AI Article Synopsis

  • Peroxynitrite, formed from nitric oxide and superoxide during immune responses, may enhance benzene's genotoxic effects through hydroxylation and nitration processes.
  • Analysis of benzene reacted with peroxynitrite revealed the creation of several phenolic compounds, showing a direct correlation with the concentrations of benzene and peroxynitrite.
  • In experiments with human neutrophils, the presence of metabolites from benzene exposure became evident only after pre-treatment with an inflammatory agent, suggesting that inflammation may elevate benzene's carcinogenic potential due to increased peroxynitrite production.

Article Abstract

Peroxynitrite, the reaction product of nitric oxide (NO.) and superoxide anion (O2.-) produced during immune activation by a variety of inflammatory cells, may contribute to genotoxicity of benzene through its ability to carry out hydroxylation and nitration. After exposure of benzene to synthesised peroxynitrite, phenol, nitrophenols (p-nitrophenol, o-nitrophenol and m-nitrophenol) and nitrobenzene were identified in the reaction mixture by HPLC separation and single UV wavelength and diode array detection. The formation of phenol, nitrophenols and nitrobenzene showed a linear relationship with both benzene and peroxynitrite concentrations. The molar ratio for phenol/(nitrobenzene and nitrophenols) was approximately 9/5 with a total product yield of 14% hydroxylated and nitrated products as based on peroxynitrite. The physiological relevance of the chemical reaction between benzene and peroxynitrite was tested by detecting the reaction products in human neutrophils (2.5 x 10(7)cells/ml) incubated with 10 mM benzene for 25 min. The concentration of phenol and p-nitrophenol were found to be 1.29+/-0.22 and 1.56+/-0.61 microM (mean+/-SD) in the incubation medium of the neutrophils pretreated with phorbol myristate acetate (500 nM) for 5 min, respectively, whereas no metabolites were detected if the neutrophils were not pretreated. Nitrated aromatic compounds are known to be more carcinogenic than the parent compounds. It is reported that acute and chronic infection increases the risk of cancer at various sites; and that anti-inflammatory agents decrease benzene myelotoxicity. We suggest that the increased production of peroxynitrite during chronic inflammation combined with benzene exposure may increase the carcinogenicity of benzene by a mechanism that includes the formation of metabolites from the chemical reaction between benzene and peroxynitrite. Thus, peroxynitrite mediated hydroxylation and nitration of benzene during immune activation represent a novel in vivo mechanism for generation of proximal carcinogens of benzene.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/10715769809070805DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

benzene peroxynitrite
16
benzene
13
peroxynitrite
9
aromatic compounds
8
immune activation
8
hydroxylation nitration
8
phenol nitrophenols
8
chemical reaction
8
reaction benzene
8
neutrophils pretreated
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!