| Literature DB >> 32399610 |
Jessica S Helm1, Ruthann A Rudel2.
Abstract
Knowledge about established breast carcinogens can support improved and modernized toxicological testing methods by identifying key mechanistic events. Ionizing radiation (IR) increases the risk of breast cancer, especially for women and for exposure at younger ages, and evidence overall supports a linear dose-response relationship. We used the Adverse Outcome Pathway (AOP) framework to outline and evaluate the evidence linking ionizing radiation with breast cancer from molecular initiating events to the adverse outcome through intermediate key events, creating a qualitative AOP. We identified key events based on review articles, searched PubMed for recent literature on key events and IR, and identified additional papers using references. We manually curated publications and evaluated data quality. Ionizing radiation directly and indirectly causes DNA damage and increases production of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (RONS). RONS lead to DNA damage and epigenetic changes leading to mutations and genomic instability (GI). Proliferation amplifies the effects of DNA damage and mutations leading to the AO of breast cancer. Separately, RONS and DNA damage also increase inflammation. Inflammation contributes to direct and indirect effects (effects in cells not directly reached by IR) via positive feedback to RONS and DNA damage, and separately increases proliferation and breast cancer through pro-carcinogenic effects on cells and tissue. For example, gene expression changes alter inflammatory mediators, resulting in improved survival and growth of cancer cells and a more hospitable tissue environment. All of these events overlap at multiple points with events characteristic of "background" induction of breast carcinogenesis, including hormone-responsive proliferation, oxidative activity, and DNA damage. These overlaps make the breast particularly susceptible to ionizing radiation and reinforce that these biological activities are important characteristics of carcinogens. Agents that increase these biological processes should be considered potential breast carcinogens, and predictive methods are needed to identify chemicals that increase these processes. Techniques are available to measure RONS, DNA damage and mutation, cell proliferation, and some inflammatory proteins or processes. Improved assays are needed to measure GI and chronic inflammation, as well as the interaction with hormonally driven development and proliferation. Several methods measure diverse epigenetic changes, but it is not clear which changes are relevant to breast cancer. In addition, most toxicological assays are not conducted in mammary tissue, and so it is a priority to evaluate if results from other tissues are generalizable to breast, or to conduct assays in breast tissue. Developing and applying these assays to identify exposures of concern will facilitate efforts to reduce subsequent breast cancer risk.Entities:
Keywords: Adverse outcome pathway; Breast carcinogenesis; Cell proliferation; Characteristics of carcinogens; DNA damage; Epigenetics; Genomic instability; Hormones; In vitro assays; In vivo assays; Inflammation; Ionizing radiation; Key events; Mechanisms; Oxidative stress
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32399610 PMCID: PMC7261741 DOI: 10.1007/s00204-020-02752-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Toxicol ISSN: 0340-5761 Impact factor: 5.153
Fig. 1Adverse outcome pathway showing the key events linking the stressor ionizing radiation to breast cancer. Arrows indicate directionality of events: e.g., an increase in the upstream event leads to an increase in the downstream event. The intersection of additional stressors (estrogen and progesterone) with this pathway is included on the right. MIE molecular initiating event, the original action caused by the stressor IR in tissue that leads to subsequent events. AO adverse outcome. While this pathway is focused on breast cancer as an adverse outcome, DNA damage and GI, mutations, and hyperplasia can be considered adverse outcomes in their own right
Fig. 2Intracellular RONS at varying times after IR. RONS are measured with DCFH (dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate), a common but non-specific fluorescent indicator of intracellular oxidants. Red indicates elevated RONS; black indicates that RONS was measured but not elevated. Each reference is listed on the y-axis. Cell types are mostly embryonic or immortalized fibroblasts, keratinocytes, epithelial cells, and immune cells—none are mammary/breast (color figure online)
Guideline assays and other methods measuring key events in the pathway to breast cancer
| Event | Guideline test | Methods | Tissue |
|---|---|---|---|
| Breast cancer | Yes | OECD Test No. 451 and 453, 2-year bioassay for carcinogenicity and combined toxicity and carcinogenicity (OECD | Mammary |
| US National Toxicology Program (NTP), FDA, EPA guidelines for 2-year cancer bioassay and risk assessments (EPA | Mammary | ||
| RONS | No | Fluorescent protein-based probes (Dickinson and Chang | Any* |
| Boronate-based small molecule probes (Dickinson and Chang | Any* | ||
| EPA ToxCast assay for mitochondrial membrane potential and intracellular superoxide (DHE) (Giuliano et al. | Primary rat hepatocyte* | ||
| DNA damage | Yes | OECD DNA synthesis Test No. 486 for nucleotide excision repair (OECD 1997b) | Mammalian liver cells—only informs primary damage to liver (EFSA Scientific Committee et al. 2017) |
| OECD Alkaline comet assay Test No. 489 for single- and double-strand breaks and nucleotide damage (OECD | Any*,** | ||
| OECD Chromosomal damage and micronuclei Test No. 473, 475, 483, and 487 (OECD | 473, 487: Stable cell line, esp lymphocyte (no validated mammary)* | ||
| 475: Mammalian bone marrow*,** | |||
| 483: Rodent sperm cells*,** | |||
| No | Electrophoretic methods for finding strand breaks or specific DNA lesions: high-throughput comet assay (Ge et al. | Any* | |
| Direct measurement of DNA lesions via HPLC–MS/MS (Ravanat | Any** | ||
| Immunostaining using antibodies to label DNA damage repair proteins (H2AX, XRCC2, OGG1, etc.) coupled with microscopy or flow cytometry (Lobrich et al. | Any*,** | ||
| EPA ToxCast anti-p53 assay (Giuliano et al. | HEPG2 cells* | ||
| Mutation | Yes | OECD Ames Test No. 471 (OECD | Bacteria* |
| OECD Hprt or Xprt Test No. 476 (OECD | Selected lines, not mammary* | ||
| OECD Transgenic Rodent Somatic and Germ Cell Gene Mutation Assays Test No. 488 (OECD | Any (performed in mammary gland (Jakubczak et al. | ||
| OECD Thymidine kinase Test No. 490 (OECD | Lymphoma or lymphoblastoid cell lines* | ||
| No | Transgenic rodent in vivo/in vitro: RaDR-GFP for errors in homologous recombination (sister chromatid exchange) (Sukup-Jackson et al. | Any (performed in mammary gland (Sukup-Jackson et al. | |
| Transgenic rodent in vitro: many tests, some metabolically characterized (White et al. | Any (some in mammary) (White et al. | ||
| Array CGH detects copy number variations in tumors or clonal cells (Bonnet et al. | Any* | ||
| Genomic Instability | No | Many of the above methods for detecting DNA and chromosomal damage and mutation are applied at a range of time points to detect GI (Datta et al. | Any*,** |
| Proliferation, Hyperplasia | No | Change in cell numbers (DNA synthesis markers (in vivo or in vitro), impedance, time lapse imaging, colony formation assay (in vitro)) (Menyhart et al. | Any* |
| Immunohistochemistry (Ki67 labeling) (Romar et al. | Any*,** | ||
| Histology (proliferation, hyperplasia) in in vivo toxicity studies such as 90-day subchronic, 28 day, or 14-day can include longitudinal sectioning of male and female mammary glands and BrDU injection and staining to better detect proliferation (Collins | Any*,** | ||
| EPA ToxCast BRDU assay (Giuliano et al. | HepG2 carcinoma line* | ||
| Inflammation | No | Detection of inflammatory proteins like IL6, TNF-α: ELISA (El-Saghire et al. | Any (ideally both target tissue and leukocytes)*,** |
| Histology (leukocyte infiltration) (Ebrahimian et al. | Any*,** | ||
| EPA ToxCast BioMap assays (Houck et al. | Various, not including mammary* | ||
| Epigenetic changes | No | Global methylation: [3H]dCTP extension assay (Koturbash et al. | Any*,** |
| Gene-specific methylation: MeDIP-on-chip (Hsu et al. | Any*,** | ||
| miRNA expression (Mestdagh et al. | Any*,** | ||
| Histone methylation: ChIP (Prior et al. | Any*,** | ||
| Gene expression: western blot (Wang et al. | Any*,** |
*This test/measurement is not typically conducted in mammary tissue, so validation that results are generalizable is needed
**Verify that test substance reaches the mammary gland
Weight of evidence for essentiality of key events to the breast cancer pathway
| Key events | Essentiality |
|---|---|
| Increase in reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (RONS) | |
| Increase in DNA damage, GI, and mutation | |
| Increase in Proliferation and Hyperplasia | |
| Increase in inflammation | |
| Epigenetic changes |