The Mutagenic Activity of High-Energy Explosives; Contaminants of Concern at Military Training Sites

The genotoxicity of energetic compounds (i.e., explosives) that are known to be present in contaminated soils at military training sites has not been extensively investigated. Thus, the Salmonella mutagenicity and Muta(TM)Mouse assays were employed as in vitro assays to examine the mutagenic activit...

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Main Author: McAllister, Jennifer E.
Language:en
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20175
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OOU.-en#10393-201752013-01-11T13:33:11ZThe Mutagenic Activity of High-Energy Explosives; Contaminants of Concern at Military Training SitesMcAllister, Jennifer E.ExplosivesSoil contaminationSalmonella typhimuriumSalmonella mutagenicity assayFlat Epithelial cell lineMuta(TM)Mouse assayThe genotoxicity of energetic compounds (i.e., explosives) that are known to be present in contaminated soils at military training sites has not been extensively investigated. Thus, the Salmonella mutagenicity and Muta(TM)Mouse assays were employed as in vitro assays to examine the mutagenic activity of twelve explosive compounds, as well as three soil samples from Canadian Forces Base Petawawa. Salmonella analyses employed strains TA98 (frameshift mutations) and TA100 (base-pair substitution mutations), as well as the metabolically-enhanced YG1041 (TA98 background) and YG1042 (TA100 background), with and without exogenous metabolic activation (S9). For Salmonella analyses, the results indicate that ten of the explosive compounds were mutagenic, and consistently elicited direct-acting, base-pair substitution activity. All three soil samples were also observed to be mutagenic, eliciting direct-acting, frameshift activity. Mutagenic potencies were significantly higher on the metabolically-enhanced strains for all compounds and soil samples. For Muta(TM)Mouse analyses on FE1 cells, the results indicate that the majority of explosive compounds did not exhibit mutagenic activity. All three soil samples elicited significant positive responses (PET 1 and PET 3 without S9, and PET 2 with S9), and although there is some evidence of a concentration-related trend, the responses were weak. Correspondence of the mutagenic activity observed with the two assay systems, for both the explosive compounds and soil samples, was negligible. The differential response is likely due to differences in metabolic capacity between the two assay systems. Furthermore, it is likely that there are unidentified compounds present in these soil samples that are, at least in part, responsible for the observed mutagenic activity. Additional testing of other explosive compounds, as well as soil samples from other military training sites, using a variety of in vitro and in vivo assays, is warranted in order to reliably estimate mutagenic hazard and subsequently assess risk to human health.2011-08-24T14:59:11Z2011-08-24T14:59:11Z20112011-08-24Thèse / Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/10393/20175en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Explosives
Soil contamination
Salmonella typhimurium
Salmonella mutagenicity assay
Flat Epithelial cell line
Muta(TM)Mouse assay
spellingShingle Explosives
Soil contamination
Salmonella typhimurium
Salmonella mutagenicity assay
Flat Epithelial cell line
Muta(TM)Mouse assay
McAllister, Jennifer E.
The Mutagenic Activity of High-Energy Explosives; Contaminants of Concern at Military Training Sites
description The genotoxicity of energetic compounds (i.e., explosives) that are known to be present in contaminated soils at military training sites has not been extensively investigated. Thus, the Salmonella mutagenicity and Muta(TM)Mouse assays were employed as in vitro assays to examine the mutagenic activity of twelve explosive compounds, as well as three soil samples from Canadian Forces Base Petawawa. Salmonella analyses employed strains TA98 (frameshift mutations) and TA100 (base-pair substitution mutations), as well as the metabolically-enhanced YG1041 (TA98 background) and YG1042 (TA100 background), with and without exogenous metabolic activation (S9). For Salmonella analyses, the results indicate that ten of the explosive compounds were mutagenic, and consistently elicited direct-acting, base-pair substitution activity. All three soil samples were also observed to be mutagenic, eliciting direct-acting, frameshift activity. Mutagenic potencies were significantly higher on the metabolically-enhanced strains for all compounds and soil samples. For Muta(TM)Mouse analyses on FE1 cells, the results indicate that the majority of explosive compounds did not exhibit mutagenic activity. All three soil samples elicited significant positive responses (PET 1 and PET 3 without S9, and PET 2 with S9), and although there is some evidence of a concentration-related trend, the responses were weak. Correspondence of the mutagenic activity observed with the two assay systems, for both the explosive compounds and soil samples, was negligible. The differential response is likely due to differences in metabolic capacity between the two assay systems. Furthermore, it is likely that there are unidentified compounds present in these soil samples that are, at least in part, responsible for the observed mutagenic activity. Additional testing of other explosive compounds, as well as soil samples from other military training sites, using a variety of in vitro and in vivo assays, is warranted in order to reliably estimate mutagenic hazard and subsequently assess risk to human health.
author McAllister, Jennifer E.
author_facet McAllister, Jennifer E.
author_sort McAllister, Jennifer E.
title The Mutagenic Activity of High-Energy Explosives; Contaminants of Concern at Military Training Sites
title_short The Mutagenic Activity of High-Energy Explosives; Contaminants of Concern at Military Training Sites
title_full The Mutagenic Activity of High-Energy Explosives; Contaminants of Concern at Military Training Sites
title_fullStr The Mutagenic Activity of High-Energy Explosives; Contaminants of Concern at Military Training Sites
title_full_unstemmed The Mutagenic Activity of High-Energy Explosives; Contaminants of Concern at Military Training Sites
title_sort mutagenic activity of high-energy explosives; contaminants of concern at military training sites
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20175
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