| Literature DB >> 23583964 |
Francesca Faita1, Liliana Cori, Fabrizio Bianchi, Maria Grazia Andreassi.
Abstract
The arsenic (As) exposure represents an important problem in many parts of the World. Indeed, it is estimated that over 100 million individuals are exposed to arsenic, mainly through a contamination of groundwaters. Chronic exposure to As is associated with adverse effects on human health such as cancers, cardiovascular diseases, neurological diseases and the rate of morbidity and mortality in populations exposed is alarming. The purpose of this review is to summarize the genotoxic effects of As in the cells as well as to discuss the importance of signaling and repair of arsenic-induced DNA damage. The current knowledge of specific polymorphisms in candidate genes that confer susceptibility to arsenic exposure is also reviewed. We also discuss the perspectives offered by the determination of biological markers of early effect on health, incorporating genetic polymorphisms, with biomarkers for exposure to better evaluate exposure-response clinical relationships as well as to develop novel preventative strategies for arsenic-health effects.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23583964 PMCID: PMC3709332 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph10041527
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1The metabolism pathway of inorganic arsenic showing arsenate reduction to arsenite and methylation to pentavalent and trivalent forms.
Figure 2Schematic representation of arsenic genotoxicity.
Cytogenetic monitoring in populations exposed to arsenic.
| Study population, n | Mean arsenic water drinking exposure | Country | Main endpoint result | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 18 exposed subjects | 1,312 μg/L | Nevada | 1.8 fold increase in bladder cells | Warner |
| 31 exposed subjects | 408.7 μg/L | Mexico | CA increase in lymphocytes | Gonsebatt |
| 42 exposed subjects | 410 μg/L | Finland | CA correlation/urinary As exposure, among current users | Maki-Paakanen [ |
| 19 exposed subjects | 527.5 μg/L | USA | 3.4 fold increase of MN in buccal cells | Tian [ |
| 32 cancer cases of risk area | n.d. | Taiwan | No difference in spontaneous and mitomycin C-induced SCE | Liou |
| 45 exposed subjects | 368.11 μg/L | India | MN increase | Basu |
| 59 exposed subjects | 211.70 μg/L | India | CA and SCE increases | Mahata |
| 106 exposed subjects | >750 μg/L | Chile | MN increase | Martinez |
| 163 exposed subjects | 214.7 μg/L | India | 5.3 fold MN increase in lymphocytes | Basu |
| 45 exposed subjects | 66.75 μg/L | India | CA and MN increases | Chakraborty |
| 422 exposed subjects (244 skin symptomatic) | 202.33 μg/L | India | CA and MN increases | Ghosh |
| 200 subjects exposed | 56.76 μg/L * | India | MN increase in buccal cells | Vuyyuri [ |
| 27 exposed subjects | >50 μg/L (water drinking) | Argentina | MN increase in buccal cells | Bartolotta [ |
* Occupational exposure; CA: Chromosomal Aberration; MN: Micronucleus; SCE: Sister Chromatid Exchange; n.d.: not determined.
Genetic polymorphisms involved in the susceptibility to arsenic toxicity.
| Gene symbol | Biological function | SNP | Main associated effect | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ASIIIMT | As metabolism | G7395A (intronic) | Arsenic metabolite levels | Meza |
| GST-O2 | As detoxification | Asn142Asp | iAs and arsenic metabolites levels | Chung |
| GST-P1 | As detoxification | Ile105Val | Arsenic metabolite levels | Agusa |
| GST-M1 | As detoxification | Null genotype | iAs and arsenic metabolite levels | Chiou |
| GST-T1 | As detoxification | null genotype | Arsenic metabolite levels | Chiou |
| MTHFR | As metabolism | Ala222Val | iAs and arsenic metabolite levels | Lindberg |
| hOGG1 | DNA repair | Ser326 Cys | 8-oxoguanine levels | Fujihara |
| APE1 | DNA repair | Asp148Glu | 8-oxoguanine levels | Fujihara |
| XRCC3 | DNA repair | Thr241Met | Arsenic-induced skin lesions; Chromosomal aberrations | Kundu |
| HO1 | Inducible antioxidant enzyme | short GT-repeat | BP regulation and cardiovascular mortality risk | Wu |
| P53 | Tumor suppressor | Arg72Pro | Risk for arsenic-induced kerastosis | De Chaudhuri |