| Literature DB >> 25243052 |
Jae Sung Park1, Hye Lim Kim2, Yeo Jin Kim2, Jong-Il Weon3, Mi-Kyung Sung4, Hai Won Chung5, Young Rok Seo2.
Abstract
Human apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease 1 (APE1) functions mainly in DNA repair as an enzyme removing AP sites and in redox signaling as a coactivator of various transcription factors. Based on these multifunctions of APE1 within cells, numerous studies have reported that the alteration of APE1 could be a crucial factor in development of human diseases such as cancer and neurodegeneration. In fact, the study on the combination of an individual's genetic make-up with environmental factors (gene-environment interaction) is of great importance to understand the development of diseases, especially lethal diseases including cancer. Recent reports have suggested that the human carcinogenic risk following exposure to environmental toxicants is affected by APE1 alterations in terms of gene-environment interactions. In this review, we initially outline the critical APE1 functions in the various intracellular mechanisms including DNA repair and redox regulation and its roles in human diseases. Several findings demonstrate that the change in expression and activity as well as genetic variability of APE1 caused by environmental chemical (e.g., heavy metals and cigarette smoke) and physical carcinogens (ultraviolet and ionizing radiation) is likely associated with various cancers. These enable us to ultimately suggest APE1 as a vital marker for the prediction of environmental carcinogenesis risk.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25243052 PMCID: PMC4158471 DOI: 10.1155/2014/730301
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1Multifunction of APE1/Ref1. APE1 has varied and independent functions and has an essential role in maintaining cellular stability. APE1 enzymatically restores damaged DNA bases and interacts with other proteins involved in DNA repair. APE1 regulates redox status of various transcription factors including AP-1 and p53 with its Cys residue. The crystal structure of APE1 (PDB ID : 1HD7) was identified by Beernink et al. [12].
Interference of APE1 upon environmental carcinogen exposure using in vitro and in vivo mammalian models and human population samples.
| Environmental factor | Subject | Dose | Effect on APE1 | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Arsenic | Human skin cell line |
0.005–5 | Decrease of APE1 mRNA expression | [ |
| Human lung cell line | 5 | Decrease of APE1 mRNA expression | [ | |
| Human skin cell line | 0.1–5 | Increase of APE1 protein expression (short-term) |
[ | |
| 0.1 or 0.5 | Decrease of APE1 protein expression (long-term) | |||
| >1 | Dose-dependent decrease of APE1 mRNA expression | |||
| Human lung and skin cell lines | <1 | Increase of APE1 protein expression | [ | |
| 5–100 | Dose-dependent increase of APE1 mRNA expression | |||
| Mouse embryo cell line | 10–75 | Dose-dependent increase of APE1 protein expression |
[ | |
| 10–100 | Dose-dependent increase of APE1 activity | |||
| Human population | — | Induction of APE1 polymorphism (D148E) | [ | |
| Human population | — | Induction of skin lesions with APE1 polymorphism (D148E) | [ | |
| Human kidney cell line | 100 | No effect on APE1 activity | [ | |
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| Cadmium | Human colon cell line | >10 | Decrease of APE1 mRNA expression |
[ |
| >25 | Decrease of APE1 activity | |||
| Human kidney cell line | 100 | Decrease of APE1 activity | [ | |
| Human population | — | Decrease of APE1 mRNA expression | [ | |
| Human breast and cervix cell lines | 20–80 | No effect on APE1 protein expression and activity | [ | |
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| Lead | Mouse brain cell | 10 | APE1 accumulation in nucleus | [ |
| Hamster ovary cell line | 0.5–500 | Dose-dependent accumulation of AP sites and decrease of APE1 activity | [ | |
| Human kidney cell line | 100 | Decrease of APE1 activity | [ | |
| Human population | — | Induction of APE1 polymorphism (D148E) | [ | |
| Human population | — | No effect on APE1 mRNA expression | [ | |
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| Swiss ICR albino mice | 119, 292, 438, 631 mg/m3 (TSM§) | Decrease of APE1 protein expression in brain tissue | [ | |
| Human population | — | Induction of lung cancer with APE1 polymorphism (D148E and −656T > G) | [ | |
| Human population | — | Induction of bladder cancer with APE1 polymorphism (D148E) | [ | |
| Human population | — | No effect on the induction of lung cancer with APE1 polymorphism (D148E) | [ | |
| Human population | — | No effect on the induction of bladder cancer with APE1 polymorphism (D148E) | [ | |
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| Ultraviolet | SKH-1 hairless mice | 5 days a week, 9 h a day at 10,000 lx (UVC) | Increase of APE1 mRNA expression | [ |
| Human lymphocyte | 4 J/m2 (UVA) | Induction of APE1 polymorphism (D148E) | [ | |
| Human cervix cell line | 0.2 J/cm2 (UVA) | Induction of APE1 relocalization to nuclear speckles | [ | |
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| Ionizing radiation | Human population | — | Induction of APE1 polymorphism (D148E) | [ |
| Human population | — | Induction of breast cancer with APE1 polymorphism (D148E) | [ | |
| Human population | — | Induction of APE1 polymorphism (D148E) | [ | |
| Human lung cell line | 200 cGy/min (X-ray) | Increase of APE1 protein expression | [ | |
| Human lung cell line | 4, 16 Gy (X-ray) | Increase of APE1 protein expression | [ | |
| Human blood culture | 80 cGy/min (X-ray) | Induction of APE1 polymorphism (D148E) | [ | |
| Human lymphocyte | 1 Gy/min (X-ray) | Induction of APE1 polymorphism (D148E) | [ | |
∗It represents study of gene-environment interaction; §TSM is abbreviation of total suspended matter in average after burning cigarette.
Figure 2Scheme showing the potential of APE1 as an important modulator in human diseases. APE1 abnormality is known to be associated with the induction of various lethal diseases including cancer. In particular, gene-environment interaction between APE1 malfunction and several environmental factors increases the carcinogenic risk, leading to cancer development. Thus, APE1 can be suggested as one of the potential markers for risk prediction of environmental carcinogenesis.