| Literature DB >> 16675414 |
Ana Navas-Acien1, Ellen K Silbergeld, Robin A Streeter, Jeanne M Clark, Thomas A Burke, Eliseo Guallar.
Abstract
Chronic arsenic exposure has been suggested to contribute to diabetes development. We performed a systematic review of the experimental and epidemiologic evidence on the association of arsenic and type 2 diabetes. We identified 19 in vitro studies of arsenic and glucose metabolism. Five studies reported that arsenic interfered with transcription factors involved in insulin-related gene expression: upstream factor 1 in pancreatic beta-cells and peroxisome proliferative-activated receptor gamma in preadipocytes. Other in vitro studies assessed the effect of arsenic on glucose uptake, typically using very high concentrations of arsenite or arsenate. These studies provide limited insight on potential mechanisms. We identified 10 in vivo studies in animals. These studies showed inconsistent effects of arsenic on glucose metabolism. Finally, we identified 19 epidemiologic studies (6 in high-arsenic areas in Taiwan and Bangladesh, 9 in occupational populations, and 4 in other populations). In studies from Taiwan and Bangladesh, the pooled relative risk estimate for diabetes comparing extreme arsenic exposure categories was 2.52 (95% confidence interval, 1.69-3.75), although methodologic problems limit the interpretation of the association. The evidence from occupational studies and from general populations other than Taiwan or Bangladesh was inconsistent. In summary, the current available evidence is inadequate to establish a causal role of arsenic in diabetes. Because arsenic exposure is widespread and diabetes prevalence is reaching epidemic proportions, experimental studies using arsenic concentrations relevant to human exposure and prospective epidemiologic studies measuring arsenic biomarkers and appropriately assessing diabetes should be a research priority.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16675414 PMCID: PMC1459913 DOI: 10.1289/ehp.8551
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Figure 1Flow diagram of the experimental and epidemiologic study selection process.
In vitro studies of arsenic exposure and glucose metabolism outcomes.
| Source | Type of cell/tissue | Compound | Dose (ppm) | Incubation | Outcomes and results (compared with controls) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Signal transduction and gene expression | |||||
| | Pancreatic β-cells | Arsenite | 37.5 | 0.33 hr | ↑ IUF-1 dependent gene expression
|
| | Pancreatic β -cells | Arsenite | 75 | 0.5 hr | ↑ IUF-1 translocation from cytoplasm to nucleus
|
| | Pancreatic β-cells | Arsenite | 75 | 0.5 hr | ↑ IUF-1 translocation from cytoplasm to nucleus
|
| | C3H 10T1/2 preadipocytes | Arsenite | 0.45 | 2 months | ↓ PPARγ mRNA
|
| | 3T3-F442A preadipocytes | Arsenite | 0.0017, 0.003 | 3 days | ↑ Expression of PPARγ and C/EBPα(genes with important roles in adipose determination) |
| Glucose uptake in cultured cells | |||||
| | BHK-21 cells | Arsenite | 3.75 | 2 hr | ↑ Basal glucose uptake; = insulin-stimulated glucose uptake
|
| | BHK-21 cells | Arsenite | 15 | 2 hr | ↑ Basal glucose uptake; ↑ glucose transporter translocation (reversible) |
| | BHK-21 cells | Arsenite | 4.5–7.5 | 2 hr | ↑ Basal glucose uptake (reversible when arsenite removed)
|
| | MDCK dog cells | Arsenite | 37.5–75 | 1 hr | ↓ Basal glucose uptake, dose dependent |
| | BHK cells 3T3-L1 adipocytes | Arsenite | 7.5–22.5 | 2 hr | ↑ Basal glucose uptake, dose dependent
|
| | L6 rat muscle cells | Arsenite | 7.5–112.5 | 0.5 hr | ↑ Basal glucose uptake, dose dependent but maximal with 37.5 ppm
|
| | Bovine adrenal cells | Arsenite | 1.88–18.8 | 1 hr | ↑ Basal glucose uptake up to 7.5 ppm, then plateau
|
| | 3T3-L1 adipocytes | Arsenite | 0.75–75 | 0.5 hr | ↑ Basal glucose uptake up to 37.5 ppm, then ↓
|
| | 3T3-L1 adipocytes | Arsenite | 3.75–750 | 0.5 hr | ↑ Basal glucose uptake up to 37.5 ppm
|
| | 3T3-L1 adipocytes | Arsenite | 1.5, 7.5 | 4 hr | = basal glucose uptake at 1.50 ppm, ↓at 7.5 ppm, ↓insulin-stimulated |
| MAsIIIO | 0.08, 0.4 | = basal glucose uptake at 0.08 ppm, ↓at 0.4 ppm, ↓insulin-stimulated | |||
| DMAsIIII | 0.15, 0.75 | = basal glucose uptake all doses, ↓insulin-stimulated | |||
| Arsenate | 7.5, 75 | ↑ basal glucose uptake at 7.5 ppm, ↓at 75 ppm, = insulin-stimulated | |||
| MAsV | 7.5, 75 | = basal glucose uptake all doses, ↓insulin-stimulated | |||
| DMAsV | 7.5, 75 | = basal and insulin-stimulated glucose uptake all doses,
| |||
| Arsenite | 0.4, 0.8, 1.5 | 24 hr | Dose-dependent ↓insulin-stimulated glucose uptake | ||
| MAsIIIO | 0.02, 0.04, 0.08 | = insulin-stimulated glucose uptake at 0.02 ppm, ↓at 0.04 and 0.08 | |||
| DMAsIIII | 0.04, 0.08, 0.15 | = insulin-stimulated glucose uptake all doses | |||
| Miscellaneous experiments | |||||
| | Rat hemidiaphragms | Arsenite | 75 | 1–3 hr | ↑ Basal glucose uptake in hemidiaphragms; ↑uptake with arsenate in fat pads = insulin stimulated glucose uptake in hemidiaphragm; ↓ uptake with arsenite in fat pad |
| Epidydimal fat pads | Arsenate | 75 | |||
| | Epidydimal fat pads | Arsenite | 0.75–7,500 | 3 hr | ↑ Basal glucose oxidation up to 7.5 ppm |
| | Rabbit kidney tubules | Arsenate | 0.75–375 | 0.5 hr | ↓ Fluid, phosphate, and glucose absorption (lumen to bath) |
| | Rat jejunal segments | Arsenite | 0.19–18.9 | 2 hr | ↓ Intestinal glucose transfer dose dependent (= arsenate < 7.5 ppm) |
| Arsenate | 0.19–187.5 | ||||
1 ppm = 13.35 μM. Basal glucose uptake, glucose uptake in the absence of insulin. ↑, increase; ↓, decrease; = similar levels; BHK-21 cells, baby hamster kidney cells (contain predominantly GLUT1); C/EBPα, CCAAT/enhancer binding protein; DAsIIII, iododimethylarsine; DMAsV, dimethylarsinic acid; GLUT, glucose transporter; IRβ: insulin receptor β; IRS, insulin receptor substrate; IUF-1, insulin upstream factor-1 (also called homeodomain transcription factor PDX1); MAsIIIO, methylarsine oxide; MAsV, monosodium methyl arsenate; MDCK dog cells, Madin-Darby canine kidney cells; ppm, part per million; PI-3 kinase, phosphatydilinositol-3 kinase; PKB, protein kinase B; PKC, protein kinase C; PPARγ, peroxisome proliferative-activated receptor γ; SAPK2, stress activator protein kinase 2 (also called p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase).
Figure 2Ratio of basal glucose uptake in peripheral cell lines comparing arsenite versus control. Lines represent the dose response for each independent study. Single points represent the effect for studies using a single dose (1 ppm = 13.35 μM; 0.75 ppm = 10 μM).
Experimental characteristics and ratio of glucose uptake in peripheral cell lines exposed to arsenite and insulin compared with insulin and arsenite alone.
| Experiment characteristics
| Ratio of glucose uptake vs.
| |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Source | Type of cell | Incubation (hr) | Arsenite (ppm) | Insulin (nM) | Insulin | Arsenite |
| BHK-21 cells | 2 | 3.75 | 100 | 0.94 | 0.91 | |
| L6 rat muscle cells | 0.5 | 37.5 | 100 | 1.42 | 1.21 | |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes | 0.5 | 37.5 | 100 | 0.57 | 1.33 | |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes | 4 | 1.50 | 1,000 | 0.60 | 0.55 | |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes | 4 | 7.49 | 1,000 | 0.20 | 0.33 | |
BHK-21 cells, baby hamster kidney cells. For arsenite, 1 ppm = 13.35 μM.
In vivo studies of arsenic exposure and glucose metabolism.
| Source | Experimental Animal | Compound (route) | Daily dose (ppm) | Duration | Outcomes and results (compared with controls) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Field mice | 19 | Methanearsonate (po in water) | 1,000 | 30 days | ↓ Blood glucose, = fluid and food consumption | |
| Rats | 12 | Arsenite (ip) | 5–10 | 7 days | ↑ Glucose levels after glucose tolerance test, dose dependent | |
| B6C3F1 mice | 72 | Arsenate (po in water) | 0.025–2.5 | 28 days | ↓ Plasma glucose, = fluid and food consumption | |
| Wistar rats | 20 | Arsenate (po in food) | 5 | 10 weeks | = Plasma glucose levels | |
| Wistar rats | 21 | Arsenite (po in water) | 17.75 | 1st week | Delayed glucose clearance after glucose tolerance test | |
| up to 100 | 8th week | = Basal insulin levels | ||||
| Bengal goats | 12 | Arsenite (po in capsule) | 25 | 12 weeks | ↑ Blood glucose at week 6 and ↑↑ at week 12 | |
| Fischer rats | 480 | Monomethylarsenic (po in food) | 50–1,300 | 2 years | = Blood glucose levels up to 400 ppm, ↓with 1,300 ppm | |
| Wistar rats | 18 | Arsenite (ip) | 5.55 | 21 days | ↓ Blood glucose (reversed with methionine)
| |
| Wistar rats | 18 | Arsenite (ip) | 5.55 | 30 days | ↓ Blood glucose (reversed with | |
| Wistar rats | 18 | Arsenite (ip) | 5.55 | 30 days | ↓ Blood glucose (reversed with methionine) |
Abbreviations: ip, intraperitoneal; po, per oral; ↑, increase; ↓, decrease.
Epidemiologic studies of arsenic exposure and diabetes.
| Source | Design | Country | Population | Diabetes diagnosis | Cases/noncases | Men (%) | Age range (year) | Arsenic assessment | Levels, exposed vs. reference | RR of diabetes (95% CI) | Adjusted for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| General populations, high arsenic exposure | |||||||||||
| | CS | Taiwan | Survey of participants in high-arsenic area | OGTT or self-reported | 86/805 | 43 | 30–69 | CEI village drinking water | > 15 vs. 0 ppm-year | 10.1 (1.30–77.9) | Age, sex, BMI, physical activity |
| | RCO | Taiwan | Deaths in 1971–1994 | Death certificate | 531 deaths | 35 | All ages | Living in HAA | HAA vs. no HAA | 1.46 (1.28–1.67) | Age, sex |
| | CO | Taiwan | Survey of participants in high-arsenic area | OGTT | 41/405 | 50 | Mean 47 | CEI village drinking water | > 17 vs. < 17 ppm-year | 2.10 (1.10–4.20) | Age, sex, BMI |
| | CS | Taiwan | National Health Insurance Database | ICD-9 250 ICD-9 A181 | 27,543/678,791 | 43 | 25–65+ | Living in HAA | HAA vs. no HAA | 2.69 (2.65–2.73) | Age, sex |
| | CS | Bangladesh | Survey participants in high- and low-arsenic areas | Self-reported symptoms + glucosuria + OGTT | 46/971 | 59 | 30–60+ | Living in HAA and keratosis | Keratosis vs. no keratosis | 5.90 (2.90–11.6) | Age, sex, BMI |
| | CS | Bangladesh | Survey participants in high-arsenic area | Glucosuria | 263/1,332 | 61 | 30–60+ | CEI village drinking water | > 10 vs. 0 ppm-year | 2.10 (1.10–4.20) | Age, sex |
| Occupational populations, high arsenic exposure | |||||||||||
| | RCO | U.S. | Pesticide workers, Baltimore, MD | Death certificate | 2 deaths | 75 | < 20–40+ at hire | Job title | Workers vs. general population | 0.47 (0.12–1.88) | Age, sex, period |
| | RCO | U.S. | Copper smelter workers, Washington State | Death certificate | 12 deaths | 100 | < 20–69 at hire | Job title | Workers vs. general population | 0.85 (0.48–1.49) | Age |
| | CS | Sweden | Copper smelter workers, other jobs | Self-reported type 2 diabetes | 4/85 | 100 | Mean 57 | Job title | Workers vs. other workers | 9.61 (0.53–173) | Crude |
| | CC | Sweden | Copper smelter workers | Death certificate, medical record | 12/31 | 100 | 30–74 at death | Air levels | ~ 5 vs. 0 mg/m3 | 3.30 (0.50–30.0) | Age |
| | CC | Sweden | Deaths in glass industry area | Death certificate | 240/2,216 | 100 | 45–75+ | Job title | Workers vs. other workers | 1.40 (0.90–2.10) | Age |
| | CS | Denmark | Taxidermists, wood workers, other jobs | HbA1c | 5/59 | 87 | Mean 37 | Job title | Workers vs. general population | 4.43 (0.47–42.0) | Age |
| | RCO | Italy | Glass industry workers | Death certificate | 3 deaths | 100 | < 40–65+ | Job title | Workers vs. general population | 0.34 (0.09–0.88) | Age |
| | RCO | U.S. | Copper smelter workers, Montana | Death certificate | 54 deaths | 100 | < 20–30+ at hire | Job title | Workers vs. general population | 0.83 (0.63–1.08) | Age |
| | RCO | U.S. | Children < 4 km of Copper smelter | Death certificate | 16/3,116 | 58 | < 14 | Years of residency | ≤10 vs. < 1 year | 1.60 (0.36–1.16) | Crude |
| General populations, low to moderate arsenic exposure | |||||||||||
| Ward and Pim1984 | CC | UK | Hospital based | NR | 87/30 | 65 | 18–78 | Plasma levels (NAA) | 75th vs. 25th percentile | 1.09 (0.79–1.49) | Crude |
| | CC | Spain | Hospital based | NR | 38/49 | 39 | NR | Urinary levels (AAS) | 75th vs. 25th percentile | 0.87 (0.50–1.53) | Crude |
| | CO | U.S. | Mormons | Death certificate | 55/4,003 | 52 | < 50–80+ | CEI community drinking water | > 4 vs. < 1 ppm-year | 0.65 (0.34–1.24) | Age, sex |
| | CC | U.S. | Survey participants with private wells | Self-reported | 67/1118 | NR | Mean 62 | Subject drinking water | > 10 vs. < 2 ppb | 1.02 (0.49–2.15) | Age, sex, BMI, smoking |
Abbreviations: AAS, atomic absorption spectrometry; BMI, body mass index; CC, case–control; CEI, cumulative exposure index: ∑ arsenic levels in drinking water × time of exposure (i indicates specific village); CO, cohort; CS, cross-sectional; HAA, high-arsenic area; HbA1c, hemoglobin A1c; ICD-9, International Classification of Diseases, Ninth revision; NAA, neutron activation analysis; NR, not reported; OGTT, oral glucose tolerance test, criteria for a positive test based on the WHO criteria; RCO, retrospective cohort; RR, relative risk.
Criteria for evaluating the design and data analysis of epidemiologic studies on arsenic and diabetes.a
| Taiwan and Bangladesh
| Occupational populations
| Other populations
| |||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All studies (n = 19) | |||||||||||||||||||
| Diabetes diagnosis based on fasting glucose levels or oral glucose tolerance tests | Y | N | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N |
| Exposure assessed at the individual level | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N | N | N | Y | Y | Y | N | Y |
| Exposure assessed using a biomarker of exposure | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y | Y | N | N |
| Control for established diabetes risk factors in addition to age | Y | N | Y | N | N | N | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | N | Y |
| Case–control and cross-sectional studies ( | |||||||||||||||||||
| Response rate among noncases at least 70% | Y | — | — | Y | N | Y | — | — | N | — | — | N | — | — | — | N | N | — | N |
| Noncases would have been cases if they had developed diabetes | N | — | — | N | N | N | — | — | N | N | N | Y | — | — | — | N | N | — | N |
| Data collected in a similar manner for all participants | Y | — | — | Y | N | N | — | — | N | Y | Y | Y | — | — | — | N | N | — | Y |
| Cases interviewed within 6 months of diagnosis | N | — | — | N | N | N | — | — | N | N | N | N | — | — | — | N | N | — | N |
| Interviewer blinded with respect to the case status of the person interviewed | Y | — | — | — | N | N | — | — | N | N | N | Y | — | — | — | N | N | — | Y |
| Time period during which all participants were interviewed was the same | Y | — | — | — | N | N | — | — | N | Y | Y | N | — | — | — | N | N | — | Y |
| Same exclusion criteria applied to all participants | Y | — | — | Y | N | N | — | — | N | Y | N | N | — | — | — | N | N | — | Y |
| Cohort studies ( | |||||||||||||||||||
| Loss to follow-up was independent of exposure | — | N | Y | — | — | — | N | N | — | — | — | — | N | N | N | — | — | Y | — |
| Intensity of search of disease independent of exposure status | — | N | Y | — | — | — | N | N | — | — | — | — | N | N | N | — | — | Y | — |
Abbreviations: —, not applicable; N, no; Y, yes.
Criteria modified from Longnecker et al. (1988).
Not applicable to two case–control studies based only on deaths (Rahman and Axelson 1995; Rahman et al. (1996).
Not applicable to the study using the National Health Insurance Database from Taiwan (Wang et al. 2003).
Figure 3Risk of diabetes by cumulative arsenic exposure in drinking water in epidemiologic studies. Black lines represent the dose response for studies in Taiwan and Bangladesh compared with the baseline category of exposure. Gray lines represent the dose response in studies in the United States. Cumulative exposure: ∑ arsenic levels in drinking water × time of exposure (i indicates specific village). For example, a cumulative exposure of 1 ppm-year is reached after 10 years of residence in a village with an arsenic concentration in drinking water of 0.1 ppm. In the study by Zierold et al. (2004), we assumed 20 years of exposure for all study subjects.