NST110, Toxicology Department of Nutritional Sciences and Toxicology University of California, Berkeley
NST110, Toxicology Department of Nutritional Sciences and Toxicology University of California, Berkeley
NST110, Toxicology Department of Nutritional Sciences and Toxicology University of California, Berkeley
NST110, Toxicology
Department of Nutritional Sciences and Toxicology
University of California, Berkeley
Characteristics of Cancer
Initiation
(irreversible)
Promotion
More (reversible)
mutations
Progression
(irreversible)
malignant
metastases
Different Steps of Carcinogenesis
cell survival
increased
Carcinogens often
increased p53 p14ARF
sequesters
mutationally inactivate p53 as
(tetrameric TF) Mdm2 well as proteins that control
binds tandem sequence of
increased Apaf p53 function (e.g. Mdm2, p14)
(apoptosis)
Fas ligand PuPuPuC A/t T/a G PyPyPy increased p21 (G1
arrest)
increased IGF-BP3
increased Fas receptor increased Bax
IGF-1
FADD/DISC complex Bax dimer
depolarizes mitochondrial
membrane
IGF-1 receptor
activates caspase 8 + 10
apoptosis
Ras oncogene: involved in control of cell cycle progression and apoptosis
norepinephrine growth factor
serotonin, etc (PDGF, IGF, EGF, NGF)
HO HO
O OH OH
benzo[a]pyrene (+) benzo[a]pyrene (+) benzo[a]pyrene
7,8-oxide (-) benzo[a]pyrene
7,8-dihydrodiol-9,10-epoxide
7,8-dihydrodiol
ULTIMATE CARCINOGEN
CYP/PHS GST/GSH
DNA
Phase II and
excretion
O N
GS HN N
O OH N DNA
inactive (excreted) HN
HO
HO
OH
Phase II
Benzopyrene Leads to Mutations in K-Ras and p53 in the Genomic
Loci Found to be Mutated in Smoking-Induced Lung Cancers
K-Ras and p53 are the two oncogenes most frequently mutated in
smoking-related lung cancers
If not corrected by the cells DNA repair mechanism, this guanine adduct is
misread as a thymine by the DNA polymerase that copies chromosomes
during replication
Ultimately, the original GC base pair may be replaced by a TA base pair,
a mutation called a traversion
Cells treated with Benzopyrene show the same spectrum of GT
transversions as found in the K-RAS and p53 of smokers.
These mutational hot spots map well to the guanine binding sites of BaP
epoxide
Promotion
Promotion
Epigenetic eventchange in gene expression without
change in DNA.
Mitogenic (Not mutagenic) Stimulates proliferation.
Causes both mutated and normal cells to proliferate.
Enhances the effect of the genotoxic initiating agent
by establishing clones of initiated cells.
Long delay possible between administration of
initiating agent and promoting agent.
Promotion is reversible.
Promoters
1. Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) and redox active
xenobiotics and metals
2. Phorbol esters (e.g. TPA)
3. Polycyclic aromatic compounds (e.g. Dioxin)
4. Peroxisome Proliferators (oxidized fats)
5. Endocrine Disruptors (estradiol, DES)
Structures of Representative Promoters
2. ER inhibits ER
a.ER-ER dimerization (homodimer) leads to mitogenic
activation.
b.ER-ER dimerization (heterodimer) leads to an inactivation.
e s tro g e n
E R b e ta
c y to s o l
E R a lp h a
m it o g e n ic n o p r o life r a tio n
n u c le u s
Examples of Endocrine Disruptors
Cellular Necrosis
Intracellular contents
(e.g. ATP, dsDNA)
Activation of Resident
Macrophages
Cytokines, chemokines,
Eicosanoids (TNF, IL1, PGE2)