Formation and repair of DNA adducts in vinyl chloride-and vinyl fluoride-induced carcinogenesis.

JA Swenberg, MS Bogdanffy, A Ham, S Holt… - IARC Scientific …, 1999 - europepmc.org
JA Swenberg, MS Bogdanffy, A Ham, S Holt, A Kim, EJ Morinello, A Ranasinghe, N Scheller…
IARC Scientific Publications, 1999europepmc.org
Vinyl chloride is a known human and animal carcinogen that induces angiosarcomas of the
liver. We review here studies on the formation and repair of DNA adducts associated with
vinyl chloride and vinyl fluoride in exposed and control rodents and unexposed humans.
These vinyl halides induce etheno (epsilon) adducts that are identical to those formed after
lipid peroxidation. Of these adducts, N2, 3-ethenoguanine (epsilon G) is present in greatest
amounts in tissues of exposed animals. After exposure to vinyl chloride for four weeks …
Vinyl chloride is a known human and animal carcinogen that induces angiosarcomas of the liver. We review here studies on the formation and repair of DNA adducts associated with vinyl chloride and vinyl fluoride in exposed and control rodents and unexposed humans. These vinyl halides induce etheno (epsilon) adducts that are identical to those formed after lipid peroxidation. Of these adducts, N2, 3-ethenoguanine (epsilon G) is present in greatest amounts in tissues of exposed animals. After exposure to vinyl chloride for four weeks, epsilon G levels attain steady-state concentrations, such that the amount of newly formed adducts equals the number of adducts that are lost each day. We report the first dosimetry of epsilon G in rats exposed to 0, 10, 100 or 1100 ppm vinyl chloride for five days or four weeks. The number of adducts increased in a supralinear manner. Exposure to 10 ppm vinyl chloride for five days caused a two-to threefold increase in epsilon G over that of the controls, while four weeks' exposure resulted in a fivefold increase. This was confirmed with [13C2] vinyl chloride and by measuring exogenous and endogenous adducts in the same animals. Exposure to 100 ppm vinyl chloride for four weeks caused a 25-fold increase in epsilon G levels over that found in control rats, while exposure to 1100 ppm resulted in a 42-fold increase. The amount of endogenous epsilon G was similar in liver DNA from rats and humans. A comparable response to exposure was seen in rats and mice exposed to 0, 25, 250 or 2500 ppm vinyl fluoride for 12 months. There was a very high correlation between epsilon G levels in rat and mouse liver at 12 months and the incidence of haemangiosarcoma at two years. We were able to demonstrate that the target cell population for angiosarcoma, the nonparenchymal cells, contained more epsilon G than hepatocytes, even though nonparenchymal cells are exposed by diffusion of vinyl halide metabolites formed in hepatocytes. The expression of N-methylpurine-DNA glycosylase mRNA was induced in rat liver after exposure to either 25 or 2500 ppm vinyl fluoride. When this induction was investigated in hepatocytes and nonparenchymal cells, it was found that the latter had only 20% of the N-methylpurine-DNA glycosylase mRNA of hepatocytes, and that only the hepatocytes had induction of this expression after exposure to vinyl fluoride. Thus, the target cells for vinyl halide carcinogenesis have much lower expression of this DNA repair enzyme, which has been associated with etheno adduct repair.
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