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CHEMICAL CARCINOGENESIS INDRANIL CHATTOPADHYAY Cancer is a group of diseases characterized by uncontrolled growth and spread of abnormal cells […] that can result in death” (American Cancer Society, 2006) Genetic disease characterized by either acquired or inherited mutations. Accumulation of non- lethal successive mutations or loss of function in the genes that control the growth of cells Any agent with the ability to initiate the formation of cancer. Due to the ability to damage the genome or to the disruption of cellular metabolic processes. Cause damage after repeated or long-duration exposure. Not immediate apparent harmful effects, with cancer developing only after a long latency period. Similarity to Drugs and Other Toxins: • Exhibit clear dose-response relationships • Undergo biotransformation (activation, deactivation) • Response varies with species, sex, age • Interact with co-administered substances (enhancement or inhibition) Difference from Drugs and Other Toxins: • Biologic effect is persistent, cumulative and delayed Proximate or direct-acting: act locally without metabolic change, they are already electrophilic. Examples: Nitrogen mustard Nitrosomethylurea Benzyl chloride Indirect acting : are metabolically activated into electrophilic species (procarcinogen to carcinogen). Examples: Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) Produced by incomplete combustion of organic materials Present in chimney soot, charcoal-grilled meats, auto exhaust, cigarette Which classes of chemicals tend to be carcinogens? Epoxides: Ethylene oxide Propylene oxide Organohalogen comp.: Vinyl chloride Carbon tetrachloride Chloroform Hexachlorobenzene Trichloroethylene Hydrazines: Hydrazine (and salts) 1,2Dimethylhydrazine N-Nitroso compounds: N-Nitrosodimethylamine Aromatic Amines: Benzidine Aniline oAnisidine Toluidine o- Aromatic hydrocarbons: Benzene Benz[a]anthracene Benzo[a]pyrene How do carcinogens enter the body? Skin absorption. Many solvents and other chemicals go directly through the skin. Ingestion. Swallowing of a carcinogen. Inhalation. Breathing gases, fumes and vapors is the most common form of exposure. What organs to carcinogens attack? Lungs Liver Kidney Reproductive system Skin Many other organs and tissues What factors influence the development of cancer? Dose--amount and length of exposure. The lower the dose the least likely you are to develop cancer or related diseases. Environmental or “lifestyle” factors. Cigarette smoking (co-carcinogen) Alcohol consumption (co-carcinogen) Diet--high fat consumption, natural antioxidants Geographic location--industrial areas, UV light Therapeutic drugs--some are known carcinogens Inherited conditions Exposure of humans to chemical agents and the identification of the cancer-causing molecular species. Loeb L A , Harris C C Cancer Res 2008;68:6863-6872 Examples of Carcinogens Identified in the Normal Diet Food Compound Black pepper piperine C o m m o n Agaritine Celery Furocoumarins, mushroom Rhubarb Anthraquinones psoralens Cocoa powder Theobromine M u s t a r d , A l l y l Alfalfa sprouds Canavanine horseradish isothiocyanate Burnt material Large number Coffee Caffeic coffee An overview of primary examples of events that have generated important insights into carcinogenesis. Loeb L A , Harris C C Cancer Res 2008;68:6863-6872 • • • • A substance that is not itself a carcinogen can sometimes be turned into carcinogen. Pro-carcinogens are activation dependent. These compounds require cellular enzymatic metabolism into an ultimate carcinogen in order to exert their carcinogenic action. The resulting chemicals can be just as carcinogenic as direct carcinogens. • Metabolism represents the organism's attempts to detoxify exogenous chemicals to water soluble conjugates which can be excreted. • But through the detoxifying process a chemical may be activated to an ultimate carcinogenic form. • These pathways may be modulated by drugs, age, nutrition, hormones or genetics. Metabolic Activation of Chemical compounds and Genotoxic and NonGenotoxic effects of Carcinogens Metabolic Activation of Chemical Carcinogens Phase I Metabolism usually precedes Phase II reactions with the most common outcome is deactivation (detoxification). Occasionally compounds are activated to metabolites with greater biological activity or chemical reactivity (bioactivation). •Oxidases(e.g. cytochromeP450)-catalyze the oxidation of chemicals to produce unstable epoxide intermediates or stable hydroxylated compounds for conjugation by Phase II enzymes. •Loss of chemical leaving groups generates electrophiles which have the potential to form covalent DNA adducts. • microsomal cytochrome P450 (CYP)• epoxide hydrolase (EH) • flavin-containing monooxygenase (FMO) Metabolism of aromatic hydrocarbons • • First chemically identified carcinogens The polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons are chemically inert and require metabolism to exert their biologic effects. • This is a multi-step process: Initial epoxidation (cytochrome P-450, CYP1A1 an inducible isoform) Hydration of the epoxide (epoxide hydrolase) Subsequent epoxidation across the remaining olefinic bond (principally CYP3A4). • The result is the formation of the ultimate carcinogenic metabolite a diol-epoxide • • • • • • Phase II Metabolism produces more water-soluble metabolites Most common outcome is detoxification Occasionally compounds are bioactivated by this route as well. Transferases(e.g. glutathione-S-transferase)-catalyze the conjugation of water-soluble molecules onto oxidase-generated Hydroxyl groups of potentially reactive chemicals (detoxification) Conjugated products are unstable and may spontaneously break Down into DNA-reactive electrophiles UDP-glucuronyltransferases (UDP-GTs) Phase II enzymes • • • • • • • • • • • • • • act on oxidized substrates and also contribute to xenobiotic metabolism. methyltransferases, acetyltransferases, glutathione transferases, Uridine 5'-diphosphoglucuronosyl transferases, sulfotransferases, nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide (NAD)- and nicotinamideadenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADP)-dependent alcohol, aldehyde and steroid dehydrogenases, quinone reductases, NADPH diaphorase, azo reductases, aldoketoreductases, transaminases, esterases, hydrolases. Induction of Metabolizing Enzymes Ø May be a reason for tissue-, and/or species-selectivity of carcinogens Ø Metabolites may be ligands for receptors Ø Production of reactive oxygen species Nebert & Dalton Nat Rev Cancer 2006 Action of carcinogen • Change in DNA structure – the formation of bulky aromatic-type adducts, • exocyclic (N2) amino group of deoxyguanosine, deoxyadenosine, C8-, N2-, and sometimes O6-positions of deoxyguanosine as well as deoxyadenosine. – alkylation (generally small adducts), • generally attack the following nucleophilic centers: adenine (N1, N3, and N7), cytosine (N3), guanine (N2, O6, and N7), and thymine (O2, N3, and O4). – oxidation, • form thymine glycol or 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine adducts – dimerization, – deamination • deamination of methylated cytosine • Epigenetic changes – alteration in DNA methylation EPIGENETICS Epigenetic alterations – changes induced in cells that alter the expression of the information on transcriptional, translational, or posttranslational levels without changes in DNA sequence Methylation of DNA DNMT1 DNMT3a DNMT3b Modifications of histones Me P U SAM SAH A A - acetylation Me- methylation P- phosphorylation U - ubiquitination RNA-mediated modifications • RNA-directed DNA methylation • RNA-mediated chromatin remodeling • RNAi, siRNA, miRNA … Classification of Carcinogens According to the Mode of Action GENOTOXIC: § DNA-reactive or DNA-reactive metabolites § Direct interaction to alter chromosomal number/integrity § May be mutagenic or cytotoxic § Usually cause mutations in simple systems DNA Adduct Mutation Cancer • Electrophilic species react with electronrich sites on DNA bases to form covalent adducts • Each class of agents reacts at selective positions on purine and pyrimidine targets Mechanism of Carcinogenesis: Genotoxic Carcinogens 1. Carcinogen activation Chemical C “inactivated“ carcinogen 4 P Y 5 0s "Activated“ carcinogen 2. DNA binding 4. Gene mutation 3. Cell proliferation (fix mutation) DNA Repair APOPTOSIS Schematic diagram showing the mechanism through which exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons is thought to cause cancer Rundle, Mutat Res 600(1-2):23-36 (2006) Williams J.A., Carcinogenesis 22:209-14 (2001) Overview of Genotoxic and Non-Genotoxic Effects of Carcinogens Mutations Result from Incomplete DNA Repair Loeb L A , Harris C C Cancer Res 2008;68:6863-6872 Classification of Carcinogens According to the Mode of Action GENOTOXIC NON-GENOTOXIC Phenotypic characteristics of cancer cells: • Immortalization • Transformation • Loss of contact growth inhibition • Autonomy of proliferation • Avoidance of apoptosis • Aberrant differentiation • Induction of angiogenesis Four steps of Carcinogenesis • • • • Tumor Initiation Tumor Promotion Malignant Conversion Tumor progression Multi-stage chemical carcinogenesis Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms in Multistage Carcinogenesis: INITIATION Initiating event involves cellular genome – MUTATIONS Target genes: - oncogenes/tumor suppressor genes - signal transduction - cell cycle/apoptosis regulators “Simple” genetic changes Chemical Exposure (air, water, food, etc.) Internal Exposure Metabolic Activation Macromolecular Binding DNA RNA Detoxication Protein (Biomarker) Biologically Effective Dose X Efficiency of Mispairing X Cell Proliferation Initiation Clonal selection and expression of initiated cells Mutator phenotype cells Cancer cells Normal cells Endogenous ACQUISITION OF ADDITIONAL RANDOM MUTATIONS Environmental Normal cells Endogenous Environmental GENETIC AND EPIGENETIC MODELS OF THE CANCER INITIATION ALTERATIONS IN CELLULAR EPIGENOME Epigenetically reprogrammed cells Mutator phenotype cells Cancer cells Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms in Multistage Carcinogenesis: PROMOTION Reversible enhancement/repression of gene expression: - increased cell proliferation - inhibition of apoptosis No direct structural alteration in DNA by agent or its metabolites Tumor Promotion • Promoters - irritants or substances that produce cell activation and proliferation. • Non-mutagenic, not carcinogenic alone, and often (but not always) able to mediate their biologic effects without metabolic activation. • To reduce the latency period for tumor formation after exposure of a tissue to a tumor initiator • To increase the number of tumors formed in that tissue. • To induce tumor formation in conjunction with a dose of an initiator that is too low to be carcinogenic alone. • Act like growth factors on cells that have already acquired one or more carcinogenic mutations. • Tumor promotion causes cells to proliferate but not to terminally differentiate, resulting in proliferation of preneoplastic cells and the formation of benign lesions such as papillomas, nodules or polyps. • Increased rate of division increases the likelihood that they will acquire more mutations. • Promotion may be reversible and most of these pre-neoplastic lesions (e.g. polyps, papillomas) may regress if promoting agent is withdrawn. • Threshold levels of promoter may be necessary to impart growth stimulus to initiated cells. • exogenous (e.g. chemicals) or endogenous (e.g. hormonal status, chronic inflammatory states). Tumor-promoting chemicals, complex mixtures of chemicals, or other agents • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • dioxin, benzoyl peroxide, macrocyclic lactones, bromomethylbenzanthracene, anthralin, phenol, saccharin, tryptophan, dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT), phenobarbital, cigarette-smoke condensate, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), teleocidins, cyclamates, estrogens and other hormones, bile acids, ultraviolet light, wounding, abrasion, other chronic irritations (i.e., saline lavage). Tumor Promotion and Tumor Initiation 1. Initiation alone is not sufficient for tumor formation. 2 and 3 An initiated cell is altered making it more likely to give rise to a tumor if exposed to another agent called promoter. 4. Tumors do not result when the promoting agent is applied before the initiating agent. 5. Promoters can induce tumors in initiated cells, but they are nontumourigenic by themselves (group5). 6. This indicates that unlike initiating agents, promoting agents do not affect DNA directly and are reversible . Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms in Multistage Carcinogenesis: PROGRESSION • Irreversible enhancement/repression of gene expression • Complex genetic alterations (chromosomal translocations, deletions, gene amplifications, recombinations, etc.) • Selection of neoplastic cells for optimal growth genotype/ phenotype in response to the cellular environment “Complex” genetic changes Malignant Conversion • Carcinogenesis requires the malignant conversion of hyperplastic cells from a benign to malignant state • Malignant conversion is the transformation of a preneoplastic cell into one that expresses the malignant phenotype. • This process requires further genetic changes. • Increased substantially by the exposure of preneoplastic cells to DNA-damaging agents Tumor Progression • Expression of the malignant phenotype and the tendency of already malignant cells to acquire more aggressive characteristics with time. • Propensity for genomic instability and uncontrolled growth. • Invasion and Metastasis are manifestations of further genetic and epigenetic changes. • Activation of proto-oncogenes and the functional loss of tumor-suppressor genes Used a strain of Salmonella typhimurium, which requires histidine to grow. The reversion of a single gene will allow the cells to grow without histidine. Highly accurate. Now widely used in chemical industries, such as pharmaceutical, cosmetic, and agriculture . Most chemicals found to be mutagenic are not carcinogenic in animal models or humans! Carcinogenicity of non-genotoxic chemicals (e.g. promotors) cannot be assessed with the Ame’s assays. Plate bacteria, add test chemical, there is a little bit of histidine there, so cells divide a few times, and if the chemical is a mutagen, reversion is common; then the mutant culture takes off, even if it runs out of histidine. Multistage carcinogenesis in mouse skin Conceptual Model for Understanding Mechanisms of Tobacco Carcinogenesis DNA repair mediated by p53 family target genes. A modified molecular epidemiologic approach for validating causal relationships between carcinogen exposure and cancer risk. Loeb L A , Harris C C Cancer Res 2008;68:6863-6872 Recent Advances in Biochemistry and Molecular biology in Characterizing chemical carcinogenesis Method improvement Experimental induction of cancers DNA adduct quantification in humans Genome sequencing Epigenetics Polymorphism genetics Mutagenesis Cataloguing oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes Clonal (driver) versus non-clonal mutations Exogenous versus endogenous mutagenesis Mechanisms of DNA adduction Site-specific versus non-site-specific adduction Biological effects of free radicals Biochemistry and molecular biology Metabolism of xenobiotic Low-dose versus high-dose carcinogenesis Cataloguing environmental carcinogens Bioaccumulation of exogenous carcinogens in the adipose tissue