Literature DB >> 22521957

Chronic occupational exposure to arsenic induces carcinogenic gene signaling networks and neoplastic transformation in human lung epithelial cells.

Todd A Stueckle1, Yongju Lu, Mary E Davis, Liying Wang, Bing-Hua Jiang, Ida Holaskova, Rosana Schafer, John B Barnett, Yon Rojanasakul.   

Abstract

Chronic arsenic exposure remains a human health risk; however a clear mode of action to understand gene signaling-driven arsenic carcinogenesis is currently lacking. This study chronically exposed human lung epithelial BEAS-2B cells to low-dose arsenic trioxide to elucidate cancer promoting gene signaling networks associated with arsenic-transformed (B-As) cells. Following a 6month exposure, exposed cells were assessed for enhanced cell proliferation, colony formation, invasion ability and in vivo tumor formation compared to control cell lines. Collected mRNA was subjected to whole genome expression microarray profiling followed by in silico Ingenuity Pathway Analysis (IPA) to identify lung carcinogenesis modes of action. B-As cells displayed significant increases in proliferation, colony formation and invasion ability compared to BEAS-2B cells. B-As injections into nude mice resulted in development of primary and secondary metastatic tumors. Arsenic exposure resulted in widespread up-regulation of genes associated with mitochondrial metabolism and increased reactive oxygen species protection suggesting mitochondrial dysfunction. Carcinogenic initiation via reactive oxygen species and epigenetic mechanisms was further supported by altered DNA repair, histone, and ROS-sensitive signaling. NF-κB, MAPK and NCOR1 signaling disrupted PPARα/δ-mediated lipid homeostasis. A 'pro-cancer' gene signaling network identified increased survival, proliferation, inflammation, metabolism, anti-apoptosis and mobility signaling. IPA-ranked signaling networks identified altered p21, EF1α, Akt, MAPK, and NF-κB signaling networks promoting genetic disorder, altered cell cycle, cancer and changes in nucleic acid and energy metabolism. In conclusion, transformed B-As cells with their whole genome expression profile provide an in vitro arsenic model for future lung cancer signaling research and data for chronic arsenic exposure risk assessment. Published by Elsevier Inc.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22521957      PMCID: PMC3358533          DOI: 10.1016/j.taap.2012.04.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Toxicol Appl Pharmacol        ISSN: 0041-008X            Impact factor:   4.219


  60 in total

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5.  Genome-wide analysis of BEAS-2B cells exposed to trivalent arsenicals and dimethylthioarsinic acid.

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Review 7.  Effect of arsenic on transcription factor AP-1 and NF-kappaB DNA binding activity and related gene expression.

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Review 9.  Arsenic-induced carcinogenesis--oxidative stress as a possible mode of action and future research needs for more biologically based risk assessment.

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Review 10.  Loss of cks1 homeostasis deregulates cell division cycle.

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  37 in total

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3.  Arsenic-induced metabolic shift triggered by the loss of miR-199a-5p through Sp1-dependent DNA methylation.

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5.  Arsenic exposure and cancer mortality in a US-based prospective cohort: the strong heart study.

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6.  Circulating miRNAs and their target genes associated with arsenism caused by coal-burning.

Authors:  Baofei Sun; Junchao Xue; Jun Li; Fei Luo; Xiong Chen; Yonglian Liu; Qingling Wang; Caihua Qi; Zhonglan Zou; Aihua Zhang; Qizhan Liu
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7.  Targeted Quantitative Proteomics Revealed Arsenite-induced Proteasomal Degradation of RhoB in Fibroblast Cells.

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8.  Methylarsonous acid causes oxidative DNA damage in cells independent of the ability to biomethylate inorganic arsenic.

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9.  Arsenic is cytotoxic and genotoxic to primary human lung cells.

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10.  Oxidative stress, epigenetics, and cancer stem cells in arsenic carcinogenesis and prevention.

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Journal:  Curr Pharmacol Rep       Date:  2016-01-23
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