The 5 year goal of this is to determine the identity of chemicals in urban air and indoor air which account for the mutagenicity of these samples in human cells expressing xenometabolic genes at levels found in human lungs. To achieve this broad goal we are (1) determining the primary mutagens in air samples from Los Angeles, Washington DC, Rochester NY and Woburn, Mass in the human diploid cell line h1A1v2 which expresses cytochrome P450 1A1 and is mutated by urban air samples, (2) determining expression a set of twelve xenometabolic genes in bronchial brush biopsies of Afro- and Euro Americans, males and females, smokers and nonsmokers and measuring the mutational load in the DNA of each sample, (3) constructing diploid human cell lines which express the xenometabolic patterns of the nonsmoking Afro- and Euro-American and smoker which show the highest lung cell mutational load and also constructing a line representing median enzyme levels for the whole population studied (4) using these lung surrogate lines to determine if an dhow the xenometabolic patterns effect the mutagenicity of the environmental air sample mutagens (5) using long term exposure of the lung surrogate cells to measure the mutational spectra of the environmental air samples at concentrations common to human experience. These data will allow air quality researchers to focus on chemicals with clear potential to cause genetic damage in human lungs and provide analytical geneticists with mutational spectra for which to search for cause and effect relationships between air-borne chemical exposure and cancer causing mutations in human lung cells.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
1P01ES007168-01
Application #
3755340
Study Section
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
1994
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
Cambridge
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code
02139
Zheng, Weiming; Khrapko, Konstantin; Coller, Hilary A et al. (2006) Origins of human mitochondrial point mutations as DNA polymerase gamma-mediated errors. Mutat Res 599:11-20
Coller, Hilary A; Khrapko, Konstantin; Herrero-Jimenez, Pablo et al. (2005) Clustering of mutant mitochondrial DNA copies suggests stem cells are common in human bronchial epithelium. Mutat Res 578:256-71
Pedersen, Daniel U; Durant, John L; Taghizadeh, Koli et al. (2005) Human cell mutagens in respirable airborne particles from the northeastern United States. 2. Quantification of mutagens and other organic compounds. Environ Sci Technol 39:9547-60
Pedersen, Daniel U; Durant, John L; Penman, Bruce W et al. (2004) Human-cell mutagens in respirable airborne particles in the northeastern United States. 1. Mutagenicity of fractionated samples. Environ Sci Technol 38:682-9
Tomita-Mitchell, Aoy; Ling, Losee Lucy; Glover, Curtis L et al. (2003) The mutational spectrum of the HPRT gene from human T cells in vivo shares a significant concordant set of hot spots with MNNG-treated human cells. Cancer Res 63:5793-8
Luo, Wen; Gurjuar, Rajan; Ozbal, Can et al. (2003) Quantitative detection of benzo[alpha]pyrene diolepoxide-DNA adducts by cryogenic laser induced fluorescence. Chem Res Toxicol 16:74-80
Kim, Andrea S; Thilly, William G (2003) Ligation of high-melting-temperature 'clamp' sequence extends the scanning range of rare point-mutational analysis by constant denaturant capillary electrophoresis (CDCE) to most of the human genome. Nucleic Acids Res 31:e97
Muniappan, Brindha P; Thilly, William G (2002) The DNA polymerase beta replication error spectrum in the adenomatous polyposis coli gene contains human colon tumor mutational hotspots. Cancer Res 62:3271-5
Kim, Andrea S; Holmquist, Gerald P; Thilly, William G (2002) High-efficiency DNA ligation for clamp attachment without polymerase chain reaction. Anal Biochem 310:179-85
Zheng, Weiming; Marcelino, Luisa A; Thilly, William G (2002) Scanning low-frequency point mutants in the mitochondrial genome using constant denaturant capillary electrophoresis. Methods Mol Biol 197:93-106

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