (BEAS-2B). Particulate matter (PM) of gasoline exhaust was collected from passenger cars on filters and semi-volatile compounds on polyurethane foam (PUF). The soluble organic fraction (SOF) extracted from the particles was used to expose the cells and to perform PAH analysis. Gasoline extracts, benzo[a]
pyrene
(B[a]P) and reference materials (
SRM
1650 and 1587) were used to study dose-dependent adduct formation in BEAS-2B cells. The levels of DNA adducts were in good accord with the 10 DNA adduct-forming PAH concentrations analyzed in the extracts. Gasoline extracts,
SRM
1650,
SRM
1587 and B[a]P formed DNA adducts dose-dependently in BEAS-2B cells. The time-dependent DNA adduct formation of 5.0 micro M B[a]P was lower than that of 2.5 micro M B[a]P. The results of this study indicate that reformulated and standard diesel fuels formed about 11- and 31-fold more adducts than gasoline, respectively, when PAH-DNA adduct levels were calculated on an emission basis (adducts/mg PM/km), whereas on a particulate basis (adducts/mg PM) no difference between the diesel and gasoline extracts was observed. We conclude that the genotoxicity of diesel fuel is based on higher particulate emission rates compared to gasoline emission and although the concentration of PAH compounds was higher in diesel particulate extracts, DNA binding by the gasoline particulate-bound PAH compounds was more pronounced than that by the diesel particulate-bound PAH compounds.
...
PMID:DNA binding of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in a human bronchial epithelial cell line treated with diesel and gasoline particulate extracts and benzo[a]pyrene. 1296 Apr 11
A method has been developed for analysis of the highly potent polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) carcinogens dibenzo(a,l)
pyrene
, dibenzo(a,h)
pyrene
, and dibenzo(a,i)
pyrene
(molecular weight 302) present in small amounts in diesel and air particulate material. The method can also be used for analysis of the PAH benzo(a)
pyrene
, coronene, and perylene, for which reference and certified values are available for the standard reference materials used for validation of the method--
SRM
1649a (urban dust) and
SRM
2975 (diesel particulate matter). The only NIST values that have been published for these dibenzopyrene isomers in the analyzed
SRM
are reference values for dibenzo(a,i)
pyrene
and dibenzo(a,h)
pyrene
in
SRM
1649a. The concentrations determined in the
SRM
were in good agreement with reported NIST-certified and reference values and other concentrations reported in the literature. Standard reference material 1650 (diesel particulate matter) was also analyzed. The method could not, however, be validated using this material because certification of
SRM
1650 had expired. The method is based on ultrasonically assisted extraction of the particulate material, then silica SPE pre-separation and isolation, and, separation and detection by hyphenated LC-GC-MS. The method is relatively rapid and requires only approximately 1-5 mg
SRM
particulate material to identify and quantify the analytes. Low extraction recoveries for the analytes, in particular the dibenzopyrenes, when extracting diesel
SRM
2975 and 1650 resulted, however, in the dibenzopyrenes being present in amounts near their limits of quantifications in these samples. The method's limit of quantification (LOQ), based on analyses of
SRM
1649a, is in the range 10-77 pg. By use of this method more than 25 potential PAH isomers with a molecular weight of 302 could be separated.
...
PMID:Determination of dibenzopyrenes in standard reference materials (SRM) 1649a, 1650, and 2975 using ultrasonically assisted extraction and LC-GC-MS. 1633 1
A microwave-assisted extraction (MAE) procedure has been developed and optimized for the extraction of six regulated polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) from muscle samples of polluted fish. The procedure involves the simultaneous microwave-assisted extraction of PAHs with n-hexane and the lipids hydrolysis with potassium hydroxide. Experimental design methodology allows a quick and robust optimization of operational parameters such as the extraction time, temperature, and solvent volumes. In these final optimized conditions, the procedure can be applied to a vast range of fat containing fish samples without significant changes, thus enabling its routine use. Recoveries around 90% for the studied compounds benz[a]anthracene, benzo[b]fluoranthene, benzo[k]fluoranthene, benzo[a]
pyrene
, dibenz[a,h]anthracene, and indene[1,2,3-cd]
pyrene
and quantification limits (between 0.07 and 0.53 ng/g dry weight) far below the regulated limits, have been obtained. The procedure is applied to several different fish samples. Further, accuracy validation using NIST
SRM
2977 reference material was carried out.
...
PMID:Optimization of a microwave-assisted extraction method for the analysis of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons from fish samples. 1668 51
1
2
3
4
Next >>