In vitro mammalian mutagenesis as a model for genetic lesions in human cancer.

1992 
Abstract Recently in vitro assays of mutagenesis have been criticized as being poorly predictive of long-term in vivo rodent assays of carcinogenicity. Questions have also been raised concerning the relevance of rodent assays to human risk. In vitro assays using mammalian cells can detect most types of genetic lesions thought to be important in human malignant disease. Molecular and cytogenetic analyses of mutations induced by a variety of genotoxic compounds at the heterozygous thymidine kinase locus in mouse lymphoma cells indicate that this in vitro assay does indeed register the range of genetic lesions recently found in a wide variety of human tumors. The types and complexity of the induced lesions are reflected in mutant colony phenotype in a compound-specific fashion. These studies point to the use of appropriate in vitro mammalian mutagenesis assays as new model systems for dissecting the genetic lesions important in human carcinogenesis, and as a means of determining the potential for compounds to induce such lesions.
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