Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2601139 Toxicology Letters 2009 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Occupational exposure to styrene was studied in 34 workers employed in the production of fiberglass-reinforced plastic sheets and compared to 29 unexposed healthy controls. We evaluated genotoxic effects induced by occupational styrene exposure in lymphocytes by alkaline version of the comet assay to detect single-strand breaks (SSBs), DNA oxidation products (formamido pyrimidine glycosilase (Fpg)- and endonuclease (Endo III)-sensitive sites) and DNA repair kinetics studies, as well as the neutral version of comet assay for DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). An innovative aspect of this study was the use of immuno-comet assay, a new technique that recognizes DSBs with specific antibody by DAPI/FITC method. The battery of parameters included markers of external and internal exposure. Exposed workers showed significant high levels of SSBs (p < 0.0001) and DSBs (p < 0.0001) in neutral- and immuno-comet assay. A drastic decrease in DNA repair activity as compared to controls was observed (180 min vs. 35 min). Styrene workplace concentration significantly correlated with alkaline comet parameters (TM, p = 0.013; TI, p = 0.008), in negative with TL (p = 0.022), and with DNA-base oxidation (TM Endo III, p = 0.048 and TI Endo III, p = 0.028). There was a significant negative correlation between urinary metabolites (MA + PGA) and TM Endo III (p = 0.032) and TI Endo III (p = 0.017).

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