INVESTIGADORES
RAMIREZ Dario
artículos
Título:
Requirement of arsenic biomethylation for oxidative DNA damage
Autor/es:
CHIKARA KOJIMA; DARIO C. RAMIREZ; ERIK J. TOKAR; HIMENO SEIICHIRO; ZUZANA DROBNÁ; MIROSLAV STYBLO; RONALD P. MASON; MICHAEL P. WAALKES
Revista:
JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE.
Editorial:
OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
Referencias:
Año: 2009 p. 1670 - 1681
ISSN:
0027-8874
Resumen:
J Natl Cancer Inst. 2009 Dec 16;101(24):1670-81. Requirement of arsenic biomethylation for oxidative DNA damage. Kojima C, Ramirez DC, Tokar EJ, Himeno S, Drobná Z, Stýblo M, Mason RP, Waalkes MP. Inorganic Carcinogenesis Section, Laboratory of Comparative Carcinogenesis, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute at National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709, USA. Comment in: J Natl Cancer Inst. 2009 Dec 16;101(24):1660-1. Abstract BACKGROUND: Inorganic arsenic is an environmental carcinogen that may act through multiple mechanisms including formation of methylated derivatives in vivo. Sodium arsenite (up to 5.0 microM) renders arsenic methylation-competent TRL1215 rat liver epithelial cells tumorigenic in nude mice at 18 weeks of exposure and arsenic methylation-deficient RWPE-1 human prostate epithelial cells tumorigenic at 30 weeks of exposure. We assessed the role of arsenic biomethylation in oxidative DNA damage (ODD) using a recently developed immuno-spin trapping method. METHODS: Immuno-spin trapping was used to measure ODD after chronic exposure of cultured TRL1215 vs RWPE-1 cells, or of methylation-competent UROtsa/F35 vs methylation-deficient UROtsa human urothelial cells, to sodium arsenite. Secreted matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-2 and -9 activity, as analyzed by zymography, cellular invasiveness by using a transwell assay, and colony formation by using soft agar assay were compared in cells exposed to arsenite with and without selenite, an arsenic biomethylation inhibitor, to assess the role of ODD in the transition to an in vitro cancer phenotype. RESULTS: Exposure of methylation-competent TRL1215 cells to up to 1.0 microM sodium arsenite was followed by a substantial increase in ODD at 5-18 weeks (eg, at 16 weeks with 1.0 microM arsenite, 1138% of control, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 797% to 1481%), whereas exposure of methylation-deficient RWPE-1 cells to up to 5.0 microM arsenite did not increase ODD for a 30-week period. Inhibition of arsenic biomethylation with sodium selenite abolished arsenic-induced ODD and invasiveness, colony formation, and MMP-2 and -9 hypersecretion in TRL1215 cells. Arsenic induced ODD in methylation-competent UROtsa/F35 cells (eg, at 16 weeks, with 1.0 microM arsenite 225% of control, 95% CI = 188% to 262%) but not in arsenic methylation-deficient UROtsa cells, and ODD levels corresponded to the levels of increased invasiveness, colony formation, and hypersecretion of active MMP-2 and -9 seen after transformation to an in vitro cancer phenotype. CONCLUSION: Arsenic biomethylation appears to be obligatory for arsenic-induced ODD and appears linked in some cells with the accelerated transition to an in vitro cancer phenotype.