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- The subjects are asked to rinse their mouth with water and a cytobrush is used to obtain exfoliated cells from the oral mucosa.
- The samples are transferred to dry glass slides, to ensure an adequate harvest of cells.
- Smears are air dried and fixed with 95% ethanol spray.
- Smears are stained with either DNA specific or DNA non-specific stain.
- Smears are scored manually/digitally using a Tolbert (most accepted) criteria.
TABLE 2. STAINS COMMONLY USED FOR STAINING THE CYTOSMEARS FOR MN ASSAYDNA specific stains:
- Feulgen Stain
- DAPI (4’,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole)
- Acridine orange
DNA non-specific stains:
- Giemsa stain
- May Grunwald-Giemsa stain
- PAP stain
- H & E stain
TABLE 3. FOR DESIGNATING AN EXTRA NUCLEAR BODY AS MICRONUCLEUS, THE FOLLOWING CRITERIA GIVEN BY TOLBERT IS APPLIED
- Rounded smooth perimeter suggestive of a membrane.
- Less than a third of the diameter of the associated nucleus, but large enough to discern shape and color.
- Staining intensity similar to that of the nucleus.
- Texture similar to that of nucleus.
- Same focal plane as nucleus.
- Absence of overlap with, or bridge to, the nucleus
In the early studies from the 1980s, exfoliated buccal mucosa cells were used to evaluate the genotoxic effects of betel nuts and quids and of chewing tobacco. Most studies showed higher MN frequencies at the site within the oral cavity where the quid or tobacco mixture was kept compared to the opposite, control site. The MN assay in buccal cells was also used to study cancerous and precancerous lesions and to monitor the effects of a number of chemopreventive agents. It is notable that the first studies of Stich and Rosin conducted between 1983 and 1984 had higher baseline MN frequencies than subsequent studies. This may have been due to a lack of defined scoring criteria and a relatively small number of scored cells (in some cases less than 500). Since then, published biomonitoring studies using the MN assay in buccal mucosa cells have investigated the effects of multiple factors including environmental and occupational exposures, radiotherapy, chemoprevention, vitamin supplementation trials, lifestyle habits, cancer, and other diseases . 2.1 MICRONUCLEI AS A NOVEL BIOMARKER2.1.1 OCCUPATIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL EXPOSURES In the last 15–20 years the MN assay has been applied to evaluate chromosomal damage for biological monitoring of human populations exposed to a variety of mutagenic and carcinogenic chemical or physical agents. Significantly higher frequencies of MN have also been observed in exfoliated buccal cells from people exposed to organic solvents, antineoplastic agents, diesel derivatives, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, lead containing paints and solvents, and drinking water contaminated with arsenic . 2.2 MN AND RADIATION Ionizing radiation plays an important role in the treatment of many neoplasias, but it also produces genetic damage. As a consequence, secondary tumors may develop years after the primary tumor treatment. Several studies evaluated MNi in buccal cells of patients undergoing radiotherapy in the head and neck region. The most striking increase in cytogenetic damage (150– 300 MN/1000 cells) was observedin an early study of three patients exposed to a cumulative dose of 3400–4000 cGy . 2.3 MN FREQUENCIES IN BUCCAL CELLS OF PATIENTS WITH SOME SPECIFIC DISEASES A site-specificity was observed for Xeroderma pigmentosum patients, with a higher MN frequency in cells from the dorsal tip of tongue, possibly due to greater light exposure. Down syndrome was associated with a 733% increase in MNi in comparison to younger healthy controls, and the MN frequency was 78.5% higher than in older controls. An increase in MN frequency in buccal cells was reported for Diabetes mellitus with the patients having double the level of genetic damage in comparison to matched controls and for treated pediatric patients with ulcerative colitis in comparison with controls or children with Crohn’s disease . Various studies have hypothesized that CBMN assay may provide an useful tool for screening of the obesity and metabolic syndrome and its progression to diabetes and cardiovascular disease in adults as well in children and also demonstrated a strong association between HPV type infection and MN frequency . 2.4 LIFESTYLE AND HOST FACTORS Lifestyle factors that are associated with genetic damage include smoking, alcohol consumption, and diet, especially vitamin deficiencies and supplementation. The majority of the studies reporting a significant increase in MN in buccal mucosa cells related to a risk of oral cancer were performed in subgroups of subjects with specific lifestyle habits, i.e. chewers of betel quids (areca nut, betel leaves, slaked lime and tobacco) from India, Taiwan and Philippines; reverse smokers (who hold the lit end of the cigarette inside their mouths) from India and Philippines; snuff dippers from Canada; users of Khaini tobacco (tobacco mixed with slaked lime) from India, and other similar practices . The HUMN project is an effective vehicle for the development and implementation of an international collaborative validation effort to bring together the various buccal MN databases, and to identify and quantify the key variables affecting this biomarker . CONCLUSION: MN formation is generally considered as a manifestation of genetic damage or chromosomal breakage. Many investigators already and unequivocally have called MN as an upcoming marker of tumorogenesis. MN is thus a potential biomarker to screen genotoxicity, biomonitoring of various diseases, detection of malignancies and preneoplastic conditions and also a lot of other diseases. Since MN is a manifestation of day to day exposure to environmental pollutants, infections, nutrition, radiation, foods, and the genetic make-up or ethnicity which again varies around the globe. So there must be an upper limit of the base-line MN frequency only beyond which we can label it as increased MN frequency. REFERENCES:
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