The use of rec-bacteria for testing of carcinogenic substances.

Mutat Res, 1977/4;46(2):53-6.

Ichinotsubo D, Mower HF, Setliff J, Mandel M

PMID: 327303

Impact factor: 3.151

Abstract
A series of rec-Escherichia coli strains were tested for their sensitivity to four known carcinogenic compounds by examination of a zone of inhibited bacterial growth around a central well containing the test chemical. The mutants recA-, recB-, recC-, and recA- recB- recC- were all more sensitive to the mutagens than the parental strain AB1157. The recB- recC- strain was examined with a larger series of compounds and was found to respond to many of the substances in a similar way as the Salmonella typhimurium strains of Ames but with some notable exceptions. Nitrosamines, with rat liver microsomal activation, could be detected at lower levels and a group of aromatic amino compounds failed to react with these rec-E. coli. An unusual feature of these rec-mutants is their sensitivity to mixtures of nitrosamines and 2-acetyl amino-fluorene in the absence of microsomal activation.
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