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Mechanism of chromium(VI) carcinogenesis
Authors:Karen E. Wetterhahn  Joshua W. Hamilton  Jayshree Aiyar  Kim M. Borges  Robert Floyd
Affiliation:1. Department of Chemistry, Dartmouth College, 03755, Hanover, NH
2. Department of Biochemistry, Dartmouth College, 03755, Hanover, NH
3. Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation, 73104, Oklahoma City, OK
Abstract:Since chromium(VI) is unreactive toward DNA under physiological conditions in vitro, the ability of carcinogenic chromium(VI) compounds to damage DNA depends on the presence of cellular redox components that reduce chromium(VI) to reactive species capable of interacting with DNA. We have examined the role of glutathione and hydrogen peroxide in chromium(VI)-induced DNA damage in vitro. Upon reaction with chromium(VI), glutathione produced chromium(V) and glutathione thiyl radical reactive intermediates, whereas hydrogen peroxide produced chromium(V) and hydroxyl radical. Reaction of DNA with chromium(VI) in the presence of glutathione resulted in binding of chromium and glutathione to DNA with little or no DNA strand breakage. Reaction of DNA with chromium(VI) in the presence of hydrogen peroxide produced the 8-hydroxydeoxy-guanosine adduct and extensive DNA strand breakage in the absence of significant Cr-DNA adduct formation. These results suggest that the nature of chromium(VI)-induced DNA damage will be strongly dependent on reactive intermediates such as chromium(V), glutathione thiyl radical, and hydroxyl radical, produced by cellular components active in chromium(VI) metabolism. In order to assess the ability of chromium(VI)-induced DNA damage to affect the normal template function of DNA, we investigated the effects of chromium(VI) on steady-state mRNA levels of various genes in chick embryo liver in vivo, and compared the effects to the levels of DNA damage observed. Chromium(VI) induced DNA-protein and DNA interstrand cross-links in chick embryo liver in vivo and suppressed the induction of 5-aminolevulinic acid synthase and cytochrome P-450 mRNA expression by porphyrinogenic drugs. In contrast, chromium(VI) increased the basal levels of expression of these two inducible genes, but had little or no effect on the expression of the constitutive albumin, β-actin, and conalbumin genes. Comparison of the time course of formation and repair of DNA damage with that of changes in gene expression suggests that chromium(VI) may form a mono-adduct prior to formation of DNA cross-links, and that chromium(VI)-induced DNA lesions may target certain classes of genes and lead to changes in their expression.
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