Abstract: | Stable mutants resistant to an anticancer antibiotic, bleomycin-A2, were selected in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell either spontaneously or after ethylmethane sulfonate mutagenesis. Fluctuation analysis showed that bleomycin resistance occurs in CHO at a rate of 6.50--6.58 x 10(-7) mutations per cell per generation. Bleomycin-A2-resistant cell lines exhibited increased resistance to bleomycin analogs--bleomycin-A5, -B2, -B4, and pepleomycin. Colchicine, mitomycin C, and ultraviolet light irradiation inhibited colony formation equally in CHO cells and in bleomycin-resistant mutants. Cell-cell hybridization tests showed that bleomycin-resistance behaves as a dominant trait. Bleomycin-inactivating activity in the mutant cell extracts was three to fourfold higher than that in extracts of the parental CHO cell. |