Comparison of HepG2 Feeder Cells Generated by Exposure to Gamma-rays, X-rays, UV-C Light or Mitomycin C for Ability to Activate 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene in a Cell-mediated Chinese Hamster V79/HGPRT Mutation Assay
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The cell-mediated Chinese hamster V79/HGPRT mutagenicity assay is an established in vitro testing method. Although gamma-irradiated human HepG2 hepatoma cells have been used recently for chemical activation, an alternative is now needed due to scheduled retirement of the available gamma-source. X-irradiation, 254 nm UV-C light and mitomycin C were examined as possible HepG2 mitotic inhibitors, and treated cells compared for activation of 7, 12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA). In colony-forming assays, V79 and HepG2 cells differed in sensitivity to DMBA, with V79 survival declining sharply between 1-2.5 microM (LD50=1.75 microM) while HepG2 survival decreased gradually, beginning at 0.01 microM DMBA (LD50=0.045 microM). When HepG2 feeder cells generated by each method were included in V79/HGPRT mutation assays, activation of 1 microM DMBA was found to vary according to the mitotic inhibitor used, with mutation frequencies decreasing in the order 4000 rads gamma-rays>25 microg/ml mitomycin C>4000 rads X-rays>25 J/m2 UV-C light. Only assays containing gamma-irradiated HepG2 cells generated an increase (2-3-fold) in mutation frequency when DMBA exposure was extended from 24 to 48 h. The effect of HepG2 preincubation with either Aroclor 1254 or DMBA on feeder cell activation of DMBA was also assessed using concentrations of Aroclor 1254 (10 microg/ml) or DMBA (1.0 microM) which were found to produce optimum induction of ethoxyresorufin-O-deethylase (EROD) activity (3.1-fold and 2-fold increases, respectively). Compared to results obtained with uninduced HepG2 cells, assays incorporating HepG2 cells activated by either Aroclor 1254 or DMBA produced slightly increased V79/HGPRT mutation frequencies after 24 h of exposure to mutagen; however, a 48 h incubation with mutagen in the presence of HepG2 preincubated with either Aroclor 1254 or DMBA resulted in higher mutation frequencies regardless of the mitotic inhibitor treatment. EROD activity was also induced 1.4-fold following exposure of HepG2 cells to mitomycin C alone. Although gamma-irradiation remains the treatment of choice for producing metabolically active HepG2 feeder cells, comparison of the alternatives tested suggests that mitomycin C would be a convenient and suitable replacement.
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