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Begin 04/20/10 In a 2009 review of human carcinogens by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) arsenic, beryllium, cadmium, chromium, and nickel, are categorized as Group 1 carcinogens: confirmed human carcinogens. As of 2008 the IARC classified Co in Group 2B, possibly carcinogenic to humans. [slide 1] The chemistry of metals is complex, but there are some general observations that can be made about mechanisms of carcinogenicity. All of the carcinogenic metals are associated with the generation of ROS, either directly through redox chemistry or indirectly be interacting with antioxidant defenses, for example depletion of GSH. The carcinogenic metals also appear to affect cell signaling systems and are involved in activation or suppression of genes that can be linked in one way or another to cell transformation. Cr is distinct in that, in addition to acting through ROS and cell signaling pathways, it directly reacts with DNA, resulting in characterizable lesions that are promutagenic and could also lead to cell transformation. Considerable work has been published on Cr and As. Because of the time constraint, I selected Cr and Cd to discuss in detail. I selected Cr because it is distinctive in its reactivity with DNA and Cd, because it is of interest to us at UNC by virtue of being the object of our Superfund research grant. We will look at Cd first. Cadmium is relatively insoluble in all its forms, so availability and uptake are relevant to describing the activity of Cd, in contrast to organic carcinogens that we have discussed. Cadmium absorption shows marked route dependency with only ~5% of an oral dose absorbed by the gastrointestinal tract. Cadmium absorption from the lung is very high, with upwards of 90% of a dose being absorbed. Cd lies below Zn in the periodic table so like Zn, is a transition metal having its outer d-shell completely filled. Like Zn, Cd is biologically active in the 2+ valence state and as a consequence, Cd mimics Zn and can replace Zn in biological complexes, particularly Zn finger proteins. Under certain circumstances, Cd can also replace Ca2+, and this also has implications in its carcinogenic activity as we shall see. There is a common pathway for absorption of cadmium with iron through the divalent metal transporter-1 protein (DMT-1) which enhances uptake of cadmium during iron deficiency. The major mechanisms involved in Cd carcinogenesis can be broadly categorized into four groups (next slide), aberrant gene expression, inhibition of DNA damage repair, inhibition of apoptosis, and induction of oxidative stress, and all of these pathways are interconnected. [slide 2] Aberrant gene expression Recent developments in gene expression studies, especially those in toxicogenomics, have facilitated the identification of a large number of genes and provide insight into mechanisms that are potentially involved in Cd carcinogenesis. The sub-group of genes whose expression is influenced by Cd exposure and which may also be involved in Cd toxicity and carcinogenesis can be organized into five categories: [slide 3] 1. Immediate early response genes, abbreviated IEGs, 2. Stress response genes, 3. transcription factors, 4. translation factors, and 5. miscellaneous genes. There is overlap between the stress response genes, transcription factors and IEGs. Immediate early response genes (IEGs) The group of genes called immediate early response genes (IEGs) are protooncogenes that undergo early transcriptional activation in response to mitogenic stimuli, and they are overexpressed in response to Cd exposure. In this group are some familiar names: c-fos, c-jun and c-myc which are transcription factors. The connection between overexpression of the early response genes and carcinogenic potential of Cd lies in the observation that IEGs are frequently found overexpressed in tumors and in cells undergoing proliferation. The Cd-induced overexpression of the IEGs can be transitional, lasting for a few hours, or sustained, such as in the case of cells that are transformed by exposure to Cd. Effects on the levels of secondary messengers such as ROS and Ca2+ have been suggested as the mechanism of Cd-induced overexpression of the immediate early response genes. Elevated cellular levels of Ca2+ have been associated with overexpression of the transcription factors c-fos, c-jun and c-myc in cell culture. Remember that the jun-fos complex is a bZIP heterodimer that comprises the transcription factor AP-1, which responds to multiple stimuli, including stress and growth factors initiating cell division. The c-myc gene codes for a bHLH transcription factor which is involved in activation of a large number of diverse proteins (15% of all genes). The role if Ca2+ in activation of IEGs is postulated to be interaction with response elements such as the serum response element (SRE) or cAMP-response element binding protein (CREB) that are present in the promoter or enhancer regions of the IEGs. In a second Ca ion-dependent pathway, elevated Ca2+ levels can trigger specific kinases which in turn can catalyze the phosphorylation of transcription factors resulting activation and consequent the deregulation of their target genes. One specific example is the activation of protein kinase C (PKC) which has been demonstrated in the overexpression of c-fos and c-jun in response to Cd exposure. Stress-response genes The expression of a group of genes collectively referred to as stress response genes is induced in order to combat the stress caused by exposure to Cd. Among the stress response genes which are induced are genes involved in the synthesis of metallothionein (MT), heat shock proteins and the oxidative stress response protein glutathione (GSH). Earlier in the course, we used the MT gene as an example of how response elements function. The MT protein is a low molecular weight protein containing 30% cysteine, which chelates metals because of its high sulfhydryl content, and thus serves as a defense against metal toxicity. GSH is the most important antioxidant molecule present in cells and protects against Cd carcinogenicity both through its antioxidant activity and potentially through chelation by its cysteinyl sulfhydryl group. As we shall see, exposure of cells and animals to Cd results in the oxidative stress; and many of the reactive oxygen species (ROS) that are generated following exposure of cells to Cd are detoxified either by the action of GSH or enzymes, such as GSH peroxidase and GSH reductase, that are involved in the GSH redox cycle. You should have some concept of the relation of ROS to chemical carcinogenesis from the section of the course that we just concluded. Heat shock proteins are a class of stress response protein induced in response to exposure to physical and chemical insults and the induction of these proteins is considered as an adaptation of the cells allowing them to perform functions essential for survival under conditions of stress. It has been hypothesized that protein denaturation or any other type of protein damage caused by Cd serves as the stimulus for induction of the genes encoding heat shock proteins. Transcription factors Some of the genes that are induced by the exposure of cells to Cd encode transcription factors with resulting transcriptional deregulation of their target genes. The transcriptional genes include the IEGs we have already mentioned, c-fos, c-jun, and c-myc but a host of other transcription factors are also activated, including the metal regulatory transcription factor 1 (MTF1), which binds to the MRE (metal response element) of promoters; upstream stimulator factor (USF), which binds in the promoter region of the MT-1 gene; nuclear factor κB (NFκB) and NF-E2related factor 2 (NRF2). NF-κB regulates many physiological processes, including apoptosis, cell adhesion, and cell proliferation. NF-κB can both induce and repress gene expression by binding to particular DNA sequences, known as κB elements in promoters and enhancers. NF-κB is inactivated and retained in the cytoplasm by complexation with a family of inhibitory proteins called inhibitors of NF-κB (IκB). Activation of NF-κB involves the phosphorylation of IκB by the IκB kinase (IKK) complex, which results in IκB degradation, allowing translocation of NFκB to the nucleus to transactivate (or repress) target genes. Nrf2 is a key transcription factor in the transcriptional regulation of antioxidant response element-dependent (ARE-dependent) gene expression in response to oxidative stress. Important Nrf2-regulated genes include heme oxygenase-1 and NAD (P)H:quinone oxidoreductase-1. Heme oxygenase-1 degrades the heme in hemoglobin to biliverdin and bilirubin, which are potent antioxidants and appear to be involved in a manifold of additional protective physiological situations. NADPH:quinone oxidoreductase (NQO1), is a dimeric flavoprotein that catalyzes the two-electron reduction of quinones to hydroquinones. This reduction by 2 electrons prevents the one-electron reduction of quinones by cytochrome P450 reductase and other flavoproteins that would otherwise result in redox cycling of the quinones with generation of superoxide (O2−/●). Translation factors Translation factors are involved in the regulation of initiation, elongation and termination of peptide chain synthesis – an area which we didn’t cover in our very cursory description of protein synthesis. Overexpression of several of the translation factors has been identified in cancer cell lines and tumor samples. In cells transformed by Cd, overexpression of translation initiation factor 3 and translation elongation factor 1δ has been demonstrated. Miscellaneous genes “Miscellaneous genes” represents the large number of additional genes differentially expressed in response to Cd exposure that have been identified by the use of microarrays. However, their relation to Cd carcinogenesis remains to be demonstrated, which explains the “miscellaneous category”. The following slide shows some of the genes activated. [slide 4 summary of some activated genes] Cadmium and the inhibition of DNA damage repair We have discussed the fact a number of the responses to Cd involve defense against oxidative stress. While genotoxicity induced by Cd is not a direct effect of the metal through the generation of oxy radicals, exposure of cells to Cd results in the generation of 8-oxodG — a reliable marker for oxidative DNA damage. What is the explanation? The explanation probably lies in the observation that Cd exhibits the potential to inhibit DNA damage repair, and this has been proposed as a major mechanism underlying the carcinogenic potential of Cd. The potential of Cd to inhibit DNA damage repair has been demonstrated by several studies. Exposure of alveolar epithelial cells to Cd significantly reduced the activity of formamido pyrimidine DNA glycosylase, an enzyme involved in the recognition and removal of FapyG and FapyA as well as other oxidative DNA damage such as 8-oxoG and 8-oxoA. The Fapy glycosylase contains a Znfinger binding motif and the Cd-induced inhibition of DNA damage repair is likely a result of substitution for Zn. The zinc finger proteins substituted with Cd do not perform their functions as efficiently as DNA damage repair enzymes with the appropriate Zn coordination. An important implication of DNA repair inhibition by Cd is that Cd may also enhance the malignant transformation of cells induced by other genotoxic chemicals. . Cadmium and apoptosis We have learned how apoptosis plays an essential role in the elimination of damaged cells which are potentially tumorigenic and we have by implication indicated that to survive cancer cells develop mechanisms to avoid apoptosis. The potential involvement of apoptotic inhibition as a mechanism for Cd carcinogenesis has been demonstrated by studies with normal human prostate epithelial cells exposed to CdCl2. Two-thirds of the cells apoptosed - based on morphological changes (e.g. appearance of fragmented DNA and other histological changes specific to apoptosis) – but a third of the cells survived and showed resistance to Cd-induced apoptosis. So it appears that in spite of its ability to induce apoptosis in cells, Cd may facilitate the selective enrichment of a population of genetically damaged and apoptosis-resistant cells. A prominent characteristic of the Cd-resistant population of cells was 2.5-fold greater MT content compared to the normal, untreated cells. Gene expression profiling has provided insight into the molecular mechanisms responsible for resistance to apoptosis in the selection of this population. Results of cDNA microarray analysis of the gene expression profile demonstrated the down-regulation of genes encoding several members of the caspase family of apoptotic proteases. The next slide should refresh your memory about the role of caspases. [Slide 5, repeat of receptor-mediated apoptosis pathway] You recall that caspase-3 and caspase-9 were integral proteins involved in receptor-mediated apoptotic pathways. Furthermore, the expression of bax, an important pro-apoptotic gene we mentioned, was significantly reduced in the transformed cells compared with the control cells. At the same time, the anti-apoptotic gene, bcl2, was significantly overexpressed in the transformed cells compared to the controls. The proposed role of Cd as an inhibitor of apoptosis is also cited with respect to its potential as a co-carcinogen. Cd has been reported as an inhibitor of apoptosis induced by both metallic and non-metallic toxic agents. The ability of Cd to block or inhibit apoptosis induced by hexavalent chromium, known carcinogen, has been studied in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO K1-BH4) cells treated with CdCl2 alone, hexavalent chromium alone or chromium plus CdCl2, and apoptosis was determined 48-hour post-exposure. Exposure of the cells to chromium alone resulted in the induction of apoptosis as evidenced from the appearance of DNA fragmentation and apoptotic nuclei in the cells. However, Cd was able to block or inhibit chromium-induced apoptosis when the cells were co-exposed to both metals. The inhibitory effect of Cd on chromium-induced apoptosis is mediated through the inhibition of caspase 3 activity. Similar inhibitory effects of CdCl2 have been reported on apoptosis induced by the antineoplastic drugs cisplatin and etoposide. Cd has also been shown to inhibit apoptosis induced by benzo(a)pyrene-7,8-diol epoxide (BPDE) in mammalian cells treated with Cd and BPDE. As already indicated in describing the treatment of the human prostate epithelial cells with Cd, Cd can induce apoptosis as well as inhibiting apoptosis. Multiple mechanisms appear to be involved in the Cd-induced apoptosis. Both caspase dependent and independent mechanisms involving mitochondria have been reported. In the case of mouse macrophages, oxidative stress has been demonstrated as the major mechanism responsible for apoptosis. The oxidative stress in the macrophages affected apoptosis indirectly by modulating the cellular level of Ca2+ and the activities of caspases and mitogen activated protein kinases (MAPKs) in the cells. The role of oxidative stress was confirmed by inhibition of apoptosis in the presence of antioxidants, Nacetyl cysteine (NAC), glutathione, and catalase. Induction of ROS We have discussed the activation of antioxidant defenses in response to Cd exposure, including specific genes involved and the fact that oxidative damage is observed in Cd-exposed cells. There is definitive evidence for the increased presence of free radicals in intact animals following acute Cd overload. Superoxide anion, hydrogen peroxide, and hydroxyl radicals in vivo have been detected by spectroscopic techniques. The expression of ROS-related genes in response to Cd-overload just described gives strong biological support to the importance of oxidative stress. In microarray analyses, in addition to the antioxidant gene products described above, oxidative stress protein A170, heat-shock proteins, and oxidative DNA damage responsive GADD45, GADD153, is increased. Conversely, the expression of genes encoding metabolism is generally suppressed, which is interpreted as an attempt to switch the cellular energy to overcome oxidative stress. (Metabolism can be a source of ROS.) It has been suggested that the mechanisms of acute Cd toxicity involve the depletion of glutathione and protein-bound sulfhydryl groups, resulting in enhanced production of ROS such as superoxide ion, hydrogen peroxide, and hydroxyl radicals. The next slide illustrates proposed role of acute Cd exposure in effects of ROS. [slide 6, summarizing the effect of Cd on ROS] In support of this hypothesis, the Fe-chelator Desferal can abolish the Cd-generated spintrapping of radical adducts in the bile, clearly indicating the involvement of endogenous irondependent hydroxyl radical generation (Fenton reaction) as a mechanism of Cd induced oxidative stress. This observation is consistent with the fact that, in addition to background levels of Fe, displacement of Fe from iron storage protein ferritin appears to be involved. Increased ROS effects are amplified by lipid peroxidation, and results in DNA damage via the generation of the α,β-unsaturated aldehydes. So overall, it is generally agreed upon that oxidative stress plays important roles in acute Cd poisoning. However, following long-term Cd exposure at environmentally-relevant low levels, direct evidence for oxidative stress is less well defined and there are conflicting reports about its role. Alterations in ROS-related gene expression during chronic exposures are less significant compared to acute Cd poisoning. This is probably due to induced adaptation mechanisms such as increased levels of metallothionein and glutathione with chronic Cd exposures, which would be expected to reduce Cd-induced oxidative stress. This is supported by the observation that in chronic Cd-transformed cells, attenuated levels of ROS signals are detected with spectroscopic probes. It may be that ROS are generated following acute Cd overload and play important roles in tissue damage, and adaptation to chronic Cd exposure reduces ROS production, but acquired Cd tolerance along with aberrant gene expression probably plays important roles in chronic Cd toxicity and carcinogenesis. With regard to aberrant gene expression, an epigenetic mechanism for Cd carcinogenesis may also play a role through the ability of Cd to affect DNA methylation status. Cd can induce DNA hypomethylation initially following acute exposure (transcription ↑), and subsequently induce DNA hypermethylation (transcription ↓) following the long-term exposure at low doses/concentrations. Cd-induced DNA hypermethylation in Cd-transformed prostate epithelial cells is associated with increases in DNA methyltransferases activity and decreases in oxidative stress and the redox-sensitive signal transduction pathways such as the JNK apoptotic pathway, resulting in apoptotic resistance. (Remember the slide on receptor mediated apoptotic pathways which included the non-caspase JNK pathway. The implication of increased methyltransferase activity is that the transcription of the JNK pathway proteins is shut down.) Cd-induced DNA hypermethylation was also shown to decrease the expression of tumor suppressor genes (including p16), which could be an additional factor supporting Cd-induced malignant transformation in human prostate cells. Recently a theory to explain cadmium carcinogenesis has been formulated involving a protein we have already discussed as an oncogene product, β-catenin [Slide 7, repeat β-catenin] The story originates with a protein called E-cadherin, which is a transmembrane, Ca2+-binding glycoprotein, that plays a role in Ca2+-dependent cell–cell adhesion and is localized at the adhesion belts of the adhering junctional complexes. [Slide 8, showing role of E-cadherin] E-cadherin has an intracellular domain that is linked to the actin cytoskeleton through catenins, and an extracellular domain that contains the Ca2+-binding sites, in addition to the adhesion domain of the molecule. Normally, Ca2+-binding to E-cadherin causes the protein to rigidify, and it constrains the position of the adhesion sites in the molecule to those suitable for the formation of a uniform cell–cell adhesion lattice. Cadmium was found to bind to a polypeptide which corresponds to one of the extracellular Ca2+-binding regions of E-cadherin, changing its conformation. The disruption of E-cadherin-mediated cell-adhesion triggers β-catenin-mediated gene activation and this may represent early steps in the initiation phase of cancer. Remember that in the cytosol, β-catenin can be phosphorylated and degraded or translocated to the nucleus where it binds to transcription factors and alters the expression of several genes including c-myc and c-jun. Because calcium activates E-cadherin and suppresses β-catenin, the displacement of calcium from E-cadherin by cadmium possibly contributes to abnormal differentiation and malignant progression. Supporting this pathway is the observation that after cadmium exposure of renal tubule epithelial cells there is a loss of E-cadherin from the cell borders, the appearance of gaps between cells, a decrease in the amount of β-catenin in the cell border and an increase in its amount in the nuclei. Begin 04/22/10 With regard to aberrant gene expression, an epigenetic mechanism for Cd carcinogenesis may also play a role through the ability of Cd to affect DNA methylation status. Cd can induce DNA hypomethylation initially following acute exposure (transcription ↑), and subsequently induce DNA hypermethylation (transcription ↓) following the long-term exposure at low doses/concentrations. Cd-induced DNA hypermethylation in Cd-transformed prostate epithelial cells is associated with increases in DNA methyltransferases activity and decreases in oxidative stress and the redox-sensitive signal transduction pathways such as the JNK apoptotic pathway, resulting in apoptotic resistance. (Remember the slide on receptor mediated apoptotic pathways which included the non-caspase JNK pathway.) The implication of increased methyltransferase activity is that the transcription of the JNK pathway proteins is down-regulated.) Cd-induced DNA hypermethylation was also shown to decrease the expression of tumor suppressor genes (including p16), which could be an additional factor supporting Cd-induced malignant transformation in human prostate cells. The mechanism by which methylation status is altered has not been worked out. Recently a theory to explain cadmium carcinogenesis has been formulated involving a protein we have already discussed as an oncogene product, β-catenin [repeat β-catenin slide] The story originates with a protein called E-cadherin (= Ca adhesion), which is a transmembrane, Ca2+-binding glycoprotein, that plays a role in Ca2+-dependent cell–cell adhesion and is localized at the adhesion belts of the junctional complexes. [slide showing role of E-cadherin] E-cadherin has an intracellular domain that is linked to the actin cytoskeleton through catenins, and an extracellular domain that contains the Ca2+-binding sites, in addition to the adhesion domain of the molecule. Normally, Ca2+-binding to E-cadherin causes the protein to rigidify, and it constrains the position of the adhesion sites in the molecule to sites appropriate for the formation of a uniform cell–cell adhesion lattice. Cadmium has been found to bind to a Ca2+binding region of E-cadherin, changing its conformation. The disruption of E-cadherin-mediated cell-adhesion triggers β-catenin-mediated gene activation and this may represent early steps in the initiation phase of cancer. Remember that in the cytosol, β-catenin can be phosphorylated and degraded or the unphosphorylated protein is translocated to the nucleus where it binds to transcription factors and alters the expression of several genes including c-myc and c-jun as well as genes involved in cell development. The excess β-catenin released in an unphosphorylated form following E-cadherin deactivation translocates to the nucleus and possibly contributes to abnormal differentiation and malignant progression. Supporting this pathway is the observation that after cadmium exposure of renal tubule epithelial cells there is a loss of E-cadherin from the cell borders, the appearance of gaps between cells, a decrease in the amount of β-catenin in the cell border and an increase in its level in the nuclei. CHROMIUM Cr(VI) Metabolism. Cr is taken up by cells only in its hexavalent form. At neutral pH, Cr(VI) exists as a mixture of chromate (CrO42–) and hydrochromate (HCrO4–) anions in the approximate ratio of 3:1. Chromates are isostructural with physiological sulfate and phosphate ions, and this molecular mimicry is why Cr(VI) readily enters cells through the sulfate channels. Most chromates are sparingly soluble, and therefore absorption occurs under circumstances where locally high concentrations can form. This is favorable in the lung, and absorption and toxic/carcinogenic activity is pretty much confined to the lung. Human and other mammalian cells are capable of massive accumulation of Cr(VI), with intracellular levels 10–20 times above extracellular levels within 3 h. Cr(VI) is completely unreactive toward DNA under physiological pH and temperature. In the biological systems, however, Cr(VI) undergoes a series of reduction reactions ultimately yielding thermodynamically stable Cr(III). [Slide 9, Cr uptake and metabolism] When this occurs extracellularly, reduction acts as a detoxification process because membranes are only poorly permeable to Cr(III). Inside the cell, Cr(VI) reduction is the activation event that is responsible for the generation of genotoxic damage and other forms of toxicity. Cr(VI) metabolism in mammalian cells consists of direct electron transfer from ascorbate and nonprotein thiols, such as glutathione and cysteine. Ascorbate is the dominant biological reducer of Cr(VI), accounting for about 90% of its metabolism in cells in vivo. Cultured cells typically contain < 50–60 μM ascorbate and rely on thiols for Cr(VI) reduction, so unless cellular ascorbate levels are restored to normal by supplementation, cell cultures are not a true physiological model of Cr(VI) metabolism. While the end-product of Cr(VI) metabolism is always Cr(III), the reduction process can generate variable amounts of transient Cr(V), Cr(IV), and organic radicals depending on the reducing agent and the ratio of reactants. The significance of this observation is that under physiological conditions, that is high ascorbate concentrations, the high-valent forms Cr(IV) and Cr(V) are not a significant actors. This observation is important because considerable effort has been devoted to investigating the role of Cr(IV) and Cr(V) in the genotoxic and mutagenic capability of Cr, particularly with regard to oxidative stress. Thus a large segment of literature devoted to the activity of high-valent transients in the reduction cascade probably does not have physiological relevance. The final product of Cr(VI) metabolism, Cr(III), forms stable coordination complexes with nucleic acids and proteins. Studies in Cr(VI)-treated cells and in vitro reduction reactions under physiologically realistic conditions show the formation of several types of DNA damage, including strand breaks and various Cr-DNA adducts. Cr-DNA Adducts. Low molecular weight Cr-DNA adducts are the most abundant form of Cr(VI)-induced genetic lesions in mammalian cells, and they were found to be responsible for all mutagenic damage generated during Cr(VI) reduction with both cysteine and ascorbate. Some structures are on the next slide. [Slide 10: structures of Cr(III)-DNA adducts] The 50–75% of adducts in vitro are binary Cr-DNA complexes and these are only weakly mutagenic. Their existence in vivo is debated because ternary Cr-DNA adducts can be disrupted during DNA isolation to produce binary adducts which of course complicates the assessment of the actual levels of binary adducts. The predominant forms of Cr-DNA complexes in cells are ternary adducts (cross-links), in which the Cr(III) atom bridges DNA with small cellular molecules (L-Cr-DNA). Four major forms of ternary adducts are glutathione-Cr-DNA, cysteineCr-DNA, histidine-Cr-DNA, and ascorbate-Cr-DNA complexes. All ternary adducts are much more mutagenic than binary adducts, and ascorbate-Cr-DNA crosslinks were the most potent promutagenic of the Cr-DNA modifications. Ternary adducts are formed through an attack of DNA by ligand-Cr(III) complexes. The primary site of attachment for all Cr(III) adducts is the phosphate group, but induction of G:C-targeted mutagenic events by Cr-DNA modifications has also led to the suggestion that the mutagenic forms of adducts are probably Cr(III) microchelates involving a phosphate group and the N7 position of G (slide). The adducts are substrates for nucleotide excision repair (NER) in human and hamster cells, supported by the persistence of total adducts and increased toxicity and mutagenicity of Cr-DNA damage in NER-deficient cells. A recent assignment of Cr-dG binding to 5'-NGG-3' sequences, which was based on the mapping of DNA nicks made by bacterial UvrABC mapping in Cr-adducted DNA, is consistent with this sequence specificity of Cr-adduct mutagenesis. DNA–Protein and DNA Interstrand Cross-Links. The formation of DNA–protein cross-links (DPC) by Cr(VI) has been observed both in vivo and in vitro. Sensitive assays are available to measure DPCs, and the overall yield of DPC in cells is small, estimated as less than 1% of total Cr-DNA adducts. Because of the molecular volume of octahedral Cr(III) and the attached protein, the lesions are extremely bulky and would be expected to block replication and transcription, but at this time, the biological significance and repair of Cr-induced DPCs is unknown. Interstrand DNA cross-links are an area of controversy. The conditions under which interstrand cross-links have been identified involve Cr concentrations that are unrealistically high, and result in the formation of Cr oligomers which would not exist in cells. At non-lethal concentrations of Cr, interstrand cross-links are not expected to be important on the basis of the severe steric restrictions for the intercalation of monomeric octahedral Cr(III) complexes and the lack of Cr(VI) hypersensitivity in crosslink repair-deficient [ERCC4(XPF)-null] CHO cells provides a strong argument that interstrand DNA cross-linking does not contribute to Cr genotoxicity. DNA Breaks. The presence of single-strand breaks (SSB) in chromate-treated cells in culture and in animal tissues has been reported in several studies that used standard detection assays for the quantitation of these DNA lesions. The assays all involved treatment of DNA under strongly alkaline conditions raising a major concern as to whether the data measured genuine SSB or breaks that were artifacts of the alkaline assay conditions. As in the case of other phosphate triesters, Cr-DNA phosphate adducts make the phosphate backbone linkages unstable under alkaline conditions, causing breaks. Another complication in the detection of SSB attributed to oxidative damage is the presence of strand breaks resulting from the rapid excision of Cr-DNA adducts by NER, which generates 50,000 excision events/min in human cells following exposure even to non-toxic Cr(VI) concentrations (2–5 μM). The occurrence of Cr-mediated SSBs is supported only at high, toxic doses of Cr by comparing Cr(VI) toxicity in SSB-repair deficient (XRCC1–/–) and proficient (XRCC1+) EM9-CHO cells. The production of SSB was inhibited by the addition of catalase and iron chelators implicating involvement of Fenton chemistry and H2O2. Although Cr(V) is known be involved in oxy radical generation by Fenton chemistry, the levels of Cr(V) in cells with physiological levels of ascorbate are negligible, so in the absence of extraneous Fe(II), hydroxyl radical should not be a factor. In fact, careful sample preparation to exclude Fe greatly reduces the SSB observed. The presence of H2O2 needs to be explained, but could be a result of mitochondrial damage or elevated activity of NADPH oxidases. Recently, evidence for the formation of DSB in Cr(VI)-treated human cells has been obtained. The DSB were produced via an indirect mechanism, which required the passage of cells through S-phase and the participation of mismatch repair proteins. (We will come back to this in a few minutes.) The next slide summarizes pathways leading to SSBs and DSBs. [Slide 11, major pathways leading SSB and DSB] DNA Base Damage. Administration of Cr(VI) to animals with different tissue levels of ascorbate failed to induce the formation of 8-oxoG, which is the most widely used indicator of the oxidative insult on DNA. However, there is a recent report that Cr(VI) yielded Sp in vivo in E. coli treated with > 100 μM K2CrO7 (we cited the result in the unit on oxidative damage) and also in vitro in dsDNA by reduction of K2CrO7 (at lower concentrations (3 – 50 μM) with ascorbate. Since Sp is a further oxidation product of 8-oxoG, the 8-oxoG should have initially been present. In the in vitro work, 8-oxoG was detected at a level ~5% of Sp and the rapid conversion to Sp in vivo might explain why 8-oxoG was not detected. Sp was first characterized in 2001, and even now, would not be routinely assayed, so it could have been overlooked in all other studies – identification of Sp would imply 8-oxoG as a precursor. The generation of Sp in vivo or in vitro with excess ascorbate would seem to be inconsistent with the suggestion that oxidative stress should not be important under physiological relevant conditions, but an element of uncertainty in vivo arises from the fact that the concentration of Cr(VI) used to treat the cells was high and perhaps ROS originated from damage to the aerobic respiration chain. To settle this point, determination of spiroiminodihydantoin and other advanced oxidation products of guanine in ascorbate-complemented human cells is necessary. Begin 04/27/10 Genomic Instability, Toxicity, and Cr(VI) Carcinogenesis. One feature characteristic of Cr(VI)-associated cancers is the presence of microsatellite instability, which is indicative of a defective mismatch repair (MMR). Microsatellite DNA consists of multiple repeats of short sequences that are interspersed throughout the genome. In Cr-induced cancers, an elevated mutation rate within microsatellites is associated with the loss of expression of MLH1, which you might remember is the human homolog of mutL, one of the essential MMR proteins in E. coli. MMR is a critical system used by cells to correct replication errors, and cells deficient in MMR exhibit mutation rates 100-times higher than normal within genes, and at even greater rates within the microsatellites. Thus, chromate-associated cancer cells express a phenotype called a “mutator phenotype” because of the increasing propagation of mutations caused by the loss of a major mutation avoidance system. Once MMR is inactivated, the rate of mutation in the critical growth-controlling genes is greatly accelerated since the mutator phenotype maintains high rates of random mutagenesis. An interesting consequence is that exposure to Cr(VI) for additional mutagenic events is no longer required for the cell to progress to a transformed state. The question arises as to how Cr(VI) selectively leads to the appearance of this specific form of microsatellite instability, which is uncommon for other lung carcinogens. One hint is that (1) the absence of MMR eliminated the ability of Cr-DNA adducts to inhibit cellular replication of Crmodified vectors and (2) concurrently elimination of MMR reduced the induction of DSB in Cr(VI)-treated cells: that is, no MMR = no DSB. Thus, MMR appears to be responsible for an aberrant repair process in which DSBs are generated. The Cr-resistant phenotype can be induced by the loss of any of the main MMR proteins (in addition MLH1 that includes MSH2, MSH6 or PMS2), indicating that the entire MMR complex is required for the processing of Cr-DNA adducts into highly toxic DSB. The damage-promoting effects of MMR extended over a range of Cr(VI) concentrations from very low, nontoxic (<1 μM within drinking water standards) to highly toxic doses (>90% clonogenic lethality). The potentiating effects of MMR were most strongly pronounced in cells supplemented with physiological levels of ascorbate. MMRpromoted DSB were preferentially found in the G2 phase of the cell cycle, irrespective of dose, postexposure time, and type of cell. The G2 specificity of DSB production is presumed to result from the requirement for Cr-damaged DNA to undergo replication, i.e., pass through the S- phase, in order for the MMR system to activate aberrant processing. These observations have led to a proposed model for transformation in which highly mutagenic adducts such as the ascorbate–Cr-DNA cross-links described in the last lecture induce mismatches during the replication of damaged DNA and the compound lesions (consisting of mismatches at the site of Cr adducts) lead to abnormal MMR. In this scenario, adducts both induce mutations and also promote larger chromosomal abnormalities including DSB. The DSB are handled through an error-prone system known as nonhomologous end-joining. We did not cover nonhomologous end joining, but suffice it to say for now that NHEJ is a process involving resection of the ends of dsDNA at double strand breaks, and thus results in deletions and translocations (the exchange of chromosomal material). The error-prone repair can eventually select for a MMR-deficient population, since these cells have a growth advantage . The observed tolerance of Cr(VI) by MMR-deficient cells (meaning this doesn’t happen in the absence of MMR) and the absence of MMR in chromate-induced lung cancers led to the formulation of the selection model for Cr(VI) carcinogenesis shown in the next slide (MSI+ = microsatellite instability). [slide, model for MMR-induced cell transformation] This model postulates that chronic exposure to toxic doses of Cr(VI) results in the selective growth of resistant cells that lack MMR, although, as we have just said, MMR is important in initiating the pathway. Once a population of MMR-deficient cells emerges, the subsequent exposure to Cr(VI) may no longer be necessary for the generation of additional mutations needed for the further progression of initiated cells because MMR-null cells have very high rates of spontaneous mutagenesis. Direct involvement of Cr(VI) in cell signaling. The involvement of Cr in cell signaling is much less well defined than for Cd. Much of the gene expression observed with Cr-exposure may be due to damage response or epigenetic effects rather than direct action of Cr. However a recently published study does provide at least one concrete example of activity directly induced by Cr. Exposing airway epithelial cells to Cr(VI) increases DNA binding and promoter transactivation by members of a protein family called “signal transducer and activator of transcription” (STAT) including STAT1 which suppresses expression of the protein, “vascular endothelial cell growth factor A” (VEGFA). VEGFA is an important mediator of lung injury and repair. The STATs are activated through the phosphorylation of a conserved tyrosine residue in the C-terminus by a kinase Fyn, which is a Cr(VI)-stimulated src family kinase (SFK) upstream of STAT1 in the activation pathway. The role of Fyn was confirmed by demonstrating that Cr(VI) failed to activate STAT1 in cells that lacked Fyn and restoring Fyn, provided a fully functional STAT1response to Cr(VI). Cr(VI) stimulates Fyn kinase activity through a direct effect on the enzyme, demonstrated by the fact that substrate phosphorylation was increased by adding Cr(VI) to a solution containing only affinity purified enzyme, substrate, and ATP. The effect of Cr(VI) was not inhibited in the presence of catalase but was prevented by the addition of a Cr chelator, N-acetyl Cys to the reaction mixture. This suggests that Cr(VI) reacts with a thiol in the kinase. Cr(VI) causes similar activation of recombinant Src under the same reaction conditions. The thiol dependence for the activation of purified Fyn or Src is consistent with structural studies that identified a metal-responsive motif in a carboxyl regulatory domain of the SFK enzymes that contains two critical cysteines separated by 10 amino acids. Conformational change in this motif during activation is recognized to increase substrate affinity. Whether Cr(VI) binds these cysteines or binds to other amino acids in the regulatory domain in intact cells or in vivo remains to be determined. Cr(VI) as a Cocarcinogen. The possibility of a role for Cr(VI) as a cocarcinogen had been debated for a long time, but only within the last few years has chromate cocarcinogenesis actually been demonstrated in animal studies and insights into mechanism have been obtained. Experimental data definitively show that Cr(VI) can act as a potent cocarcinogen for UVinduced skin tumors. In these studies, the presence of Cr(VI) in drinking water caused dosedependent increases in the frequency of skin tumors in UV-irradiated hairless mice. Cr(VI) alone produced no tumors, indicating that it acted a strong enhancer of the UV-initiated tumorigenesis. Supplementation of the animals’ diets with the antioxidants vitamin E or selenomethionine (methionine with Se substituted for S) had no effect on Cr(VI)-mediated enhancement of skin carcinogenesis, suggesting that cocarcinogenic effects were not oxidant-mediated. Since the inability to repair UV-induced DNA damage would be a logical cause of the observed skin cancer, a likely target of Cr-UV synergism could be interference of Cr(VI) with NER of UVinduced pyrimidine dimers. We have already discussed the observation that Cr-DNA adducts, which occur at very high levels even with non toxic Cr(VI) intake, are substrates for human NER and are rapidly removed. Thus, the presence of Cr-DNA adducts in UV-irradiated keratinocytes can be expected to compete for NER machinery while mutagenic UV-DNA damage, which is removed at a slower rate, will persist. For example, a 3-h treatment of primary human fetal lung cells (IMR90) with 2 μM Cr(VI), a dose in water that meets the current federal standard for Cr in drinking water, caused 107 Cr-DNA adducts/cell. On the basis of a t1/2 = 8.2 h in the fetal lung cells, total co-opting of cellular NER would still leave about 106 Cr lesions/genome 24 h postexposure. Hence, the comutagenicity of Cr(VI) and UV can plausibly be explained by competition for NER factors. Tobacco smoke and Cr(VI) exposure represent another potential case for synergistic tumorigenesis. DNA adducts formed by polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, which are one of the main groups of tobacco-derived mutagens, are repaired by NER. A study found preexposure of CHO cells to Cr(VI) led to a significantly slower repair of BPDE-DNA adducts, which was accompanied by increased cytotoxicity and mutagenesis of BPDE. Coexposure to Cr and tobacco smoke produced no synergism repair-deficient cells, which clearly points to NER as the key target of enhancement of BPDE genotoxicity by Cr(VI). Interestingly, Cr(VI) appears to cause a selective increase in the number of BPDE adducts at the mutational hotspots of p53 in smoking-induced lung cancer: codons 248, 273, and 282. These sites are likely to be repair coldspots, which would make them particularly sensitive to decreased NER because of the competition with Cr-DNA adducts.