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  • Identification of a new mutagen, 4,4'-diamino-3,3'-dichloro-5-nitrobiphenyl, in river water flowing through an industrial area in Wakayama, Japan.

Identification of a new mutagen, 4,4'-diamino-3,3'-dichloro-5-nitrobiphenyl, in river water flowing through an industrial area in Wakayama, Japan.

Mutation research (2008-07-19)
Takeshi Ohe, Tetsushi Watanabe, Yuki Nonouchi, Tomohiro Hasei, Yukiko Agou, Mayumi Tani, Keiji Wakabayashi
ABSTRACT

3,3'-Dichlorobenzidine (DCB), which has been assigned as a possible carcinogen to humans (Group 2B) by IARC, is produced as a raw material in the manufacture of polymers and dye intermediates. In our previous paper, we identified DCB as an indirect-acting mutagenic constituent in the water concentrates from the Waka River, which flows through an industrial area in Wakayama, Japan. In this study, we have identified a novel mutagen in the water samples from the Waka River. Organic chemicals in the river water were adsorbed to blue rayon at the site where effluents from chemical plants and a sewage plant were discharged into the river. The adsorbate was highly mutagenic in Salmonella YG1024 in the presence and absence of S9 mix, inducing 440,000 and 170,000 revertants/g blue rayon equivalent, respectively. Two mutagenic fractions, which accounted for 18% and 12% of the total mutagenicity of the water concentrate in YG1024 with S9 mix, were separated by HPLC with a reversed-phase column following Sephadex LH20 column chromatography. Both fractions were further separated by HPLC using reversed-phase columns. On the basis of spectral analysis and co-chromatography using an authentic chemical standard, one mutagen in the former fraction was identified as DCB and one mutagen in the latter fraction was deduced to be a novel chemical, a 5-nitro derivative of DCB (5-nitro-DCB; 4,4'-diamino-3,3'-dichloro-5-nitrobiphenyl). 5-Nitro-DCB showed strong mutagenicity in YG1024 especially with S9 mix, inducing 24,200 revertants/microg. 5-Nitro-DCB was detected in water concentrates in the range from less than detection limit to 6.9 microg/g of blue rayon. DCB was also detected in the range from 13.2 to 104 micro/g of blue rayon. These results demonstrate that Waka River water might be continually contaminated with the indirect-acting mutagens DCB and 5-nitro-DCB as major mutagenic constituents of the river water.