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© 1989 Oxford University Press

research-article

o-Phenanthroline protects mammalian cells from hydrogen peroxide-induced gene mutation and morphological transformation

Lilian Nassi-Calò, Alberto C. Mello-Filho and Rogerio Meneghini

Department of Biochemistry, Institute of Chemistry, University of Sao Paulo Caixa Postal 20780-01498 Sao Paulo, Brazil

The radiomimetic agent hydrogen peroxide is known to produce DNA strand breaks, chromosome damage and cell death. It has also been identified as one of the cytotoxic agents formed during certain drug metabolism and by phagocytic cells in the respiratory burst. Our laboratory recently identified the ultimate reactive species responsible for the DNA-damaging and cytotoxic effect of H2O2 as being hydroxyl radical. This was achieved by the use of the specific iron chelator o-phenanthroline, which prevents the occurrence of a Fenton reaction between H2O2 and chromatin bound ferrous ions. In this paper we show that H2O2 is able to induce mutation at the HGPRT locus in V79 cells and morphological transformation of C3H/10T1/2 cells. o-Phenanthroline abolishes both effects, indicating that hydroxyl radical is directly involved in mutation and carcinogenesis.


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