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Role of DNA repair inhibition in lead- and cadmium-induced genotoxicity: a review.

Compounds of lead and cadmium have been shown to be carcinogenic to humans and experimental animals. However, the underlying mechanisms are still not understood. In mammalian cells in culture, lead(II) is weakly mutagenic after long incubation times and generates DNA strand breaks only after treatme...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Hartwig, A
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1994
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1567390/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7843136
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author Hartwig, A
author_facet Hartwig, A
author_sort Hartwig, A
collection PubMed
description Compounds of lead and cadmium have been shown to be carcinogenic to humans and experimental animals. However, the underlying mechanisms are still not understood. In mammalian cells in culture, lead(II) is weakly mutagenic after long incubation times and generates DNA strand breaks only after treatment with high, toxic doses. Cadmium(II) induces DNA strand breaks and chromosomal aberrations, but its mutagenic potential is rather weak. However, both metals exert pronounced indirect genotoxic effects. Lead(II) is comutagenic towards UV and N-methyl-N-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) and enhances the number of UV-induced sister chromatid exchanges in V79 Chinese hamster cells. With regard to DNA repair, lead(II) causes an accumulation of DNA strand breaks after UV-irradiation in HeLa cells, indicating an interference with the polymerization or ligation step in excision repair. Cadmium(II) enhances the mutagenicity of UV light in V79 Chinese hamster cells and an increased sensitivity toward UV light is observed in various rodent and human cell lines. Furthermore, an inhibition of unscheduled DNA synthesis after UV-irradiation and a partial inhibition of the removal of UV-induced DNA lesions has been shown. For both metals, the indirect genotoxic effects are observed at low, nontoxic concentrations, suggesting that an interference with DNA repair processes may be predominant at biologically relevant concentrations. This might also explain the conflicting results of epidemiological studies obtained for both metals. Possible mechanisms of repair inhibition are discussed.
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spelling pubmed-15673902006-09-19 Role of DNA repair inhibition in lead- and cadmium-induced genotoxicity: a review. Hartwig, A Environ Health Perspect Research Article Compounds of lead and cadmium have been shown to be carcinogenic to humans and experimental animals. However, the underlying mechanisms are still not understood. In mammalian cells in culture, lead(II) is weakly mutagenic after long incubation times and generates DNA strand breaks only after treatment with high, toxic doses. Cadmium(II) induces DNA strand breaks and chromosomal aberrations, but its mutagenic potential is rather weak. However, both metals exert pronounced indirect genotoxic effects. Lead(II) is comutagenic towards UV and N-methyl-N-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) and enhances the number of UV-induced sister chromatid exchanges in V79 Chinese hamster cells. With regard to DNA repair, lead(II) causes an accumulation of DNA strand breaks after UV-irradiation in HeLa cells, indicating an interference with the polymerization or ligation step in excision repair. Cadmium(II) enhances the mutagenicity of UV light in V79 Chinese hamster cells and an increased sensitivity toward UV light is observed in various rodent and human cell lines. Furthermore, an inhibition of unscheduled DNA synthesis after UV-irradiation and a partial inhibition of the removal of UV-induced DNA lesions has been shown. For both metals, the indirect genotoxic effects are observed at low, nontoxic concentrations, suggesting that an interference with DNA repair processes may be predominant at biologically relevant concentrations. This might also explain the conflicting results of epidemiological studies obtained for both metals. Possible mechanisms of repair inhibition are discussed. 1994-09 /pmc/articles/PMC1567390/ /pubmed/7843136 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Hartwig, A
Role of DNA repair inhibition in lead- and cadmium-induced genotoxicity: a review.
title Role of DNA repair inhibition in lead- and cadmium-induced genotoxicity: a review.
title_full Role of DNA repair inhibition in lead- and cadmium-induced genotoxicity: a review.
title_fullStr Role of DNA repair inhibition in lead- and cadmium-induced genotoxicity: a review.
title_full_unstemmed Role of DNA repair inhibition in lead- and cadmium-induced genotoxicity: a review.
title_short Role of DNA repair inhibition in lead- and cadmium-induced genotoxicity: a review.
title_sort role of dna repair inhibition in lead- and cadmium-induced genotoxicity: a review.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1567390/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7843136
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