4.7 Article

Salivary leucocytes as suitable biomatrix for the comet assay in human biomonitoring studies

Journal

ARCHIVES OF TOXICOLOGY
Volume 95, Issue 6, Pages 2179-2187

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00204-021-03038-8

Keywords

Comet assay; Frozen samples; Human biomonitoring; Salivary leucocytes

Categories

Funding

  1. Xunta de Galicia [ED431B 2019/02]
  2. Ministerio de Educacion, Cultura y Deporte [BEAGAL18/00142]
  3. COST Action [CA15132]

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This study validated the use of salivary leucocytes as a biomatrix for the comet assay and demonstrated the suitability of frozen salivary leucocytes for displaying DNA damage. The results show that salivary leucocytes can be employed as an alternative or complement to blood samples in genetic damage detection, making them a convenient sample for large biomonitoring studies.
Peripheral blood leucocytes (PBL) have been traditionally used to investigate DNA damage by the comet assay in population studies, but validating alternative non-invasive samples would expand the application of this assay in human biomonitoring. The objectives of this study were (i) to test the validity of salivary leucocytes as a proper biomatrix for the comet assay, (ii) to evaluate the ability of this approach to detect different types of primary and oxidative DNA damage, and (iii) to determine whether frozen salivary leucocytes are still suitable for displaying those types of DNA damage. Fresh and frozen leucocytes isolated from saliva samples (six healthy non-smoking volunteers), were exposed to four genotoxic agents inducing different types of DNA damage, both primary (methyl methanesulfonate, actinomycin-D, ultraviolet radiation) and oxidative (potassium bromate), and standard or enzyme-modified comet assay was conducted. Results were compared with those obtained from PBL. Cells exposed to the four genotoxic agents showed dose-dependent increases of primary and oxidative DNA damage, demonstrating the suitability of all these samples to detect genetic damage from different origin. When comparing baseline levels of DNA damage, just a slight significant increase in primary DNA damage was observed in frozen salivary leucocytes regarding the other biomatrices, but similar results were obtained regarding sensitivity to DNA damage induction by all agents tested. This study demonstrates that salivary leucocytes can be employed in comet assay as an alternative or complement to blood samples. Frozen salivary leucocytes were proved to be a very convenient sample in large biomonitoring studies.

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