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Suitability of salivary leucocytes to assess DNA repair ability in human biomonitoring studies by the challenge-comet assay

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Abstract(s)

The challenge-comet assay is a simple but effective approach that provides a quantitative and functional determination of DNA repair ability, and allows to monitor the kinetics of repair process. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) are the cells most frequently employed in human biomonitoring studies using the challenge-comet assay, but having a validated alternative of non-invasive biomatrix would be highly convenient for certain population groups and circumstances. The objective of this study was to validate the use of salivary leucocytes in the challenge-comet assay. Leucocytes were isolated from saliva samples and challenged (either in fresh or after cryopreservation) with three genotoxic agents acting by different action mechanisms: bleomycin, methyl methanesulfonate, and ultraviolet radiation. Comet assay was performed just after treatment and at other three additional time points, in order to study repair kinetics. The results obtained demonstrated that saliva leucocytes were as suitable as PBMC for assessing DNA damage of different nature that was efficiently repaired over the evaluated time points, even after 5 months of cryopreservation (after a 24 h stimulation with PHA). Furthermore, a new parameter to determine the efficacy of the repair process, independent of the initial amount of damage induced, is proposed, and recommendations to perform the challenge-comet assay with salivary leucocytes depending on the type of DNA repair to be assessed are suggested. Validation studies are needed to verify whether the method is reproducible and results reliable and comparable among laboratories and studies.
Highlights: Objective: to validate the use of salivary leucocytes in the challenge-comet assay; DNA damage of different nature was repaired over the evaluated time points; Results demonstrated that salivary leucocytes were as suitable as PBMC for this assay; Results were similar in fresh and after 5 months of cryopreservation; Recommendations are given depending on the type of DNA repair to be assessed.

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Keywords

Challenge-Comet Assay DNA Damage Response Frozen Samples Human Biomonitoring Salivary Leucocytes Genotoxicidade Ambiental

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Citation

Chemosphere. 2022 Nov;307(Pt 4):136139. doi: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2022.136139. Epub 2022 Aug 22

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