1. The use of different test systems with yeasts for the evaluation of chemically induced gene conversions and gene mutations
- Author
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Cristina Serra, S Baroncelli, Nicola Loprieno, C. Leporini, G. Corsi, A Cinci, Roberto Barale, A Cammellini, Carlo Bauer, Nieri R, Giorgio Bronzetti, and M. Nozzolini
- Subjects
Male ,Time Factors ,Ethyl methanesulfonate ,Cell Survival ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Mutagen ,Locus (genetics) ,Haploidy ,Gene mutation ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Mice ,Saccharomyces ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ,Probability ,Mesylates ,Recombination, Genetic ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Chromosome Mapping ,biology.organism_classification ,Yeast ,Kinetics ,Genes ,chemistry ,Evaluation Studies as Topic ,Mutation ,Microsomes, Liver ,Biological Assay ,Ploidy ,Mutagens - Abstract
The wide variety of genetic alterations that can be induced in human populations when exposed to chemical genotoxic substances present in our environment may be predictable using laboratory organisms such as yeasts. In the present paper methodologies are described for analysing the genetic effects induced by a well known chemical mutagen, ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS). Haploid or diploid yeast cells have been treated in vitro , in buffer or in the presence of mouse liver microsomes, and in vivo , in the peritoneum of the mouse (host-mediated assay). With these different methods of assaying the genetic activity of a compound, its metabolic activation occuring in the mammalian body is taken into account: this might lead to a more reliable extrapolation of data from laboratory experiments to man. The relationships between doses and frequencies of the induced genetic effects are described by equations obtained after regression analysis of the data, thus allowing a quantitative comparison among different methodologies and different genetic systems. One genetic system analyzed is represented by forward-mutations scored phenotypically on a non selective medium. Mutations induced in five loci with different sensitivity and average data of mutation-induction per locus have been derived. The second genetic system was provided by scoring on a selective medium mitotic gene-conversions induced in two loci with different kinetics. Haploid cells of Schizosaccharomyces pombe and diploid cells of Saccharomyces cerevisiae were submitted to analysis for the evaluation of gene-mutations and gene-conversions respectively.
- Published
- 1974
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