Scanlon Susan E, Scanlon Christine D, Hegan Denise C, Sulkowski Parker L, Glazer Peter M
Department of Therapeutic Radiology and.
Department of Experimental Pathology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06520-8040, USA.
Carcinogenesis. 2017 Jun 1;38(6):627-637. doi: 10.1093/carcin/bgx038.
The heavy metal nickel is a known carcinogen, and occupational exposure to nickel compounds has been implicated in human lung and nasal cancers. Unlike many other environmental carcinogens, however, nickel does not directly induce DNA mutagenesis, and the mechanism of nickel-related carcinogenesis remains incompletely understood. Cellular nickel exposure leads to signaling pathway activation, transcriptional changes and epigenetic remodeling, processes also impacted by hypoxia, which itself promotes tumor growth without causing direct DNA damage. One of the mechanisms by which hypoxia contributes to tumor growth is the generation of genomic instability via down-regulation of high-fidelity DNA repair pathways. Here, we find that nickel exposure similarly leads to down-regulation of DNA repair proteins involved in homology-dependent DNA double-strand break repair (HDR) and mismatch repair (MMR) in tumorigenic and non-tumorigenic human lung cells. Functionally, nickel induces a defect in HDR capacity, as determined by plasmid-based host cell reactivation assays, persistence of ionizing radiation-induced DNA double-strand breaks and cellular hypersensitivity to ionizing radiation. Mechanistically, we find that nickel, in contrast to the metalloid arsenic, acutely induces transcriptional repression of HDR and MMR genes as part of a global transcriptional pattern similar to that seen with hypoxia. Finally, we find that exposure to low-dose nickel reduces the activity of the MLH1 promoter, but only arsenic leads to long-term MLH1 promoter silencing. Together, our data elucidate novel mechanisms of heavy metal carcinogenesis and contribute to our understanding of the influence of the microenvironment on the regulation of DNA repair pathways.
重金属镍是一种已知的致癌物,职业性接触镍化合物与人类肺癌和鼻癌有关。然而,与许多其他环境致癌物不同的是,镍不会直接诱导DNA诱变,镍相关致癌作用的机制仍未完全了解。细胞暴露于镍会导致信号通路激活、转录变化和表观遗传重塑,这些过程也受到缺氧的影响,而缺氧本身会促进肿瘤生长但不会导致直接的DNA损伤。缺氧促进肿瘤生长的机制之一是通过下调高保真DNA修复途径产生基因组不稳定。在这里,我们发现镍暴露同样会导致致瘤性和非致瘤性人肺细胞中参与同源依赖性DNA双链断裂修复(HDR)和错配修复(MMR)的DNA修复蛋白下调。在功能上,通过基于质粒的宿主细胞再激活试验、电离辐射诱导的DNA双链断裂的持续存在以及细胞对电离辐射的超敏反应确定,镍会诱导HDR能力缺陷。从机制上讲,我们发现与类金属砷不同,镍会急性诱导HDR和MMR基因的转录抑制,这是一种类似于缺氧时所见的整体转录模式的一部分。最后,我们发现低剂量镍暴露会降低MLH1启动子的活性,但只有砷会导致MLH1启动子长期沉默。总之,我们的数据阐明了重金属致癌的新机制,并有助于我们理解微环境对DNA修复途径调节的影响。