Ames test-negative carcinogen, ortho-phenyl phenol, binds tubulin and causes aneuploidy in budding yeast |
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Authors: | Nunoshiba Tatsuo Watanabe Eri Takahashi Teruhisa Daigaku Yasukazu Ishikawa Satoko Mochizuki Masataka Ui Ayako Enomoto Takemi Yamamoto Kazuo |
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Affiliation: | Graduate School of Life Sciences, Tohoku University, Sendai 980-8577, Japan. |
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Abstract: | Ortho-phenyl phenol (OPP) is broad-spectrum of fungicides and antibacterial agents. OPP tested negative in an Ames system and positive with respect to the formation of tumors in the urinary bladder in rats when administered in diet, showing attributes of an Ames test-negative carcinogen. It has also been demonstrated that OPP does not bind or cleave DNA in vivo or in vitro, rather dose-dependent protein binding in OPP-treated rats was observed. OPP, however, generates chromosomal aberrations including aneuploidy. Thus, the steps by which Ames test-negative carcinogens exert their effects need to be elucidated. Here, we used an assay of loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in Saccharomyces cerevisiae to determine the biological effects of OPP and its hepatic metabolite phenyl hydroquinone (PHQ). LOH was found to be induced by OPP and PHQ because of a functional chromosome loss: aneuploidy. PHQ bound to and interfered with the depolymerization of tubulin in vitro and arrested the cell-cycle at M and G1. These results indicate that OPP and PHQ damaged tubulin to cause mis-segregation of chromosome by delaying cell-cycle progression through mitosis, and as a consequence caused aneuploidy. |
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