Literature DB >> 10792017

DNA breakage in asbestos-treated normal and transformed (TSV40) rat pleural mesothelial cells.

V Levresse1, A Renier, F Levy, V C Broaddus, M Jaurand.   

Abstract

Asbestos has been shown to induce cell cycle arrest, DNA repair and some abnormalities consistent with DNA damage but not DNA breakage. The purpose of the study was to investigate DNA breakage in asbestos-exposed rat pleural mesothelial cells (RPMC). RPMC were compared with their transformed counterparts, RPMC-TSV40 (i.e. p53-inactivated by infection with a retroviral recombinant encoding the SV40 large T antigen), as in the latter cells the cell cycle does not arrest and DNA repair is deficient due to ineffective p53-dependent cell cycle control. RPMC and RPMC-TSV40 were exposed to chrysotile and crocidolite asbestos and also to camptothecin for comparison. The presence of DNA breakage was determined using the single cell gel (Comet) assay with alkaline electrophoresis and quantified by measuring comet tail length (TL) and the percentage of total DNA in the tail and calculating tail moment (TM). We found that comets were generated by both types of asbestos in RPMC and in RPMC-TSV40 as well as by camptothecin in RPMC. On a per weight basis, chrysotile induced more abnormalities in comet parameters than did crocidolite. The comet TL and TM increased with fibre concentration, although less so with crocidolite than with chrysotile. When exposed to chrysotile at similar concentrations, RPMC consistently showed more abnormal comet parameters than did RPMC-TSV40. We concluded that asbestos causes DNA breakage and suggest that some of the DNA breakage measured was due to repair mechanisms in the normal RPMC.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10792017     DOI: 10.1093/mutage/15.3.239

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mutagenesis        ISSN: 0267-8357            Impact factor:   3.000


  7 in total

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Authors:  Sarah X L Huang; Marie-Claude Jaurand; David W Kamp; John Whysner; Tom K Hei
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Review 2.  Towards a unifying, systems biology understanding of large-scale cellular death and destruction caused by poorly liganded iron: Parkinson's, Huntington's, Alzheimer's, prions, bactericides, chemical toxicology and others as examples.

Authors:  Douglas B Kell
Journal:  Arch Toxicol       Date:  2010-08-17       Impact factor: 5.153

3.  The fate of chrysotile-induced multipolar mitosis and aneuploid population in cultured lung cancer cells.

Authors:  Beatriz de Araujo Cortez; Gonzalo Quassollo; Alfredo Caceres; Glaucia Maria Machado-Santelli
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-04-05       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Phosphorylation of p53 protein in A549 human pulmonary epithelial cells exposed to asbestos fibers.

Authors:  Masato Matsuoka; Hideki Igisu; Yasuo Morimoto
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  2003-04       Impact factor: 9.031

5.  Establishment of immortalized murine mesothelial cells and a novel mesothelioma cell line.

Authors:  Walter Blum; László Pecze; Emanuela Felley-Bosco; Janine Worthmüller-Rodriguez; Licun Wu; Bart Vrugt; Marc de Perrot; Beat Schwaller
Journal:  In Vitro Cell Dev Biol Anim       Date:  2015-04-15       Impact factor: 2.416

6.  Multipolar mitosis and aneuploidy after chrysotile treatment: a consequence of abscission failure and cytokinesis regression.

Authors:  Beatriz Araujo Cortez; Paula Rezende-Teixeira; Sambra Redick; Stephen Doxsey; Glaucia Maria Machado-Santelli
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2016-02-23

7.  Mesothelioma: Do asbestos and carbon nanotubes pose the same health risk?

Authors:  Marie-Claude F Jaurand; Annie Renier; Julien Daubriac
Journal:  Part Fibre Toxicol       Date:  2009-06-12       Impact factor: 9.400

  7 in total

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