24 research outputs found

    Nicotinic acid supplementation: effects on niacin status, cytogenetic damage, and poly(ADP-ribosylation) in lymphocytes of smokers.

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    Department of Health Risk Analysis and Toxicology, Universiteit Maastricht, The Netherlands.As a substrate for poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP; EC, 2.4.2.30), an enzyme that is activated by DNA strand breaks and is thought to facilitate efficient DNA repair, NAD+ and its precursor nicotinic acid (niacin) are involved in the cellular defense against DNA damage by genotoxic compounds. In this study, the effect of nicotinic acid supplementation on cytogenetic damage and poly(ADP-ribosylation) was evaluated in a human population that is continuously exposed to genotoxic agents, e.g., smokers. By use of a placebo-controlled intervention design, 21 healthy smokers received supplementary nicotinic acid at 0-100 mg/day for 14 weeks. An increased niacin status, as assessed from blood nicotinamide concentrations and lymphocyte NAD+ concentrations, was observed in groups supplemented with 50 and 100 mg/day. This effect was most pronounced in subjects with lower initial NAD+ levels. An increased niacin status did not result in decreased hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyltransferase variant frequencies and micronuclei induction in peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs). Sister chromatid exchanges in PBLs, however, were increased after supplementation with nicotinic acid. This increase was positively associated with the daily dose of nicotinic acid. No effects of nicotinic acid supplementation were found for ex vivo (+/-)-7 beta, 8 alpha-dihydroxy-9 alpha, 10 alpha-epoxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydrobenzo[a]pyrene-induced poly(ADP-ribosylation), although the small number of samples that could be analyzed (n = 12) does not allow firm conclusions. Because no evidence was found for a decrease in cigarette smoke-induced cytogenetic damage in PBLs of smokers after nicotinic acid supplementation of up to 100 mg/day, it is concluded that supplemental niacin does not contribute to a reduced genetic risk in healthy smokers.Publication Types: Clinical Trial Randomized Controlled Tria

    Discrimination of genotoxic from non-genotoxic carcinogens by gene expression profiling

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    Two general mechanisms are implicated in chemical carcinogenesis. The first involves direct damage to DNA, referred to as genotoxic (GTX), to which the cell responds by repair of the damages, arrest of the cell cycle or induction of apoptosis. The second is non-DNA damaging, non-genotoxic (NGTX), in which a wide variety of cellular processes may be involved. Therefore, it can be hypothesized that modulation of the underlying gene expression patterns is profoundly distinct between GTX and NGTX carcinogens, and thus that expression profiling is applicable for classification of chemical carcinogens as GTX or NGTX. We investigated this hypothesis by analysing modulation of gene expression profiles induced by 20 chemical carcinogens in HepG2 cells with application of cDNA microarrays that contain 597 toxicologically relevant genes. In total, 22 treatments were included, divided in two sets. The training set consisted of 16 treatments (nine genotoxins and seven non-genotoxins) and the validation set of six treatments (three and three). Class discrimination models based on Pearson correlation analyses for the 20 most discriminating genes were developed with data from the training set, where after the models were tested with all data. Using all data, the correctness for classification of the carcinogens from the training set was clearly better than that for the validation set, namely 81 and 33%, respectively. Exclusion of the treatments that had only marginal effects on the expression profiles, improved the discrimination for the training and validation sets to 92 and 100% correctness, respectively. Exclusion of the gene expression signals that were hardly altered also improved classification, namely to 94 and 80%. Therefore, our study proves the principle that gene expression profiling can discriminate carcinogens with major differences in their mode of actions, namely genotoxins versus non-genotoxins

    Comparison of supervised clustering methods to discriminate genotoxic from non-genotoxic carcinogens by gene expression profiling

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    Prediction of the toxic properties of chemicals based on modulation of gene expression profiles in exposed cells or animals is one of the major applications of toxicogenomics. Previously, we demonstrated that by Pearson correlation analysis of gene expression profiles from treated HepG2 cells it is possible to correctly discriminate and predict genotoxic from non-genotoxic carcinogens. Since to date many different supervised clustering methods for discrimination and prediction tests are available, we investigated whether application of the methods provided by the Whitehead Institute and Stanford University improved our initial prediction. Four different supervised clustering methods were applied for this comparison, namely Pearson correlation analysis (Pearson), nearest shrunken centroids analysis (NSC), K-nearest neighbour analysis (KNN) and Weighted voting (WV). For each supervised clustering method, three different approaches were followed: (1) using all the data points for all treatments, (2) exclusion of the samples with marginally affected gene expression profiles and (3) filtering out the gene expression signals that were hardly altered. On the complete data set, NSC, KNN and WV outperformed the Pearson test, but on the reduced data sets no clear difference was observed. Exclusion of samples with marginally affected profiles improved the prediction by all methods. For the various prediction models, gene sets of different compositions were selected; in these 27 genes appeared three times or more. These 27 genes are involved in many different biological processes and molecular functions, such as apoptosis, cell cycle control, regulation of transcription, and transporter activity, many of them related to the carcinogenic process. One gene, BAX, was selected in all 10 models, while ZFP36 was selected in 9, and AHR, MT1E and TTR in 8. Summarising, this study demonstrates that several supervised clustering methods can be used to discriminate certain genotoxic from non-genotoxic carcinogens by gene expression profiling in vitro in HepG2 cells. None of the methods clearly outperforms the others

    A sandwich-cultured rat hepatocyte system with increased metabolic competence evaluated by gene expression profiling

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    A rapid decline of cytochrome P450 (CYP450) enzyme activities remains a drawback of rat hepatocyte-based in vitro cultures. Consequently, judgment of the toxic potential of compounds that need bioactivation by CYP450s may not be adequate using this model. In the present study, an improved hepatocyte-based in vitro system was developed with special focus on metabolic competence. Therefore, a mixture of CYP450 inducers, phenobarbital, dexamethasone and β-naphthoflavone, was added to culture medium of sandwich-cultured rat hepatocytes. The resulting modified model was evaluated by comparing its genome-wide expression profiles with liver and a standard model without the inducer mixture. Metabolic capacity for CYP450 enzymes showed that the modified model resembled more closely the in vivo situation. Gene expression results revealed large differences between in vivo and both in vitro models. The slight differences between the two sandwich models were predominantly represented by gene expression changes in CYP450s. Importantly, in the modified model, expression ratios of the phase I and the majority of phase II genes more closely resembled liver in vivo. The CYP450 enzyme activities corresponded with gene expression data. In conclusion, for toxicological applications using sandwich-cultured hepatocytes, the modified model may be preferred. © 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved

    Time series analysis of benzo[a]pyrene-induced transcriptome changes suggests that a network of transcription factors regulates the effects on functional gene sets

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    Chemical carcinogens may cause a multitude of effects inside cells, thereby affecting transcript levels of genes by direct activation of transcription factors (TF) or indirectly through the formation of DNA damage. As the temporal profiles of these responses may be profoundly different, examining time-dependent changes may provide new insights in TF networks related to cellular responses to chemical carcinogens. Therefore, we investigated in human hepatoma cells gene expression changes caused by benzo[a]pyrene at 12 time points after exposure, in relation to DNA adduct and cell cycle. Temporal profiles for functional gene sets demonstrate both early and late effects in up- and downregulation of relevant gene sets involved in cell cycle, apoptosis, DNA repair, and metabolism of amino acids and lipids. Many significant transcription regulation networks appeared to be around TF that are proto-oncogenes or tumor suppressor genes. The time series analysis tool Short Time-series Expression Miner (STEM) was used to identify time-dependent correlation of pathways, gene sets, TF networks, and biological parameters. Most correlations are with DNA adduct levels, which is an early response, and less with the later responses on G1 and S phase cells. The majority of the modulated genes in the Reactome pathways can be regulated by several of these TF, e.g., 73% by nuclear factor-kappa B and 34-42% by c-MYC, SRF, AP1, and E2F1. All these TF can also regulate one or more of the others. Our data indicate that a complex network of a few TF is responsible for the majority of the transcriptional changes induced by BaP. This network hardly changes over time, despite that the transcriptional profiles clearly alter, suggesting that also other regulatory mechanisms are involved. © The Author 2010. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society of Toxicology. All rights reserved

    In vitro investigations into the interaction of beta-carotene with DNA: evidence for the role of carbon-centered free radicals

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    Supplementation by beta-carotene has unexpectedly appeared to increase lung cancer risk among smokers. In order to explain this it has been suggested that at high serum levels of beta-carotene, prooxidant characteristics of beta-carotene may become manifest, yielding reactive oxygen species (ROS) and inducing oxidative DNA damage. It has further been hypothesized that cigarette smoke carcinogens such as benzo[a]pyrene (B[a]P) and/or B[a]P metabolites, may directly react with beta-carotene. Furthermore, beta-carotene oxidation products may have a role in the bioactivation of B[a]P analogous to the peroxide shunt pathway of cytochrome P450 supported by cumene hydroperoxide. The aim of this study was to assess the effects of beta-carotene on the formation of B[a]P-DNA adducts and oxidative DNA damage in vitro in isolated DNA, applying as metabolizing systems rat liver and lung metabolizing fractions and lung metabolizing fractions from smoking and non-smoking humans. We established that beta-carotene in the presence of various metabolizing systems was unable to induce oxidative DNA damage (8-oxo-dG), although beta-carotene is capable of generating ROS spontaneously in the absence of metabolizing fractions. We also could not find an effect of beta-carotene on DNA adduct formation induced by B[a]P upon metabolic activation. We could, however, provide evidence of the occurrence of a carbon-centered beta-carotene radical which was found to be able to interact with B[a]P and to intercalate in DNA

    Interactions between polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in binary mixtures: Effects on gene expression and DNA adduct formation in precision-cut rat liver slices

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    Although exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) occurs mostly through mixtures, hazard and risk assessment are mostly based on the effects caused by individual compounds. The objective of the current study was to investigate whether interactions between PAHs occur, focusing on gene expression (as measured by cDNA microarrays) and DNA adduct formation. The effects of benzo[a]pyrene or dibenzo[a,h]anthracene (DB[a,h]A) alone and in binary mixtures with another PAH (DB[a,h]A, benzo[b]fluoranthene, fluoranthene or dibenzo[a,l]pyrene) were investigated using precision-cut rat liver slices. All compounds significantly modulated the expression of several genes, but overlap between genes affected by the mixture and by the individual compounds was relatively small. All mixtures showed an antagonistic response on total gene expression profiles. Moreover, at the level of individual genes, mostly antagonism was evident, with additivity and synergism observed for only a few genes. As far as DNA adduct formation is concerned, the binary mixtures generally caused antagonism. The effects in liver slices suggest a lower carcinogenic potency of PAH mixtures than estimated based on additivity of individual compounds. © The Author 2008. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the UK Environmental Mutagen Society. All rights reserved

    Oxidative DNA damage and cytogenetic effects in flight engineers exposed to cosmic radiation.

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    Department of Health Risk Analysis and Toxicology, Maastricht University, The [email protected] This study set out to analyze biomarkers for genotoxic events, e.g., oxidative DNA damage, chromosomal damage and hprt mutations, among flight personnel, who are known to be occupationally exposed to ionizing radiation of cosmic origin. Twenty-three flight engineers were recruited while ground personnel served as a matched control group. Cumulative radiation doses during flight were calculated on the basis of subjects' flight records assuming an exposure rate of 6 microSv per hour of flight. Oxidative DNA damage in peripheral lymphocytes from flight engineers appeared significantly increased in comparison with controls and was associated with cumulative exposure to cosmic radiation. Frequencies of peripheral lymphocyte chromosome aberrations, micronuclei and hprt mutations appeared also to be increased in flight engineers, but not significantly. It was also observed that DNA damage was higher in flight engineers with a relatively shorter flight history in comparison with flight engineers with higher cumulative exposures to radiation, suggesting adaptation to DNA damage caused by ionizing radiation. DNA repair activities measured as unscheduled DNA synthesis were clearly increased in the higher-exposed subgroup of flight engineers, and appeared significantly correlated with cumulative radiation dose, as well as inversely with oxidative DNA damage. The implications for cancer risk assessment in relation to exposure to cosmic radiation are discussed
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