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Product Design

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Date: 1994 (est.)
Length: 1 page
2028899784
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Hypothesis
Health effects
Design changes which have measurably altered health effects of cigarette smoke, both for smokers and nonsmokers.
Measuring overall toxicity
Development of scientifically valid protocols and methods for testing the health and toxicity effects of changes in product design.
Toxicity and consumer intake
Development of scientifically valid procedures for measuring biological activity and neurological effects of nicotine and smoke constituents.
Keyword
Animal testing
Dose-response
Lower respiratory tract (Lungs, bronchial tubes)
Upper respiratory tract (Mouth, throat)
Smoke Constituent
NNK (4-Methylnitrosamino-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone)
Subject
health effects
Metabolites (Measures)
nicotine technology
Test/Animal Subject (Testing)
Test/Smoke Constituents (Testing)

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Page 1: nhf79e00
Seite 7 10/AU,TI,SO,AB/103 (Item 103 from file: 154) AU- Castonguay A; Allaire L; Charest M; Rossignol G; Boutet M TI- metabolism of 4-(methylnitrosamino)-l-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone by hamster respiratory tissues cultured with ellagic acid [published erratum appears in Cancer Lett 1989 Sep 15;47(1-2):1611 :>S0- <JN> Cancer Lett S0- <VO> 46 (2) p93-105 :SO- <PY> Jul 15 1989 : AB- Previous studies have shown that the nicotine-derived N-nitrosamine-4-(methylnitrosamino)-l-(3-pyridyl)-l-butanone (NNK) indu ces tracheal papillomas and lung carcinomas in Syrian golden hamsters. In this study, we showed that hamster tracheal and lung explants metabolize NNK by alpha-carbon hydroxylation, pyridine N-oxidation and carbonyl reduction. alpha-Methylene hydroxylation and methyl hydroxylation yield methylating and pyridyloxobutylating intermediates, respectively. Levels of binding of the pyridyloxobutyl moiety to explant proteins was 200 times lower than the total amount of metabolites formed' by alpha-carbon hydroxylation and released in the culture medium. Viable and heat-treated lung explants were cultured with [CH3-3H]NNK or [5-3H]NNK. In viable explants, the R A T e of bind- ing of the methyl group was 2-fold higher than the R A T e of binding of pyridyloxobutyl moiety of NNK. Heat treatment reduced 54-fold the binding of [CH3-3H] NNK but only 5-fold the binding [5-3H]NNK. Tracheal explants were cultured with [5-3H]NNK (5.6 microM) and ellagic acid (EA, 10 microM), a naturally-occurring plant phenol. EA did not inhibit any of the three metabolic pathways nor the binding of the pyridyloxobutyl moiety to explant proteins. Lung explants were cultured with NNK (3.7 microM) and with or without EA (100 mi.croM). EA inhibits alpha-carbon hydroxylation by 19% and the overall metabolism of NNK by 6%. Formation of 7-methylguanine and 06-methylguanine was observed in lung explants and the levels of both adducts were reduced by EA (100 microM). These results suggest that high concentrations of EA modulate the metabolism of NNK and that NNK does not necessarily require enzymatic activation to bind to protein.

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