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© 1992 Oxford University Press

research-article

Genotoxic potential of tamoxifen and analogues in female Fischer F344/n rats, DBA/2 and C57BL/6 mice and in human MCL-5 cells

Ian N.H. White, Francesco de Matteis, Adrian Davies, Lewis L. Smith, Christopher Crofton-Sleigh 1, Stanley Venitt 1, Alan Hewer 1 and David H. Phillips 1

MRC Toxicology Unit Woodmansterne Road, Carshalton, Surrey, SM5 4EF, UK
1Haddow Laboratories, Institute of Cancer Research Cotswold Road, Sutton, Surrey, SM2 5NG, UK

Chronic administration of tamoxifen to female rats causes hepatocellular carcinomas. We have investigated damage to liver DNA caused by the administration of tamoxifen to female Fischer F344/N rats or C57B1/6 or DBA/2 mice using 32P-postlabelling. Following the administration of tamoxifen for 7 days (45 mg/kg/day) and extraction of hepatic DNA, up to 7 radiolabelled adduct spots could be detected after PEI-cellulose chromatography of the 32P-labelled DNA digests. Tamoxifen caused a time-dependent increase in the level of adduct detected up to a value of at least 1 adduct/106 nucleotides after 7 days dosing. A dose response relationship was demonstrated over the range of 5–45 mg/kg/day (0.013–0.12 mmol/kg/day). On cessation of dosing there was a loss of adducts from the liver DNA. These adducts were not detected in DNA from vehicle-dosed controls or in DNA from kidney, lung, spleen, uterus or peripheral lymphocytes. Pyrrolidinotamoxifen caused a similar level of adduct formation as tamoxifen. In contrast, no significant adduct formation could be detected in liver DNA from rats given droloxifene or toremifene. Mice given tamoxifen (45 mg/kg/day for 4 days) showed levels of adducts in the liver which were 30–40% of those present in rats. Exposure of rat hepatocytes to tamoxifen in vitro, resulted in induction of unscheduled DNA synthesis, when preparations from rats which had been pretreated with tamoxifen in vivo were used. No such increase could be detected in hepatocytes from control rats, suggesting tamoxifen may induce enzymes responsible for its own activation. Tamoxifen induced a significant increase in micronucleus formation in a dose dependent manner in cultures of MCL-5 cells, a human cell line that expresses 5 different human cytochrome P450 isoenzymes, as well as epoxide hydrolase.


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