Application of the in vivo Pig-a gene mutation assay to test the potential genotoxicity of p-phenylenediamine

作者:Qin, Meirong; Chen, Runhua; Huang, Zeyu; Wang, Jinping; Xu, Suowen; Jiang, Ruiqi; Li, Junpeng; Xian, Jingwen; Wang, Xiaowei; Lu, Yi; Xu, Liang; Chen, Ning; Chen, Xiangfu; Wang, Ping*; Wang, Tiejie*
来源:Food and Chemical Toxicology, 2019, 123: 424-430.
DOI:10.1016/j.fct.2018.10.061

摘要

Currently, it remains controversial whether p-phenylenediamine (PPD) is genotoxic. In this study, we evaluated the potential genotoxicity of PPD using the newly-developed Pig-a gene mutation assay. The results of three classical genetic toxicity tests (bacterial reverse mutation assay, mammalian cell chromosomal aberration test, and mammalian erythrocyte micronucleus test) are all positive, suggesting that PPD is potentially genotoxic. In Pig-a assay, Sprague-Dawley rats are orally administered with PPD for 28 consecutive days at three doses (12.5, 25, and 50 mg/kg/day). Our result shows that PPD (25 and 50 mg/kg/day) dose-dependently increases RETCD59- value over controls on Day 8. RETCD59- keeps increasing to the maximum on Day 15 and then decreases until Day 29. PPD also dose-dependently increase RBCCD59- value on Day 15, which keeps elevating until Day 29. The time-course of RETCD59- and RBCCD59- induced by PPD are similar with that induced by Nethyl-N-nitrosourea (ENU) treatment for 3 days. Our data suggests that PPD has potential genotoxic effects, and the Pig-a assay is sensitive to assess mutagenicity. However, further investigation of the changes of RETCD59- and RBCCD59- induced by hair dyes containing PPD should be detected by Pig-a assay in occupational exposure population to confirm the safety of PPD usage.