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The mechanism of benzene-induced leukemia: a hypothesis and speculations on the causes of leukemia.

An overall hypothesis for benzene-induced leukemia is proposed. Key components of the hypothesis include a) activation of benzene in the liver to phenolic metabolites; b) transport of these metabolites to the bone marrow and conversion to semiquinone radicals and quinones via peroxidase enzymes; c)...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Smith, M T
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1996
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1469721/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9118896
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author Smith, M T
author_facet Smith, M T
author_sort Smith, M T
collection PubMed
description An overall hypothesis for benzene-induced leukemia is proposed. Key components of the hypothesis include a) activation of benzene in the liver to phenolic metabolites; b) transport of these metabolites to the bone marrow and conversion to semiquinone radicals and quinones via peroxidase enzymes; c) generation of active oxygen species via redox cycling; d) damage to tubulin, histone proteins, topoisomerase II, other DNA associated proteins, and DNA itself; and e) consequent damage including DNA strand breakage, mitotic recombination, chromosome translocations, and aneuploidy. If these effects take place in stem or early progenitor cells a leukemic clone with selective advantage to grow may arise, as a result of protooncogene activation, gene fusion, and suppressor gene inactivation. Epigenetic effects of benzene metabolites on the bone marrow stroma, and perhaps the stem cell itself, may then foster development and survival of the leukemic clone. Evidence for this hypothesis is mounting with the recent demonstration that benzene induces gene-duplicating mutations in human bone marrow and chromosome-specific aneuploidy and translocations in peripheral blood cells. If this hypothesis is correct, it also potentially implicates phenolic and quinonoid compounds in the induction of "spontaneous" leukemia in man.
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spelling pubmed-14697212006-06-01 The mechanism of benzene-induced leukemia: a hypothesis and speculations on the causes of leukemia. Smith, M T Environ Health Perspect Research Article An overall hypothesis for benzene-induced leukemia is proposed. Key components of the hypothesis include a) activation of benzene in the liver to phenolic metabolites; b) transport of these metabolites to the bone marrow and conversion to semiquinone radicals and quinones via peroxidase enzymes; c) generation of active oxygen species via redox cycling; d) damage to tubulin, histone proteins, topoisomerase II, other DNA associated proteins, and DNA itself; and e) consequent damage including DNA strand breakage, mitotic recombination, chromosome translocations, and aneuploidy. If these effects take place in stem or early progenitor cells a leukemic clone with selective advantage to grow may arise, as a result of protooncogene activation, gene fusion, and suppressor gene inactivation. Epigenetic effects of benzene metabolites on the bone marrow stroma, and perhaps the stem cell itself, may then foster development and survival of the leukemic clone. Evidence for this hypothesis is mounting with the recent demonstration that benzene induces gene-duplicating mutations in human bone marrow and chromosome-specific aneuploidy and translocations in peripheral blood cells. If this hypothesis is correct, it also potentially implicates phenolic and quinonoid compounds in the induction of "spontaneous" leukemia in man. 1996-12 /pmc/articles/PMC1469721/ /pubmed/9118896 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Smith, M T
The mechanism of benzene-induced leukemia: a hypothesis and speculations on the causes of leukemia.
title The mechanism of benzene-induced leukemia: a hypothesis and speculations on the causes of leukemia.
title_full The mechanism of benzene-induced leukemia: a hypothesis and speculations on the causes of leukemia.
title_fullStr The mechanism of benzene-induced leukemia: a hypothesis and speculations on the causes of leukemia.
title_full_unstemmed The mechanism of benzene-induced leukemia: a hypothesis and speculations on the causes of leukemia.
title_short The mechanism of benzene-induced leukemia: a hypothesis and speculations on the causes of leukemia.
title_sort mechanism of benzene-induced leukemia: a hypothesis and speculations on the causes of leukemia.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1469721/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9118896
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