ABSTRACT:
Molecular
basis for effects of carcinogenic heavy metals on inducible
gene expression.
Certain forms
of the heavy metals arsenic and chromium are considered human
carcinogens, although they are believed to act through very
different mechanisms. Chromium(VI) is believed to act as a
classic and mutagenic agent, and DNA/chromatin appears to
be the principal target for its effects. In contrast, arsenic(III)
is considered nongenotoxic, but is able to target specific
cellular proteins, principally through sulfhydryl interactions.
We had previously shown that various genotoxic chemical carcinogens,
including chromium (VI), preferentially altered expression
of several inducible genes but had little or no effect on
constitutive gene expression. We were therefore interested
in whether these carcinogenic heavy metals might target specific
but distinct sites within cells, leading to alterations in
gene expression that might contribute to the carcinogenic
process. Arsenic(III) and chromium(VI) each significantly
altered both basal and hormone-inducible expression of a model
inducible gene, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK),
at nonovertly toxic doses in the chick embryo in vivo and
rat hepatoma H411E cells in culture. We have recently developed
two parallel cell culture approaches for examining the molecular
basis for these effects. First, we are examining the effects
of heavy metals on expression and activation of specific transcription
factors known to be involved in regulation of susceptible
inducible genes, and have recently observed significant but
different effects of arsenic(III) and chromium(VI) on nuclear
transcription factor binding. Second, we have developed cell
lines with stably integrated PEPCK promoter-luciferase reporter
gene constructs to examine effects of heavy metals on promoter
function, and have also recently seen profound effects induced
by both chromium(VI) and arsenic(III) in this system. These
model systems should enable us to be able to identify the
critical cis (DNA) and trans (protein) cellular targets of
heavy metal exposure leading to alterations in expression
of specific susceptible genes. It is anticipated that such
information will provide valuable insight into the mechanistic
basis for these effects as well as provide sensitive molecular
biomarkers for evaluating human exposure.
Hamilton JW, Kaltreider RC, Bajenova
OV, Ihnat MA, McCaffrey J, Turpie BW, Rowell EE, Oh J, Nemeth MJ, Pesce
CA, Lariviere JP. Molecular basis for effects of carcinogenic heavy
metals on inducible gene expression. Environ. Health Perspect. 106:1005-1015,
1998.