Detection of ultra-low levels of DNA changes by drinking water: epidemiologically important finding.

J Biochem

Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Saitama University, 255 Shimo-Okubo, Sakura-Ku, Saitama-City, Saitama 338-8570, Japan and Department of Bioengineering, University of Tokyo 2-11-16, Yayoi, Bunkyo-Ku, Tokyo 113-8656, Japan

Published: February 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • The safety of drinking water is crucial for health, and detecting mutagens in water is important but challenging at low concentrations.
  • A new method called genome profiling-based mutation assay (GPMA) allows detection of mutagens at extremely low levels (ppb) without complicated concentration processes.
  • The study found that all tested tap water samples were significantly mutagenic, while mineral water was not, confirming previous reports of low-level mutagens like trihalomethanes in city tap water.

Article Abstract

The safety of drinking water is essential to our health. In this context, the mutagenicity of water needs to be checked strictly. However, from the methodological limit, the lower concentration (less than parts per million) of mutagenicity could not be detected, though there have been of interest in the effect of less concentration mutagens. Here, we describe a highly sensitive mutation assay that detects mutagens at the ppb level, termed genome profiling-based mutation assay (GPMA). This consists of two steps; (i) Escherichia coli culture in the medium with/without mutagens and (ii) Genome profiling (GP) method (an integrated method of random PCR, temperature gradient gel electrophoresis and computer-aided normalization). Owing to high sensitivity of this method, very low concentration of mutagens in tap water could be directly detected without introducing burdensome concentration processes, enabling rapid measurement of low concentration samples. Less expectedly, all of the tap waters tested (22 samples) were shown to be significantly mutagenic while mineral waters were not. Resultantly, this article informs two facts that the GPMA method is competent to measure the mutagenicity of waters directly and the experimental results supported the former reports that the city tap waters contain very low level of mutagenicity reagent trihalomethanes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jb/mvu072DOI Listing

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