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1.
Occupational exposure to benzene, a major industrial chemical, has been associated with various blood dyscrasias and increased incidence of acute myelogenous leukemia in humans. It is established that benzene requires metabolism to induce its effects. Benzene exposure in humans and animals has also been shown to result in structural and numerical chromosomal aberrations in lymphocytes and bone marrow cells, indicating that benzene is genotoxic. In this review we have attempted to compile the available evidence on the role of increased free radical activity in benzene-induced myelotoxic and leukemogenic effects. Benzene administration to rodents has been associated with increased lipid peroxidation in liver, plasma, and bone marrow, as shown by an increase in the formation of thiobarbituric-acid reactive products that absorb at 535 nm. Benzene administration to rodents also results in increased prostaglandin levels indicating increased arachidonic acid peroxidation. Other evidence includes the fact that bone marrow cells and their microsomal fractions isolated from rodents following benzene-treatment have a higher capacity to form oxygen free radicals. The bone marrow contains several peroxidases, the most prevalent of which is myeloperoxidase. The peroxidatic metabolism of the benzene metabolites, phenol and hydroquinone, results in arachidonic acid peroxidation and oxygen activation to superoxide radicals, respectively. These metabolites, upon co-administration also produce a myelotoxicity similar to that observed with benzene. Recently, we have found that exposure of human promyelocytic leukemia (HL-60) cells (a cell line rich in myeloperoxidase), to the benzene metabolites, hydroquinone and 1,2,4-benzenetriol results in increased steady-state levels of 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine a marker of oxidative DNA damage. Peroxidatic metabolism of benzene's phenolic metabolites may therefore be responsible for the increased free radical activity and toxicity produced by benzene in bone marrow. We thus hypothesize that free radicals contribute, at least in part, to the toxic and leukemogenic effects of benzene.  相似文献   

2.
Benzene is a common air pollutant and confirmed carcinogen, especially in reference to the hematopoietic system. In the present study we analyzed cytokine/chemokine production by, and gene expression induction in, human peripheral blood mononuclear cells upon their exposure to the benzene metabolites catechol, hydroquinone, 1,2,4-benzenetriol, and p-benzoquinone. Protein profiling showed that benzene metabolites can stimulate the production of chemokines, the proinflammatory cytokines TNF-alpha and IL-6, and the Th2 cytokines IL-4 and IL-5. Activated cells showed concurrent suppression of anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 expression. We also identified changes in global gene expression patterns in response to benzene metabolite challenges by using high-density oligonucleotide microarrays. Treatment with 1,2,4-benzenetriol resulted in the suppression of genes related to the regulation of protein expression and a concomitant activation of genes that encode heat shock proteins and cytochrome P450 family members. Protein and gene expression profiling identified unique human cellular responses upon exposure to benzene and benzene metabolites.  相似文献   

3.
Benzene toxicity is considered to be elicited by its metabolites and phenolic metabolites of benzene are known to induce apoptosis in leukemia cells in culture and in human bone marrow progenitor cells. One potential mechanism of apoptosis induced by benzene metabolites that has not been examined is the production of pro-apoptotic cytokines such as endothelial IL-8 from endothelial cells in bone marrow stroma. In this study, we utilized HL-60 cells which are known to produce the endothelial form of IL-8 (elL-8) and human bone marrow endothelial cells (HBMEC) as model systems. Hydroquinone (HQ), Catechol (Cat) and benzenetriol (BT) all induced eIL-8 production and apoptosis in HL-60 cells. HQ induced a marked 50-70-fold stimulation of eIL-8 levels and HL-60 cells were shown to have the eIL-8 receptor, CXCR I thus enabling an autocrine pathway of apoptosis. However, treatment with recombinant elL-8 failed to induce apoptosis in HL-60 cells as previously reported and antibodies to either IL-8 or CXCRI did not significantly abrogate benzene metabolite-induced apoptosis. HQ and Cat but not BT also induced stimulation of elL-8 production in HBMEC. These data demonstrate that although metabolites of benzene induce marked stimulation of eIL-8, this is unlikely to be responsible for apoptosis induced in HL-60 cells. Our data also demonstrates that phenolic metabolites of benzene stimulate the production of eIL-8 from HBMEC suggesting that higher levels of endothelial-derived cytokines may occur in bone marrow after benzene exposure.  相似文献   

4.
Benzene, the exposome and future investigations of leukemia etiology   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Benzene exposure is associated with acute myeloid leukemia (AML), myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), and probably lymphoma and childhood leukemia. Biological plausibility for a causal role of benzene in these diseases comes from its toxicity to hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) or progenitor cells, from which all leukemias and related disorders arise. The effect of this toxicity is manifest as lowered blood counts (hematotoxicity), even in individuals occupationally exposed to low levels of benzene. Benzene can induce AML/MDS via several well-characterized pathways associated with these diseases. Through its metabolites, benzene induces multiple alterations that likely contribute to the leukemogenic process, and appears to operate via multiple modes of action. To improve mechanistic understanding and for risk assessment purposes, it may be possible to measure several of the key events in these modes of action in an in vitro model of the bone marrow stem cell niche. Even though benzene is leukemogenic at relatively low occupational levels of exposure, it seems unlikely that it is a major cause of leukemia in the general population exposed to benzene in the ppb range. Other established non-genetic causes of AML, e.g. smoking, ionizing radiation and cancer chemotherapy, also only explain about 20% of AML incidence, leaving ~80% unexplained. The question arises as to how to find the causes of the majority of de novo AMLs that remain unexplained. We propose that we should attempt to characterize the 'exposome' of human leukemia by using unbiased laboratory-based methods to find the unknown 'environmental' factors that contribute to leukemia etiology.  相似文献   

5.
Benzene toxicity is considered to be elicited by its metabolites and phenolic metabolites of benzene are known to induce apoptosis in leukemia cells in culture and in human bone marrow progenitor cells. One potential mechanism of apoptosis induced by benzene metabolites that has not been examined is the production of pro-apoptotic cytokines such as endothelial IL-8 from endothelial cells in bone marrow stroma. In this study, we utilized HL-60 cells which are known to produce the endothelial form of IL-8 (eIL-8) and human bone marrow endothelial cells (HBMEC) as model systems. Hydroquinone (HQ), Catechol (Cat) and benzenetriol (BT) all induced eIL-8 production and apoptosis in HL-60 cells. HQ induced a marked 50-70 fold stimulation of eIL-8 levels and HL-60 cells were shown to have the eIL-8 receptor, CXCR1 thus enabling an autocrine pathway of apoptosis. However, treatment with recombinant eIL-8 failed to induce apoptosis in HL-60 cells as previously reported and antibodies to either IL-8 or CXCR1 did not significantly abrogate benzene metabolite-induced apoptosis. HQ and Cat but not BT also induced stimulation of eIL-8 production in HBMEC. These data demonstrate that although metabolites of benzene induce marked stimulation of eIL-8, this is unlikely to be responsible for apoptosis induced in HL-60 cells. Our data also demonstrates that phenolic metabolites of benzene stimulate the production of eIL-8 from HBMEC suggesting that higher levels of endothelial-derived cytokines may occur in bone marrow after benzene exposure.  相似文献   

6.
Benzene and some of its metabolites (hydroquinone, phenol, catechol, 1,2,4-benzenetriol, p-benzoquinone, o,o'-biphenol, p,p'-biphenol) have been tested for their capability to induce micronuclei in bone marrow cells of pregnant mice and, transplacentally, in fetal liver cells. Dams are scarcely sensitive to the genotoxic activity of benzene and its metabolites while the latter are able to produce only evident toxic effects. Benzene and hydroquinone transplacentally induce micronuclei in fetal liver cells while all other metabolites show weak or negative genotoxicity, although they produce severe cellular toxicity.  相似文献   

7.
Genome rearrangements, such as DNA deletions, translocations and duplications, are associated with cancer in rodents and humans, and clastogens are capable of inducing such genomic rearrangements. The clastogen benzene and several of its toxic metabolites have been shown to cause cancer in animals. Benzene is associated with leukemia and other blood related disorders in humans. Benzene and metabolites tested negative in short-term bacterial mutation assays such as the Salmonella Mutagenicity Test and the Escherichia coli Tryptophan Reversion Assay. These assays, while reliable for the detection of point-mutagenic carcinogens, are incapable of detecting DNA strand break inducing xenobiotics. The yeast DEL assay is based on intrachromosomal recombination events resulting in deletions and is very sensitive in detecting DNA strand breaks. In previous results the DEL assay detected 17 Salmonella positive as well as 25 Salmonella negative carcinogens [Bishop, Schiestl, Hum. Mol. Genet. 9 (2000) 2427-2434]. The carcinogen benzene and its metabolites including phenol, catechol, p-benzoquinone and hydroquinone induced DEL recombination. The benzene metabolite 1,2,4-benzenetriol was negative. Interestingly, p-benzoquinone induced DEL recombination at a dose 300-fold lower than any of the other metabolites, suggesting that it might be responsible for much of benzene's genotoxicity. In addition, an excision repair deficient strain was used, but no difference was detected compared to the wildtype, indicating that DNA adducts subject to excision repair were not formed by benzene or its metabolites.  相似文献   

8.
Benzene may affect hemopoiesis by damaging the bone marrow stroma that provides the microenvironment for hemopoiesis. A possible target of benzene toxicity in the stroma is the macrophage, which is a major source of protein factors required for the proliferation and differentiation of progenitor cells. As an initial approach towards understanding whether benzene inhibits hemopoietic factor production in bone marrow stroma, the metabolism of benzene and phenol has been studied and the effect of benzene and its metabolites on macrophage RNA synthesis has been examined. Benzene is not metabolized in macrophages but phenol, the major metabolite of benzene in bone marrow, is converted by peroxidase in the macrophage to both free metabolites and species which covalently bind to cellular macromolecules. Benzene and its metabolites inhibited RNA synthesis in a dose-dependent manner, with 50% inhibitory concentrations of 5 × 10–3M for benzene, 2.5 × 10–3 M for phenol, 2.5 × 10–5 M for hydroquinone, and 6 × 10–6 M for p-benzoquinone; this inhibition was not attributable to loss of cell viability. Benzene, possibly by an inhibition of uridine transport into macrophages, and phenol, by its conversion to covalently binding species, inhibit RNA synthesis in macrophages and thus may inhibit the synthesis of colony stimulating factors required for hemopoiesis.Abbreviations CFU-G / M colony forming unit-granulocyte / macrophage - FCS fetal calf serum - IC50 molar concentration causing 50% inhibition - PBS phosphate buffered saline  相似文献   

9.
Recently, the concern that toluene might have carcinogenic and reproductive toxic potential has been raised. We investigated the ability of DNA damage by minor metabolites of toluene, methylhydroquinone, and methylbenzoquinone, using (32)P-5'-end-labeled DNA fragments obtained from the human genes. Methylhydroquinone caused Cu(II)-mediated DNA damage, whereas methylbenzoquinone did only in the presence of NADH. DNA damage by methylbenzoquinone was weaker than that by benzoquinone, a metabolite of carcinogenic benzene. Formation of 8-oxo-7, 8-dihydro-2'-deoxyguanosine by metabolites of toluene increased with its concentration in the presence of Cu(II) and NADH. Generation of O(*-)(2) and semiquinone radicals was detected by UV-visible and ESR spectroscopies, respectively. These results suggest that these metabolites may play some roles in expression of carcinogenicity and reproductive toxicity of toluene. We have discussed the differences of carcinogenic potency between toluene and benzene in relation to the amount of metabolites and their ability to damage DNA.  相似文献   

10.
Benzene is an important industrial chemical. At certain levels, benzene has been found to produce aplastic anemia, pancytopenia, myeloblastic anemia and genotoxic effects in humans. Metabolism by cytochrome P450 monooxygenases and myeloperoxidase to hydroquinone, phenol, and other metabolites contributes to benzene toxicity. Other xenobiotic substrates for cytochrome P450 can alter benzene metabolism. At high concentrations, toluene has been shown to inhibit benzene metabolism and benzene-induced toxicities. The present study investigated the genotoxicity of exposure to benzene and toluene at lower and intermittent co-exposures. Mice were exposed via whole-body inhalation for 6h/day for 8 days (over a 15-day time period) to air, 50 ppm benzene, 100 ppm toluene, 50 ppm benzene and 50 ppm toluene, or 50 ppm benzene and 100 ppm toluene. Mice exposed to 50 ppm benzene exhibited an increased frequency (2.4-fold) of micronucleated polychromatic erythrocytes (PCE) and increased levels of urinary metabolites (t,t-muconic acid, hydroquinone, and s-phenylmercapturic acid) vs. air-exposed controls. Benzene co-exposure with 100 ppm toluene resulted in similar urinary metabolite levels but a 3.7-fold increase in frequency of micronucleated PCE. Benzene co-exposure with 50 ppm toluene resulted in a similar elevation of micronuclei frequency as with 100 ppm toluene which did not differ significantly from 50 ppm benzene exposure alone. Both co-exposures - 50 ppm benzene with 50 or 100 ppm toluene - resulted in significantly elevated CYP2E1 activities that did not occur following benzene or toluene exposure alone. Whole blood glutathione (GSH) levels were similarly decreased following exposure to 50 ppm benzene and/or 100 ppm toluene, while co-exposure to 50 ppm benzene and 100 ppm toluene significantly decreased GSSG levels and increased the GSH/GSSG ratio. The higher frequency of micronucleated PCE following benzene and toluene co-exposure when compared with mice exposed to benzene or toluene alone suggests that, at the doses used in this study, toluene can enhance benzene-induced clastogenic or aneugenic bone marrow injury. These findings exemplify the importance of studying the effects of binary chemical interactions in animals exposed to lower exposure concentrations of benzene and toluene on benzene metabolism and clastogenicity. The relevance of these data on interactions for humans exposed at low benzene concentrations can be best assessed only when the mechanism of interaction is understood at a quantitative level and incorporated within a biologically based modeling framework.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Benzene is a widely recognized human carcinogen, the effect of which is attributed to the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) from its metabolites. Although there have been many reports on the relationship between DNA damage induced by benzene metabolites and carcinogenesis, only a report approached the subject by examining the benzene-induced dysregulation of apoptosis. Inhibition of apoptosis, aberrantly prolonging cell survival, may contribute to cancer by facilitating the insurgence of mutations and by creating a permissive environment for genetic instability. In this study, we examined the mechanism of antiapoptotic effects by benzene metabolites, p-benzoquinone (BQ) and hydroquinone (HQ), and their relationships with carcinogenesis. BQ and HQ inhibited the apoptotic death of NIH3T3 cells induced by both serum starvation and lack of an extracellular matrix (ECM). An antioxidant agent, N-acetylcysteine, significantly inhibited the antiapoptotic effects induced by benzene metabolites, indicating that the effects were mainly due to the production of ROS. Furthermore, BQ and HQ inhibited the in vitro caspase-3 activation, suggesting that the inhibition of caspase-3 activation due to ROS produced by BQ- and HQ-treatment was related to the suppression of apoptosis. The cells that escaped apoptosis could survive with the addition of serum and attachment to the ECM. Levels of 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2'-deoxyguanosine were higher in the cells which survived after BQ- and HQ-treatment than in the normal cells. Furthermore, the cells treated with BQ and HQ showed greater proliferation than normal cells under low-serum conditions and anchorage-independent growth in soft agar. These findings suggested that benzene metabolites induced dysregulation of apoptosis due to caspase-3 inhibition, which contributes to carcinogenesis.  相似文献   

13.
Benzene is an occupational toxicant and an environmental pollutant that potentially causes hematotoxicity and leukemia in exposed populations. Epidemiological studies suggest an association between an increased incidence of childhood leukemia and benzene exposure during the early stages of pregnancy. However, experimental evidence supporting the association is lacking at the present time. It is believed that benzene and its metabolites target hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) to cause toxicity and cancer in the hematopoietic system. In the current study, we compared the effects of hydroquinone (HQ), a major metabolite of benzene in humans and animals, on mouse embryonic yolk sac hematopoietic stem cells (YS-HSCs) and adult bone marrow hematopoietic stem cells (BM-HSCs). YS-HSCs and BM-HSCs were isolated and enriched, and were exposed to HQ at increasing concentrations. HQ reduced the proliferation and the differentiation and colony formation, but increased the apoptosis of both YS-HSCs and BM-HSCs. However, the cytotoxic and apoptotic effects of HQ were more apparent and reduction of colony formation by HQ was more severe in YS-HSCs than in BM-HSCs. Differences in gene expression profiles were observed in HQ-treated YS-HSCs and BM-HSCs. Cyp4f18 was induced by HQ both in YS-HSCs and BM-HSCs, whereas DNA-PKcs was induced in BM-HSCs only. The results revealed differential effects of benzene metabolites on embryonic and adult HSCs. The study established an experimental system for comparison of the hematopoietic toxicity and leukemogenicity of benzene and metabolites during mouse embryonic development and adulthood.  相似文献   

14.
15.
MicroRNA pathways modulate polyglutamine-induced neurodegeneration   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Nine human neurodegenerative diseases are due to expansion of a CAG repeat- encoding glutamine within the open reading frame of the respective genes. Polyglutamine (polyQ) expansion confers dominant toxicity, resulting in neuronal degeneration. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) have been shown to modulate programmed cell death during development. To address whether miRNA pathways play a role in neurodegeneration, we tested whether genes critical for miRNA processing modulated toxicity induced by the spinocerebellar ataxia type 3 (SCA3) protein. These studies revealed a striking enhancement of polyQ toxicity upon reduction of miRNA processing in Drosophila and human cells. In parallel genetic screens, we identified the miRNA bantam (ban) as a potent modulator of both polyQ and tau toxicity in flies. Our studies suggest that ban functions downstream of toxicity of the SCA3 protein, to prevent degeneration. These findings indicate that miRNA pathways dramatically modulate polyQ- and tau-induced neurodegeneration, providing the foundation for new insight into therapeutics.  相似文献   

16.
Benzene (880 mg/kg) and 4 of its metabolites, i.e., phenol (265 mg/kg), hydroquinone (80 mg/kg), catechol (40 mg/kg), and p-benzoquinone (5-20 mg/kg) have been tested for their capability to induce micronuclei in bone marrow cells of male mice after oral administration or intraperitoneal injection. Oral administration of benzene shows more activity than intraperitoneal injection, whereas the metabolites show more activity if administered by the latter method. The respective genotoxic strengths of the benzene metabolites are the following: hydroquinone much greater than phenol greater than catechol = p-benzoquinone. This last is active when administered orally.  相似文献   

17.
Benzene is an industrial chemical, component of automobile exhaust and cigarette smoke. After hepatic bioactivation benzene induces bone marrow, blood and hepatic toxicity. Using a toxicogenomics approach this study analysed the effects of benzene at three dose levels on gene expression in the liver after 28 daily doses. NMR based metabolomics was used to assess benzene exposure by identification of characteristic benzene metabolite profiles in urine. The 28-day oral exposure to 200 and 800 mg/kg/day but not 10 mg/kg/day benzene-induced hematotoxicity in male Fisher rats. Additionally these upper dose levels slightly reduced body weight and increased relative liver weights. Changes in hepatic gene expression were identified with oligonucleotide microarrays at all dose levels including the 10 mg/kg/day dose level where no toxicity was detected by other methods. The benzene-induced gene expression changes were related to pathways of biotransformation, glutathione synthesis, fatty acid and cholesterol metabolism and others. Some of the effects on gene expression observed here have previously been observed after induction of acute hepatic necrosis with bromobenzene and acetaminophen. In conclusion, changes in hepatic gene expression were found after treatment with benzene both at the toxic and non-toxic doses. The results from this study show that toxicogenomics identified hepatic effects of benzene exposure possibly related to toxicity. The findings aid to interpret the relevance of hepatic gene expression changes in response to exposure to xenobiotics. In addition, the results have the potential to inform on the mechanisms of response to benzene exposure.  相似文献   

18.
The prevention of benzene-induced genotoxicity in mice by indomethacin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Benzene is a myelotoxin which affects hemopoietic progenitor cells leading to bone-marrow depression as well as a genotoxin which causes chromosomal abnormalities including micronucleus formation. We have demonstrated previously that benzene administered to DBA/2 or C57B1/6 mice causes bone-marrow depression and increased prostaglandin E2 levels in bone marrow; both of these effects can be prevented by the coadministration of indomethacin, a selective inhibitor of prostaglandin synthase. We report, herein, that benzene (400-600 mg/kg body weight), under conditions where it depresses bone-marrow cellularity, also induces an increase in the frequency of micronucleus formation in polychromatic erythrocytes of C57B1/6 mice which is also prevented by the coadministration of indomethacin at levels that do not inhibit cytochrome P450 or myeloperoxidase. In Swiss Webster wild-type mice doses of benzene from 400 to 1000 mg/kg were without effect on marrow cellularity, but did induce the formation of micronucleated polychromatic erythrocytes which could be prevented by indomethacin. In contrast, DBA/2 mice, a strain highly sensitive to benzene, exhibited significant bone-marrow depression at a dose of benzene of 100 mg/kg body weight. Even at this low dose, benzene is too toxic toward developing erythrocytes to allow the evaluation of micronucleus formation. The frequency of induction of micronucleated polychromatic erythrocytes by benzene thus depends on the strain of mouse used. Furthermore, micronucleus formation appears to be an early and very sensitive indicator of benzene toxicity. A possible role for prostaglandin H synthase in the geno- and myelo-toxicity of benzene is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Benzene is one of the chemicals widely contaminating the environment. Benzene is suggested to be a human leukemogen. When benzene is absorbed in the human body, it is metabolized firstly in the liver and subsequently in the bone marrow where it provokes initiation of leukemia. In the present study, we analyzed mutations induced by p-benzoquinone (p-BQ), a benzene metabolite, in human cells using a shuttle vector plasmid pMY189, and compared frequencies, types and spectra of the mutations with those of the mutations previously revealed in mouse cells using a similar plasmid pNY200. We found that p-BQ induces mutations in human and mouse cells at similar frequencies but with different types of mutagenesis. The proportion of tandem base mutations was significantly lower in human cells than in mouse cells. Most base substitutions were induced in G:C base pairs in both human and mouse cells. However, the proportion of G:C-->C :G transversion is significantly higher in human cells. These findings indicate that the p-BQ-induced DNA damage in human and mouse cells is processed in a different manner, and that extrapolation of mice findings on experimental benzene carcinogenesis to human cancer risk assessment should be conducted carefully.  相似文献   

20.
Benzene is an occupational hazard and environmental toxicant found in cigarette smoke, gasoline, and the chemical industry. The major health concern associated with benzene exposure is leukemia. The toxic effects of benzene are dependent on its metabolism by the cytochrome P450 enzyme system. Previous research has identified CYP2E1 as the primary P450 isozyme responsible for benzene metabolism at low concentrations, whereas CYP2B1 is involved at higher concentrations. Our studies using microsomal preparations from human, mouse, and rat indicate that CYP2E1 is the P450 isozyme primarily responsible for benzene metabolism in lung and in liver. CYP2B isozymes have little involvement in benzene metabolism by either lung or liver. Our results also indicate that isozymes of the CYP2F subfamily may play a role in benzene metabolism by lung.  相似文献   

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