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Arsenicals affect base excision repair by several mechanisms

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TLDR
Investigating the impact of arsenic on several base excision repair (BER) key players in cultured human lung cells points out that DNA repair might be affected by different mechanisms and therefore very effectively, which might facilitate the carcinogenic process of inorganic arsenic.
Abstract
Inorganic arsenic is a strong, widespread human carcinogen. How exactly inorganic arsenic exerts carcinogenicity in humans is as yet unclear, but it is thought to be closely related to its metabolism. At exposure-relevant concentrations arsenic is neither directly DNA reactive nor mutagenic. Thus, more likely epigenetic and indirect genotoxic effects, among others a modulation of the cellular DNA damage response and DNA repair, are important molecular mechanisms contributing to its carcinogenicity. In the present study, we investigated the impact of arsenic on several base excision repair (BER) key players in cultured human lung cells. For the first time gene expression, protein level and in case of human 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase 1 (hOGG1) protein function was examined in one study, comparing inorganic arsenite and its trivalent and pentavalent mono- and dimethylated metabolites, also taking into account their cellular bioavailability. Our data clearly show that arsenite and its metabolites can affect several cellular endpoints related to DNA repair. Thus, cellular OGG activity was most sensitively affected by dimethylarsinic acid (DMA(V)), DNA ligase IIIα (LIGIIIα) protein level by arsenite and X-ray cross complementing protein 1 (XRCC1 protein) content by monomethylarsonic acid (MMA(V)), with significant effects starting at ≥3.2μM cellular arsenic. With respect to MMA(V), to our knowledge these effects are the most sensitive endpoints, related to DNA damage response, that have been identified so far. In contrast to earlier nucleotide excision repair related studies, the trivalent methylated metabolites exerted strong effects on the investigated BER key players only at cytotoxic concentrations. In summary, our data point out that after mixed arsenic species exposure, a realistic scenario after oral inorganic arsenic intake in humans, DNA repair might be affected by different mechanisms and therefore very effectively, which might facilitate the carcinogenic process of inorganic arsenic.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Arsenic exposure: A public health problem leading to several cancers.

TL;DR: The present review outlines of arsenic toxic effects focusing on different cancer types whit highest prevalence's by exposure to this metalloid and signaling pathways of carcinogenesis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Arsenic in the human food chain, biotransformation and toxicology- review focusing on seafood arsenic

TL;DR: Recent findings indicate that the pre-systematic metabolism by colon microbiota play an important role for human metabolism of arsenicals, and new insight indicates that bioconversion of arsenosugars and arsenolipids in seafood results in urinary excretion of DMA, possibly also producing reactive trivalent arsenic intermediates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental arsenic exposure: From genetic susceptibility to pathogenesis.

TL;DR: Understanding the molecular mechanisms of arsenic exposure and its subsequent health effects will support efforts to reduce the worldwide health burden and encourage the development of strategies for managing arsenic-related diseases in the era of personalized medicine.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluation of the carcinogenicity of inorganic arsenic

TL;DR: An assessment of the mode of action (MOA) of iAs’s carcinogenicity based on the United States Environmental Protection Agency/International Programme on Chemical Safety (USEPA/IPCS) framework, focusing primarily on bladder cancer, implies a non-linear, threshold dose-response relationship for both non-cancer and cancer end points.
Journal ArticleDOI

Role of genomic instability in arsenic-induced carcinogenicity. A review

TL;DR: Although a large body of information is now generated regarding arsenic-induced carcinogenesis; further studies exploring genome-wide association, role of environment and diet are needed for a better understanding of the arsenic- induced genomic instability.
References
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Book

DNA Repair and Mutagenesis

TL;DR: Nucleotide excision repair in mammalian cells: genes and proteins Mismatch repair The SOS response and recombinational repair in prokaryotes Mutagenesis in proKaryote Mutagenisation in eukaryotes Other DNA damage tolerance responses in eUKaryotes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oxidative DNA damage: mechanisms, mutation, and disease

TL;DR: This review critically addresses the extent to which the in vitro significance of oxidative DNA damage has relevance for the pathogenesis of disease, drawing attention to the multiplicity of proteins with repair activities along with a number of poorly considered effects of damage.
Journal ArticleDOI

DNA Damage, Aging, and Cancer

TL;DR: Evidence that cancer and diseases of aging are two sides of the DNAdamage problem is presented, followed by an account of the derailment of genome guardian mechanisms in cancer and of how this cancerspecific phenomenon can be exploited for treatment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparative toxicity of trivalent and pentavalent inorganic and methylated arsenicals in rat and human cells.

TL;DR: It is suggested that trivalent methylated arsenicals, intermediary products of arsenic methylation, may significantly contribute to the adverse effects associated with exposure to iAs, and high methylation capacity does not protect cells from the acute toxicity of triavalent arsenicals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic and epigenetic mechanisms in metal carcinogenesis and cocarcinogenesis: nickel, arsenic, and chromium.

TL;DR: Overall, metal carcinogenesis appears to require the formation of specific metal complexes, chromosomal damage, and activation of signal transduction pathways promoting survival and expansion of genetically/epigenetically altered cells.
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