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Division of
Toxicology and Cancer Risk Factors, German Cancer Research Center, Im
Neuenheimer Feld 280, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany
Correspondence to: Dr R W Owen.
Accepted for publication 9 September 1999
BACKGROUND
Reactive
oxygen species are implicated in the aetiology of a range of human
diseases and there is increasing interest in their role in the
development of cancer.
AIM
To develop a
suitable method for the detection of reactive oxygen species produced
by the faecal matrix.
METHODS
A refined high
performance liquid chromatography system for the detection of reactive
oxygen species is described.
RESULTS
The
method allows baseline separation of the products of hydroxyl radical
attack on salicylic acid in the hypoxanthine/xanthine oxidase system,
namely 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid, 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid,
and catechol. The increased efficiency and precision of the method has
allowed a detailed evaluation of the dynamics of reactive oxygen
species generation in the faecal matrix. The data show that the faecal
matrix is capable of generating reactive oxygen species in abundance.
This ability cannot be attributed to the bacteria present, but rather
to a soluble component within the matrix. As yet, the nature of this
soluble factor is not entirely clear but is likely to be a reducing agent.
CONCLUSIONS
The
soluble nature of the promoting factor renders it amenable to
absorption, and circumstances may exist in which either it comes into
contact with either free or chelated iron in the colonocyte, leading to
direct attack on cellular DNA, or else it initiates lipid peroxidation
processes whereby membrane polyunsaturated fatty acids are attacked by
reactive oxygen species propagating chain reactions leading to the
generation of promutagenic lesions such as etheno based DNA adducts.
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