Even though the molecular mechanisms by which lead induces toxicity and cancer have been intensely studied for many years, its carcinogenic mechanisms are not well understood yet. Several possible mechanisms have been examined to gain understanding on the carcinogenic properties of lead, which include mitogenesis, alteration of gene expression, and oxidative damage, among others. The aim of the present study was to explore the induction of oxidative damage at low lead concentrations using human embryonic hepatic cells WRL-68. Our results showed induction of reactive oxygen species, changes in the superoxide dismutase and catalase activity, as well as an induction of lipidperoxidation and DNA damage. However, after 5 weeks of exposure, these alterations returned to their basal levels. These results taking together indicate that at low concentrations, lead is able to establish an oxidative stress scenario; however under optimal antioxidant defense the oxidative scenario could be abolished through an adaptative process.
Several possible mechanisms have been examined to gain an understanding on the carcinogenic properties of lead, which include among others, mitogenesis, alteration of gene expression, oxidative damage, and inhibition of DNA repair. The aim of the present study was to explore if low concentrations of lead, relevant for human exposure, interfere with Ape1 function, a base excision repair enzyme, and its role in cell transformation in Balb/c-3T3. Lead acetate 5 and 30 μM induced APE1 mRNA and upregulation of protein expression. This increase in mRNA expression is consistent throughout the chronic exposure. Additionally, we also found an impaired function of Ape1 through molecular beacon-based assay. To evaluate the impact of lead on foci formation, a Balb/c-3T3 two-step transformation model was used. Balb/c-3T3 cells were pretreated 1 week with low concentrations of lead before induction of transformation with n-methyl-n-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) (0.5 μg/mL) and 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) (0.1 μg/mL) (a classical two-step protocol). Morphological cell transformation increased in response to lead pretreatment that was paralleled with an increase in Ape1 mRNA and protein overexpression and an impairment of Ape1 activity and correlating with foci number. In addition, we found that lead pretreatment and MNNG (transformation initiator) increased DNA damage, determined by comet assay. Our data suggest that low lead concentrations (5, 30 μM) could play a facilitating role in cellular transformation, probably through the impaired function of housekeeping genes such as Ape1, leading to DNA damage accumulation and chromosomal instability, one of the most important hallmarks of cancer induced by chronic exposures.
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