Benzo(c)fluorene

Benzo[c]fluorene
Names
IUPAC name
7H-Benzo[c]fluorene
Identifiers
205-12-9
ChEBI CHEBI:82403
ChemSpider 8796
KEGG C19344
Properties
C17H12
Molar mass 216.28 g·mol−1
Density 1.185 g/cm3
Melting point 125–127 °C (257–261 °F; 398–400 K) predicted
Boiling point 398 °C (748 °F; 671 K) predicted
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
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Infobox references

Benzo[c]fluorene is a polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) with mutagenic activity. It is a component of coal tar, cigarette smoke and smog and thought to be a major contributor to its carcinogenic properties.[1] The mutagenicity of benzo[c]fluorene is mainly attributed to formation of metabolites that are reactive and capable of forming DNA adducts.[2] According to the KEGG it is a group 3 carcinogen (not classifiable as to its carcinogenicity to humans).[3] Other names for benzo[c]fluorene are 7H-benzo[c]fluorene, 3,4-benzofluorene, and NSC 89264.[4][5]

Structure and reactivity

The structure of benzo[c]fluorene is depicted in the infobox on the right. It is an aromatic fluorene-derived molecule with an extra benzene ring. This benzene ring is attached to carbon 3 and 4 of the fluorene-derived molecule. The 3D structure of benzo[c]fluorene is depicted in the infobox on the right as well. It is mostly flat, because it consists of 3 aromatic rings. Only the 2 hydrogen atoms on the 5 ring are oriented into the 3D plane.

Synthesis

An example of a DNA adduct (at center), in this case the metabolite of benzo[a]pyrene, another PAH.[6]

Benzo[c]fluorene occurs naturally in tar, but can also be manually synthesized in a four step process, which is depicted in the picture below. The starting product is indanone (1). This is brominated in a substitution reaction to 3-bromoindanone (2) using the reagent N-bromosuccinimide. This substance is dehydrobrominated to 2H-inden-1-one (3) using the reagent triethylamine. Benzo[c]fluorenone-9 (4) is generated by self-condensation of 2H-inden-1-one, when heated. The final step is reduction of this compound with hydrazine hydrate, generating benzo[c]fluorene (5).[7]

Synthesis of benzo[c]fluorene

Metabolism

In general PAH carcinogenesis involves activation by the enzyme P-450 to diol epoxide metabolites with an epoxide ring in the bay or fjord region. These diol epoxide metabolites are reactive and capable of forming DNA adducts (see the image on the right). While benzo[c]fluorene does not have a bay or fjord region it does undergo a similar transformation with a pseudo-bay region that reacts instead. The type of cytochrome P 450 involved is thought to be CYP1A1.[8]

The biotransformation is depicted in the image below. First benzo[c]fluorene (1) is transformed into trans-3,4-dihydrodiol (2). This substance is transformed by CYP1A1 into the highly carcinogenic metabolites anti-diolepoxide (3) and syn-diolepoxide (4).[2]

Metabolism of benzo[c]fluorene

ADME of benzo[c]fluorene and PAHs in general

Absorption

Benzo[c]fluorene and PAHs in general are mostly absorbed via ingestion, inhalation, and dermal contact. Also, depending on the vehicle (transport medium) in which the PAHs are located, the percentages of absorption can differ. Ingestion of benzo[c]fluorene makes it a very potent lung tumorigen [9] In particular, benzo[c]fluorene is better absorbed in the lungs.[10]

Distribution

Once it is absorbed, benzo[c]fluorene enters the lymph, circulates in the blood and is metabolized. The distribution of PAHs depends on their lipophilicity and probably benzo[c]fluorene can easily cross the cell membrane, because of this lipophilicity. This has been proven for similar substances like fluorene and fluoranthene, but has yet to be investigated for benzo[c]fluorene.[11]

Metabolism and excretion

Benzo[c]fluorene is mainly metabolized by the CYP enzymes in the liver. There is also evidence that a larger number of metabolites are formed in the lungs, which might explain why benzo[c]fluorene is such a potent lung tumorigen. It is possible that benzo[c]fluorene may have a unique (and still unknown) mechanism of activation or transportation, which explains why the lungs are targeted.[9] The initial steps of the metabolism, the phase I biotransformation, are described above.

For many PAHs it has been proven that they are conjugated, in phase II, with either glucuronide, sulfate or glutathione. More research on this topic is necessary for benzo[c]fluorene. Glucuronide and sulfate conjugates of PAH metabolites are generally excreted in the bile and urine. Glutathione conjugates are further metabolized to mercapturic acids in the kidney and are excreted in the urine. The hydroxylated metabolites of the PAHs are excreted in human urine both as free hydroxylated metabolites and as hydroxylated metabolites conjugated to glucuronic acid and sulfate.[8]

Mechanism of action

The carcinogenic metabolites of benzo[c]fluorene bind to DNA which involves the opening of the epoxide ring in benzo[c]fluorene anti- and syn-diolepoxide. The benzo[c]fluorene metabolites bind in a yet unknown fashion to the DNA.

When a DNA adduct forms at a site critical to the regulation of cell differentiation or growth it can cause cancer. If an aberration in the DNA is not well repaired by the NER, a mutation will occur during cell replication. In addition, it is known that cells affected most, appear to be those with rapid replication, such as bone marrow, skin, and lung tissue, whereas, tissues with slower turnover rate like the liver are less susceptible.[1][2]

Exposure to benzo[c]fluorene in vivo leads to the induction of mainly lung tumors where it acts as an DNA adductor. Lung tumors arise after topical application in mice with coal tar, but also when it is ingested. Next to its involvement in lung tumors, benzo[c]fluorene and its metabolites are expected to be involved in the formation of different tumors. The formation of DNA adducts in human breast tumors, hepatoma and colon adenocarcinoma by these metabolites has been shown in vitro. These adducts and the ones that were observed in lung tumors of mice were similar which strengthens the hypothesis that human cells are capable of forming the mutagenic metabolites.[9][12]

Environmental exposure

Benzo[c]fluorene belongs to a group of compounds called polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). PAHs and their derivatives are ubiquitous in the environment and they are produced in several industrial and combustion processes.[13]

Workers in industries or trades using or producing coal, crude oil or coal products are at highest risk for PAH exposure. In general, the PAHs are formed during these industrial processes by incomplete combustion or pyrolysis of organic matter. The higher the temperature the more PAHs are formed.[14]

Some of these PAHs, such as benzo[c]fluorene, are carcinogens and mutagens and act as possible endocrine disruptors. To estimate the health effects that arise from exposure to PAHs and benzo[c]fluorene it is necessary to determine the concentration of these compounds in the atmosphere. This was done in a study by Morisaki et al. 2016. They compared the concentrations of different PAHs including benzo[c]fluorene in Beijing and Kanazawa in winter and summer.

Concentrations of benzo[c]fluorene and some other PAHs in air in Beijing and Kanazawa and the relative potency of these PAHs.[13]
RPF
Beijing
Kanazawa
winter
summer
winter
summer
pg/m3
BaPeq
pg/m3
BaPeq
pg/m3
BaPeq
pg/m3
BaPeq
Fluorene
0.08
46000±28000
3.7
550±140
0.04
160±72
0.013
57±22
0.005
B[a]P
1
27000±20000
26.9
960±320
0.96
93±49
0.093
99±18
0.099
B[c]F
20
11000±6100
215.5
40±12
0.79
13±5
0.254
2.7±0.52
0.053
...
Total
360000±23000
292.8
8500±2100
3.05
1600±710
0.58
890±170
0.29

The researchers corrected for the relative mutagenicity of compounds compared to benzo[a]pyrene.[15] The results of this are presented as BaPeq, which equals the concentration of the compound, times the potency of the compound compared to benzo[a]pyrene (RPF). Although the concentrations measured of benzo[c]fluorene are quite low, when corrected for mutagenicity, benzo[c]fluorene is the most important PAH of those that were measured in terms of possible health risks.[13]

General toxicity - side effects

Exposure to benzo[c]fluorene and PAHs in general causes numerous side-effects. The main effect of exposure is that it can induce cancer. This involves cancers of the skin, lung and bladder. Other effects of chronic exposure to PAH involve the pulmonary, gastrointestinal, renal and dermatological systems. Data from animal tests indicates that certain PAHs may induce effects on the hematopoietic system, others may have immunotoxic potential or may cause skin or eye irritation. On top of that, PAHs can cross the placenta and have adverse effects on the development of the embryo and fetus.[8]

Signs and symptoms

There are almost no symptoms of acute exposure to PAHs, because they cause no acute toxicity. After chronic exposure, PAHs do cause signs and symptoms of toxicity. All health effects associated with chronic exposure to PAHs are in table 4. Exposure to PAHs causes adverse side-effects on skin, eyes, respiratory system, gastrointestinal system, hematopoietic system and genitourinary system.[8]

Health effects associated with chronic exposure to PAHs
Organ Effect
Skin Redness of skin (erythema), burns and warts.
Eyes Irritation and photosensitivity
Respiratory system Cough, bronchitis and bronchogenic cancer
Gastrointestinal system Leukoplakia, buccal-pharyngeal cancer and lip cancer
Hematopoietic system Leukemia and lymphoma
Genitourinary system Hematuria, kidney cancer and bladder cancer

Treatment

Treatment of exposure to PAHs generally focuses on treating the symptoms that it causes like cancer. As most exposure occurs chronically, it is difficult to focus the treatment on the biotransformation of PAHs itself. After an acute exposure to PAHs decontamination of clothing, skin and eyes are important. It is hard to reduce the exposure to PAHs after chronic exposure and thus communication and education about the risks that it poses are most important. The treatment in individuals that are chronically exposed is based to a periodic evaluation where the side-effects may be observed early which improves the chances of survival in the case of cancer.[8]

Genetic Susceptibility

CYP1A1 is the enzyme responsible for the metabolic activation of PAHs. Persons with a high degree of CYP1A1 inducibility (phase I metabolism) are more susceptible to health risks caused by exposure to PAHs. The metabolites are epoxides which are carcinogenic/mutagenic. The genetic variation in the degree of CYP1A1 inducibility could be a determining factor for susceptibility to many cancers, including lung and laryngeal cancer. Another genetic factor that could increase the risk of cancer is a deficiency in the glutathione transferase (phase II metabolism), which is inheritable. Deficiencies of CYP1A1 and glutathione transferase do not only increase the risk of cancers induced by exposure to PAHs, but also increases the risk of other cancers.[8]

Determining carcinogenity with the Ames-Test

When a compound is suspected to be mutagenic/carcinogenic an Ames test is used to test this. It uses histidine-requiring yeast strains or bacteria. The strains have been altered with a mutation in a gene important for histidine production, so they require histidine for growth. The cells are grown on a histidine rich medium and are then transferred to a medium that lacks histidine and contains the potential mutagenic substance. If the mutagenic substance causes mutations, there is a very small chance that another mutation occurs in the histidine gene which again enables the production of histidine. These cells are then able to grow on the medium lacking histidine. The mutagenicity of a compound is calculated by the number of yeast colonies which are reverted to the histidine-independent form.[16]

In one study, the Ames test was executed with benzo[c]fluorene. Two different strains were used, TA100 and TA98. One group of each strain had a rat liver fraction and one group did not. The difference between the TA100 and the TA98 strain is that the TA98 strain has a frameshift mutation, and the TA100 has a base substitution mutation. When the amount of benzo[c]fluorene is increased in TA 100 yeast strain, the amount of revertants per plate does not increase. Only in the TA98 strain plate, which contained a fraction of a rat liver, a higher dose of benzo[c]fluorene seems to correspond with a larger amount of revertants. This indicates that benzo[c]fluorene is metabolized by enzymes in the rat liver into more potent mutagenic compounds. These compounds only affected the TA98 strain. This indicates that the adducts formed by benzo[c]fluorene metabolites cause frameshift mutations, and not point mutations.[16][17]

Dose response curve of benzo[c]fluorene was applied to the skin of mice. Data derived from [18] Ames test of benzo[c]fluorene. Data derived from [16]

Effects on animals

In one animal study, mice that were fed coal tar developed lung tumors. DNA adducts in these mice were analyzed and could be traced back to benzo[c]fluorene. This and another similar study suggest a contribution of benzo[c]fluorene to the carcinogenic potency of coal tar when administered orally.[1][19]

Another study found that benzo[c]fluorene is also carcinogenic in mice when applied topically, inducing lung and skin cancer. Of the results of this study a dose-response curve has been made, see the image above.

This figure shows the DNA adduct level after a certain dose of benzo[c]fluorene was applied to the skin of mice. This level is similar in the lungs and in the skin implying that benzo[c]fluorene is a systemic mutagen.[18]

The effects of exposure to benzo[c]fluorene were also researched on rats. In one of these studies the liver was established to be the main place of disposition of benzo[c]fluorene after a single oral dose regardless of the size of the dose. It was found that 55-69% of the labelled benzo[c]fluorene was excreted via the feces while 8-10% was found to be eliminated via urine. While the benzo[c]fluorene found in the feces was not biotransformed, the urine samples mainly showed polar metabolites of benzo[c]fluorene.[20]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Koganti A, Singh R, Rozett K, Modi N, Goldstein LS, Roy TA, Zhang FJ, Harvey RG, Weyand EH (2000). "7H-benzo[c]fluorene: a major DNA adduct-forming component of coal tar". Carcinogenesis. 21 (8): 1601–1609. doi:10.1093/carcin/21.8.1601. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  2. 1 2 3 Wang JQ, Weyand EH, Harvey RG (2002). "Synthesis of suspected carcinogenic metabolites of 7H-benzo[c]fluorene, a coal tar component implicated in causation of lung tumors". J Org Chem. 67 (17): 6216–6219. doi:10.1021/jo011149b. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  3. "7H-Benzo[c]fluorene". Pubchem. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  4. "Benzo[c]fluorene on Chemspider". Chemspider. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  5. "7H-Benzo[c]fluorene". trc-canada.com. Toronto Research Chemicals Toronto Research Chemicals. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  6. Created from PDB 1JDG
  7. Kazlauskas K, Kreiza G, Radiunas E, Adomenas P, Adomeniene O, Karpavicius K, Bucevicius J, Jankauskas V, Jursenas S (2015). "Concentration effects on spontaneous and amplified emission in benzo[c]fluorenes". Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics. 17 (19): 12935–12948. doi:10.1039/C5CP01325A. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) (2009). "Toxicity of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAH)". Retrieved 10 March 2016.
  9. 1 2 3 Weyand EH, Parimoo B, Reuhl KR, Goldstein LS, Wang JQ, Harvey RG (2004). "7H-BENZO[C]FLUORENE: A POTENT SYSTEMIC LUNG CARCINOGEN". Polycyclic Aromatic Compounds. 24 (1): 1–20. doi:10.1080/10406630490426942. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  10. Seto H, Ohkubo T, Kanoh T, Koike M, Nakamura K, Kawahara Y (1993). "Determination of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in the lung". Arch Environ Contam Toxicol. 24 (4): 498–503. doi:10.1007/bf01146169.
  11. Librando V, Sarpietro MG, Castelli F (2003). "Role of lipophilic medium in the absorption of polycyclic aromatic compounds by biomembranes". Environmental Toxicology and Pharmacology. 14 (1-2): 25–32. doi:10.1016/s1382-6689(03)00007-3. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  12. Goth-Goldstein, Regine; Marion L. Russell; Bhama Parimoo & Eric H. Weyand (2002). "7H-Benzo[c]fluorene DNA adduct formation in different human cells in culture". Retrieved 10 March 2016.
  13. 1 2 3 Morisaki H, Nakamura S, Tang N, Toriba A, Hayakawa K (2016). "Benzo[c]fluorene in Urban Air: HPLC Determination and Mutagenic Contribution Relative to Benzo[a]pyrene". Anal Sci. 32 (2): 233–23. doi:10.2116/analsci.32.233. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  14. "BaP and PAH from coal-derived sources" (PDF). gezondheidsraad.nl. Health Council of the Netherlands. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  15. "U.S. EPA. Development of a Relative Potency Factor (RPF) Approach for Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon (PAH) Mixtures (External Review Draft)". epa.gov. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  16. 1 2 3 Lavoie EJ, Tulley L, Bedenko V, Hoffmann D (1981). "Mutagenicity of methylated fluorenes and benzofluorenes". Mutat Res. 91 (3): 167–176. doi:10.1016/0165-7992(81)90027-0.
  17. "Mini Ames Test (TA98/TA100)". cyprotex. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  18. 1 2 Cizmas L; Zhou G-d; Safe SH; McDonald TJ; Zhu L; Donnelly KC (2004). "Comparative in vitro and in vivo genotoxicities of 7H-benzo[c]fluorene, manufactured gas plant residue (MGP), and MGP fractions". Environmental and Molecular Mutagenesis. 43 (3): 159–168. doi:10.1002/em.20011. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  19. Koganti A, Singh R, Ma BL, Weyand EH (2001). "Comparative analysis of PAH:DNA adducts formed in lung of mice exposed to neat coal tar and soils contaminated with coal tar". Environ Sci Technol. 35 (13): 2704–2709. doi:10.1021/es001532i. PMID 11452595.
  20. Chopard-Lallier M, Perdu E, Jamin E, Brochot C, Craved J. "Disposition of benzo[c]fluorene in rats". Toxicology Letters. 229 (supplement): 4141. doi:10.1016/j.toxlet.2014.06.838. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
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