Publications by authors named "Camus A"

The main polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon-inducible cytochrome P450 was studied in lung tissue from 57 lung cancer patients by immunohistochemistry, using a monoclonal antibody (1-7-1) that recognizes P450IA1 and P450IA2 isozymes. The intensity of immunostaining was compared with the pulmonary activity of a P450IA1-dependent enzyme, aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase (AHH), and with P450IA2-related metabolic activity estimated from the ratio of caffeine metabolites in urine. Immunostaining was not observed in peripheral lung tissue of nonsmokers or ex-smokers but was seen in the bronchiolar and alveolar epithelium of all patients who were smokers and had a peripheral carcinoma (16/16) and of 60% (10/17) of those who had a bronchial carcinoma.

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Cigarette smoking is the strongest risk factor for lung cancer, but genetically determined variations in the activities of pulmonary enzyme that metabolize tobacco-derived carcinogens may affect individual risk. To investigate whether these enzymes (e.g.

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Benzo[a]pyrene (B[a]P)-tetrols formed after stereoselective cytochrome P450-dependent metabolism from (-)-trans-7,8-dihydroxy-7,8- dihydrobenzo[a]pyrene [(-)-B[a]P-7, 8-diol] by lung microsomes (n = 19) and peripheral blood lymphocytes (n = 13) from lung cancer patients were measured, and the effect of smoking explored. B[a]P-tetrols were quantified by an HPLC/fluorescence assay with a detection limit of approximately 300 attomol, after incubation with peripheral blood lymphocytes or microsomes from lung cancer patients who were current cigarette smokers, ex-smokers and non-smokers. In lymphocytes from these subjects, high, medium and low metabolic activities respectively for (-)-B[a]P-7,8-diol to tetrol conversion were found, but there was no statistically significant difference between smokers, ex-smokers and non-smokers.

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Individual variations in activity of pulmonary enzymes that metabolize tobacco-derived carcinogens may affect an individual's cancer risk from cigarette smoking. To investigate whether some of these enzymes (e.g.

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In order to compare pulmonary DNA adducts and aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase (AHH) activity, we have measured these two parameters in non-neoplastic surgical lung parenchymal samples from four ex-smokers and 19 smokers, out of 20 patients operated for lung cancer, and three for nonmalignant lung diseases. DNA adducts were determined by scintillation counting after 32P-postlabelling analysis. The microsomal fractions of the same lung specimen were assayed for AHH activity by a fluorometric method.

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Groups of rats, either dosed with N-nitrosodiethylamine (NDEA) for 10 weeks (from the age of 7 to 17 weeks) or untreated, were fed diets containing either 2% (low fat, LF) or 30% polyunsaturated fat (high fat, HF) on an equicaloric basis from 5 weeks until rats were 43 weeks old. Biochemical parameters were measured during and at the end of the experiment in various organs, blood, urine and exhaled air, for correlation with the presence or absence of tumors. The HF diet tended to increase the number of hepatic tumors induced by NDEA, while the number of extrahepatic tumors was higher in rats fed on the LF diet; also the overall tumor incidence was higher in the LF group.

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A specific member of the cytochrome P450 superfamily of enzymes, designated P450IA (including 2 isozymes, P450IA1 and P450IA2), which is involved in the metabolic activation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and aromatic amines, was studied in lung tissue from 25 lung cancer patients by immunohistochemistry. The pulmonary activity of a P450IA1-dependent enzyme, aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase (AHH), from the same patients was also measured. Cytochrome P450IA was localized principally in the peripheral airways in alveolar epithelium of types I and II and in ciliated columnar and cuboidal bronchiolar epithelium.

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Differences in susceptibility to chemical carcinogenesis between rodent strains and species have been linked to variations in genetically-determined mixed function oxidase activities. In order to verify whether such variations also determine the susceptibility of individual animals of the same strain to a chemical carcinogen, outbred male Wistar rats were administered diethylnitrosamine (DEN) (1, 2, or 3 mg/kg) five times a week for 20 weeks. The relationship was examined between the outcome (i.

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A new sensitive fluorometric assay was established to measure the stereospecific formation of benzo[alpha]pyrene tetrols formed after cytochrome P450-dependent metabolism of (--)-7,8-dihydroxy-7,8- dihydrobenzo[a]pyrene by human hair follicles. This simple assay requires three human hair follicles and a low (0.5-2.

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Previous experiments have shown that a high fat diet changes incidence and tumour sites by N-nitroso-dialkylamines. The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of high and low fat diet on DNA methylation 6 weeks after the end of a chronic N-nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA) exposure (total dose 150 mg/kg). The concentration of O6-methyldeoxyguanosine (O6-MedG) in liver DNA was measured by immunoassays.

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Male rats were fed, from weaning onwards, either 2, 12.5 or 25% sunflower seed oil (polyunsaturated fatty acids, PSA) or lard (saturated fatty acids, SFA) and from the age of 15 weeks subgroups were given N-nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA) for 30 weeks. Blood levels of lipids were assayed and during the study exhaled ethane was measured as an index of in vivo lipid peroxidation (LPO).

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Lipid peroxidation (LPO) was studied in lung tissues of patients with lung cancer (LC, n = 37) or nonlung cancer (NLC, n = 13) and its relationships with the smoking habits and the degree of airway obstruction were investigated. Specimens of peripheral lung parenchyma, free of tumor tissue, were taken and the malondialdehyde (MDA) content was measured in the S-12 fractions. Airway obstruction was assessed by flow-volume curves, and data were expressed as percentage of the predicted values.

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Processing of the polyprotein precursor pro-dermorphin generates two distantly related D-amino acid-containing peptides, dermorphin and dermenkephalin, which are among the most selective high affinity agonists described, respectively, for the mu- and delta-opioid receptors. Dermenkephalin, Tyr-D-Met-Phe-His-Leu-Met-Asp-NH2, is a linear, potentially flexible peptide devoid of structural homology with either enkephalins, endorphins, or dynorphins and, as such, represents a useful tool for identifying determinants of high affinity and selective binding of opioids to the delta-receptor. A series of selected dermenkephalin analogs and homologs was investigated for affinity at the mu- and delta-sites in the brain.

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Dermorphin and dermenkephalin are D-aminoacid containing peptides generated from processing of the plurifonctional biosynthetic precursor pro-dermorphin. Dermorphin, Tyr-D-Ala-Phe-Gly-Tyr-Pro-Ser-NH2 (DRM) and dermenkephalin, Tyr-D-Met-Phe-His-Leu-Met-Asp-NH2 (DREK), are among the most selective and potent agonists described respectively for the mu- and delta-opioid receptors. In order to identify determinants of selectivity and high-affinity receptor binding of dermorphin and dermenkephalin, a series of analogs was investigated for their affinity at the mu- and delta-receptors in the brain.

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The pulmonary metabolism of xenobiotics was investigated by measuring the glutathione content and the activity of the aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase, epoxide hydrolase, glutathione S-transferase, and uridine 5' -diphosphoglucuronosyl transferase enzymes in S-12 fractions of bronchial tree and peripheral lung parenchyma obtained at surgery from 21 patients. In parallel, the same preparations were used to assess either the activation of promutagens, i.e.

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Endogenous cholecystokinin immunoreactivity released by depolarization of slices of rat cerebral cortex undergoes extensive degradation (85% of released immunoreactivity) before reaching the incubation medium. In order to identify the responsible peptidases, a large number of inhibitors of the four catalytic classes were tested for their protective effects. Inhibitors of metallopeptidases (bestatin, amastatin, puromycin, Thiorphan, captopril, o-phenantroline), thiol-peptidases, (leupeptin, antipain, p-hydroxymercuribenzoate) or carboxyl-peptidases (pepstatin) had generally low if any protective effect.

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The participation of a serine endopeptidase, previously shown to be involved in endogenous cholecystokinin inactivation [Rose, Camus and Schwartz (1989) Neuroscience 29, 583-594], in the hydrolysis of various exogenous cholecystokinin peptides was studied with slices from rat cerebral cortex. In order to protect intermediate fragments from further degradation and mimick experimental conditions in this previous study, most experiments were performed in the presence of Thiorphan, an enkephalinase inhibitor, and bestatin, an aminopeptidase inhibitor, which did not significantly affect the rate of cholecystokinin-8 hydrolysis. All peptide fragments formed after incubation of cholecystokinin-8, non-sulphated cholecystokinin-8, cholecystokinin-6, cholecystokinin-5, cholecystokinin-4 or Asp-Tyr-Met-Gly-Trp were identified by isocratic high-performance liquid chromatography in several systems, fluorescence spectra and/or amino acid analysis.

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A serine endopeptidase was characterized as a major inactivating enzyme for endogenous cholecystokinin (CCK) in brain. CCK-8 released by depolarization of slices of rat cerebral cortex, as measured by its immunoreactivity (CCK-ir), undergoes extensive degradation (approximately 85% of the amount released) before reaching the incubation medium. However, recovery of CCK-ir is enhanced up to 3-fold in the presence of serine-alkylating reagents (i.

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Lung tissue specimens were taken during surgery from middle-aged men with either lung cancer (LC, n = 54) or a nonneoplastic lung disease (n = 20). Aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase (AHH), 7-ethoxycoumarin O-deethylase (ECDE), epoxide hydrolase (EH), glutathione S-transferase (GST), and UDP-glucuronosyltransferase (UDPGT) activities and glutathione and malondialdehyde contents were determined in 12,000 X g supernatant fractions from nontumorous parenchymal tissues. Interindividual differences in enzyme activities ranged from 11- to 440-fold, and glutathione content varied by 17-fold; the values showed unimodal distributions.

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Sister chromatid exchange (SCE) frequencies in peripheral lymphocytes are a frequently used endpoint to indicate exposures to genotoxins in groups of humans. The aim of this study was to ascertain, in an experimental design, whether or not SCE rates have any association with the risk of cancer at the individual level in rats exposed to a known carcinogen. Individual SCE rates were determined in three consecutive analyses in cultured blood lymphocytes of 50 adult male Wistar rats.

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We have investigated the generation of prooxidant state shortly after administration of N-nitrosamines (NA) to rats. N-Nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA) was found to increase ethane exhalation (EE) rapidly in a dose-related manner. EE remained elevated for several days after single doses of NDMA.

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The effect of dietary lipids alone or in combination with an administered carcinogen, N-nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA), on whole body lipid peroxidation was studied in rats in vivo. Groups of rats were fed diets containing 2%, 12.5%, or 25% of either saturated or polyunsaturated fat.

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To investigate the role of carcinogenic chemicals as a possible cause for oxidative damage, rats were treated with N-nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA) and various measures of lipid peroxidation were followed. As an indication of enhanced peroxidative processes in vivo, NMDA treatment produced rapidly an increase in the rate of ethane exhalation. A single i.

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The precise distribution of dopamine receptors has been studied autoradiographically in the normal human brain using [3H]N-n-propylnorapomorphine ([3H]NPA) as a ligand. Preliminary experiments aimed at optimizing the binding assay conditions revealed that preincubation washing of caudate nucleus sections was a prerequisite to obtain a good ratio of specific to non-specific binding. The binding of [3H]NPA to caudate-putamen sections was saturable, stereospecific, reversible, of high affinity (Kd = 0.

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