A quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) study of mutagenicity in several series of organic chemicals likely to be activated by cytochrome P450 enzymes

2003 
The results of quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) studies on six series of compounds exhibiting indirect mutagenic activity are reported. These findings demonstrate the importance of frontier orbital energies and, in some cases, frontier orbital electronic populations to overall mutagenicity in diverse polyaromatic hydrocarbons, benzidines and aminobiphenyls, benzonitrofurans, nitrogenous cooked-food mutagens, benzanthracenes, and chrysenes. The correlations between structural parameters and mutagenic potency vary from R=0.81 to R=0.97, and these findings are discussed in the context of possible molecular mechanisms of mutagenicity. In particular, it is generally regarded that cytochrome P450-mediated activation of polyaromatic hydrocarbons and their amino derivatives plays an important role in mutagenic activity. In this respect, it is apparent that enzymes of the cytochrome P4501 (CYP1) family are closely associated with the metabolic activation of polyaromatic mutagens and carcinogens via the generation of reactive intermediates (usually electrophilic in nature) that attack DNA. The findings presented in this study indicate that QSAR analyses on several series of compounds are consistent with the known evidence of procarcinogen activation mechanisms, particularly for polyaromatic hydrocarbons and their heterocyclic/amino derivatives, pointing to the importance of frontier orbital energy values in particular. Teratogenesis Carcinog. Mutagen. Suppl. 1:187–193, 2003. © 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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