| Literature DB >> 19440419 |
Maura Lodovici1, Elisabetta Bigagli.
Abstract
In addition to the well-known link between smoking and lung cancer, large epidemiological studies have shown a relationship between smoking and cancers of the nose, oral cavity, oropharynx, larynx, esophagus, pancreas, bladder, kidney, stomach, liver, colon and cervix, as well as myeloid leukemia. Epidemiological evidence has reported a direct link between exposure of non-smokers to environmental tobacco smoke and disease, most notably, lung cancer. Much evidence demonstrates that carcinogenic-DNA adducts are useful markers of tobacco smoke exposure, providing an integrated measurement of carcinogen intake, metabolic activation, and delivery to the DNA in target tissues. Monitoring accessible surrogate tissues, such as white blood cells or bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) cells, also provides a means of investigating passive and active tobacco exposure in healthy individuals and cancer patients. Levels of DNA adducts measured in many tissues of smokers are significantly higher than in non-smokers. While some studies have demonstrated an association between carcinogenic DNA adducts and cancer in current smokers, no association has been observed in ex or never smokers. The role of genetic susceptibility in the development of smoking related-cancer is essential. In order to establish whether smoking-related DNA adducts are biomarkers of tobacco smoke exposure and/or its carcinogenic activity we summarized all data that associated tobacco smoke exposure and smoking-related DNA adducts both in controls and/or in cancer cases and studies where the effect of genetic polymorphisms involved in the activation and deactivation of carcinogens were also evaluated. In the future we hope we will be able to screen for lung cancer susceptibility by using specific biomarkers and that subjects of compared groups can be stratified for multiple potential modulators of biomarkers, taking into account various confounding factors.Entities:
Keywords: Tobacco smoking; biomarkers; cancer risk; carcinogenic DNA adducts; genetic polymorphisms
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19440419 PMCID: PMC2672383 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph6030874
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Relationship between smoking and carcinogenic-DNA adducts in target organs due to tobacco smoke.
| Source of DNA | Methods | Higher DNA adducts in smokers than ex-and non-smokers |
|---|---|---|
| Lung [ | 32P-postlabeling | 29 cancer cases (17 smokers, 7 ex-smokers, 5 non-smokers) |
| Bladder [ | 32P-postlabeling | 39 healthy subjects (18 smokers, 21 non-smokers) |
| Lung [ | HPLC/fluorescence, 32P-postlabeling | 13 cancer cases (11 smokers, 2 ex-smokers) |
| Uterine cervix [ | 32P-postlabeling | 16 HPV (10 smokers, 6 non-smoker) |
| Lung [ | 32P-postlabeling, fluorescence | 39 cancer cases (26 smokers, 11 ex-smokers, 2 non-smokers) |
| Pancreas [ | 32P-postlabeling | 20 cancer cases (10 smokers, 10 non-smokers)
|
| Lung [ | HPLC/fluorescence | 39 (12 smokers, 6 ex-smokers, 21 non-smokers) |
| Lung [ | HPLC/ECD detection of 8-oxo-dG | 30 healthy subjects (14 smokers, 7 ex-smokers, 9 non-smokers) |
Relationship between smoking and carcinogenic-DNA adducts in cancer-target organs due to tobacco smoke and influence of metabolic genotypes.
| Source of DNA | Methods | Elevated DNA adducts in smokers than non-smokers |
|---|---|---|
| Lung [ | 32P-postlabeling | High adduct levels associated with CYP1A1 among subjects with GSTM1 |
| Lung [ | 32P-postlabeling | High adducts in individuals with GSTM1 |
| Lung [ | 32P-postlabeling | In smokers increased adduct levels in both nasal mucosa and lymphocytes. No significant effect of CYP1A1, GSTM1 and GSTT1 |
| Lymphocytes [ | 32P-postlabeling | In smokers with CYP1A1 MspI allele variant. Adduct levels no influenced by GST genotypes |
| Mononuclear cells [ | 32P-postlabeling | In smokers with GSTM1 |
| Leukocytes [ | HPLC/fluorescence | In smokers with high risk genotype (CYP1A1 allele variant, GSTM1 |
| BAL fluid and cells [ | 32P-postlabeling | In smokers with MPO wt than MPO mutant genotype. The effect is gene dose-dependent |
| Lymphocytes [ | 32P-postlabeling | In smokers with GSTM1 |
| Lung [ | 32P-postlabeling | In individuals with high CYP1A1 expression, but irrespective of the smoking status |
Relationship between smoking-related DNA adducts in tissues of cancer cases and/or controls.
| Cancer | Methods | Relationship |
|---|---|---|
| Lung [ | PAH-DNA adducts (white blood cells)
| Strong OR= 7.7 (1.7–34) |
| Lung [ | Bulky DNA adducts (lymphocytes)
| None |
| Lung [ | Bulky DNA adducts (lymphocytes)
| Present |
| Lung [ | Bulky DNA adducts (lung tissue)
| Strong OR= 25.19 (2.99–211.99) |
| Lung [ | Bulky DNA adducts (white blood cells)
| OR= 2.98 (1.05–8.42) |
| Oral [ | Bulky DNA adducts (white blood cells)
| None |
| Bladder [ | Bulky DNA adducts ((white blood cells)
| Strong OR= 5.25 (2.21–12.43) |
| Bladder [ | Bulky DNA adducts (bladder tissue)
| None |
| Lung, upper respiratory, bladder and leukemia [ | Bulky DNA adducts (white blood cells)
| None |
| Lung [ | Bulky DNA adducts (white blood cells)
| Present |
Relationship between smoking-related DNA adducts in tissues of cancer cases and/or controls and effect of metabolic polymorphisms.
| Tissue | Methods | Number of subjects | Elevated DNA adducts and metabolic polymorphism influence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lung [ | 32P-postlabeling | 70 cancer cases (smokers) | In patients with GSTM1 |
| Lung [ | HPLC/fluorescence | 20 cancer cases (smokers) | In patients (n=20) with GSTM1 |
| Bronchus [ | 32P-postlabeling | 124 cancer cases (70 smokers, 40 ex-smokers non-smokers 14)
| In cancer case than in controls. Adducts levels were not influenced by CYP1A1 or GSTM1 polymorphism |
| Lung [ | 32P-postlabeling | 73 cancer cases (32 smokers, 38 non-smokers)
| In cancer cases than in controls, but not higher in smokers than non-smokers. Adducts not influenced by CYP1A1Msp1 or GSTM1 genotypes |
| Pancreas [ | 32P-postlabeling and HPLC/ECD detection of 8-oxo-dG | 31 cancer cases
| In cancer cases than in controls. Association of DNA adducts with CYP1A1 polymorphism |