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Title: Two benzene metabolites, catechol and hydroquinone, produce a synergistic induction of micronuclei and toxicity in cultured human lymphocytes. Author: Robertson ML, Eastmond DA, Smith MT. Journal: Mutat Res; 1991 Jul; 249(1):201-9. PubMed ID: 2067533. Abstract: A mixture of two benzene metabolites, hydroquinone and catechol, produces a striking synergistic genotoxic response in cultured human lymphocytes. This was demonstrated using an anti-kinetochore antibody modification of the micronucleus assay. Treatment with hydroquinone alone or in combination with phenol produced a 3-fold increase in micronucleated cells over background. Treatment with catechol or phenol alone and in combination produced only minor increases in the number of micronucleated cells. In contrast, simultaneous treatment with equimolar (75 microM) concentrations of hydroquinone and catechol resulted in a greater than 16-fold induction of micronucleated cells. Given an additivity model, 20 additional micronucleated cells would be expected (after correcting for background frequencies), yet 140 were observed. Further analysis revealed that over 90% of the micronucleated cells stained positively for kinetochores, indicating a high probability that these micronuclei contain entire chromosomes. This synergistic response appears to occur only at equimolar levels of hydroquinone and catechol. These results suggest that these metabolites are acting together to disrupt the mitotic spindle and interfere with chromosome segregation. These data provide further support for the hypothesis that multiple metabolites acting in concert are involved in the benzene-induced genotoxicity and leukemia in humans.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]