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[Cancer Research 41, 4942-4946, December 1, 1981]
© 1981 American Association for Cancer Research

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Relationship of Rat Urinary Metabolites of N-Nitrosomethyl-N-alkylamine to Bladder Carcinogenesis1

George M. Singer2, William Lijinsky, Leonard Buettner and Gary A. McClusky

Chemical Carcinogenesis Program, Frederick Cancer Research Center, Frederick, Maryland 21701

Nitrosomethylalkylamines with chain lengths from C4 (n-butyl-) to C14 (n-tetradecyl-) were each administered to three rats at doses equimolar with 12 mg of the butyl compound. All of the compounds administered to rats at this dose, twice a week for 30 weeks, induced tumors in 100% of the animals. Some of the compounds with even-numbered alkyl chains induced bladder tumors, and a connection was sought with the metabolites of these excreted in urine. The pooled 24-hr urine was extracted with ethyl acetate before and after acidification to provide a neutral fraction and a fraction containing nitrosoamino acids. The fraction containing the acids was analyzed by capillary gas chromatography and by gas chromatographymass spectrometry after esterification with diazomethane; the neutral fraction was analyzed similarly. The principal metabolite of the nitrosamines with odd-numbered chains was found in the acidic fraction and was identifed as nitrosomethyl-2-carboxyethylamine. There were several acids in the mixtures derived from the nitrosamines with even-numbered chains, nitrososarcosine and nitrosomethyl-3-carboxypropylamine being the major components. There was no trend in the yields of the nitrosamino acids that could be correlated with the differences in carcinogenic potency between the nitrosamines; the maximum yield of acids was more than 30% (from the tetradecyl compound). The principal component of the neutral fraction (≤1% of the nitrosomethylalkylamine administered) was nitrosomethyl-2-oxopropylamine. The yield of this compound increased with increasing length of the even-numbered chain nitrosamines.

1 This work was supported by Contract NO1-CO-75380 with the National Cancer Institute, NIH.

2 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed.

Received 2/20/81. Accepted 9/ 3/81.







HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS
Cancer Research Clinical Cancer Research
Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention Molecular Cancer Therapeutics
Molecular Cancer Research Cancer Prevention Research
Cancer Prevention Journals Portal Cancer Reviews Online
Annual Meeting Education Book Meeting Abstracts Online
Copyright © 1981 by the American Association for Cancer Research.