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  • Title: Molecular analysis of chemically-induced mutations in mammalian cell assays.
    Author: Davies MJ, Phillips BJ, Rumsby PC.
    Journal: Toxicol In Vitro; 1995 Aug; 9(4):513-8. PubMed ID: 20650122.
    Abstract:
    Two mammalian cell mutation assays, the HPRT/V79 assay and the TK/mouse lymphoma assay, were compared for their ability to respond to the genotoxic chemicals ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS) and mitomycin C (MMC). Whereas EMS induced a high mutant frequency at both loci, MMC produced few mutants at the hprt locus, but induced a large number of mutants at the tk locus. Southern blotting analysis showed that this difference was due to the type of genetic damage induced by the two chemicals. Intragenic changes ranging from point mutations to loss of the entire gene were recovered as viable mutants at both the hprt and tk loci. Thus, EMS which causes mainly intragenic mutations induced similar mutant frequencies at both loci. The large multilocus deletions induced by MMC, in which the damage was assumed in many cases to extend into a gene essential for growth since most TK mutants were slow-growing, could not be recovered at the hprt locus. Whereas both loci will detect intergenic mutations, mutants carrying large-scale damage are recoverable only at the heterozygous tk locus. At the hemizygous hprt locus no homologous chromosome exists to provide the function of essential genes if these are lost along with hprt in multilocus deletions. Most human cancers develop as a highly complex process involving both gene and multilocus mutations in oncogenes and tumour suppressor genes. Thus the TK/mouse lymphoma assay is a more appropriate in vitro test for the detection of chemicals capable of causing the types of DNA lesions important in human cancer.
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