Peroxisome proliferators comprise a structurally diverse class of chemicals
. Some of the members of this class show evidence of genetic toxicity (most
evidently the in vitro clastogen Wyeth 14,643, WY), while others do not (m
ost evidently methyl clofenapate, MCP). When attempting to understand the m
echanism of rodent hepatocarcinogenesis of this class of chemicals the poss
ible role of genetic toxicity should be assessed on a class-wide basis, i.e
., if just one peroxisome proliferator is shown to be unequivocally inactiv
e as a genetic toxin, genetic toxicity cannot be implicated in the carcinog
enic activity of peroxisome proliferators as a class. In an earlier paper,
we established MCP as inactive in a range of in vitro and in vivo genetic t
oxicity assays. However, the top dose level of MCP that could be tested for
induction of chromosome aberrations (clastogenicity) in human lymphocytes
and CHO cells was limited by the relative insolubility of the test agent in
the assay medium. Methyl clofenapate was not toxic up to a dose that produ
ced precipitate, so cannot be directly compared with WY, which induced aber
rations only at toxic dose levels. In the present paper, we have evaluated
the clastogenicity of the carcinogenic peroxisome proliferator nafenopin (N
AF) at dose levels up to those that are toxic to CHO cells, and found no ev
idence of chromosome aberration induction. These data isolate further the g
enetic toxicity of WY from other peroxisome proliferators, and increase con
fidence in the proposal that genetic toxicity does not play a critical role
in the hepatocarcinogenicity of peroxisome proliferators. (C) 2000 Elsevie
r Science B.V. All rights reserved.