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Epigenetic effects of carbon nanotubes in human monocytic cells
Author(s) -
Deniz Öner,
Matthieu Moisse,
Manosij Ghosh,
Radu Corneliu Duca,
Katrien Poels,
Katrien Luyts,
Eveline Putzeys,
Stevan M. Čokić,
Kirsten Van Landuyt,
Jeroen Vanoirbeek,
Diether Lambrechts,
Lode Godderis,
Peter Hoet
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
mutagenesis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.723
H-Index - 91
eISSN - 1464-3804
pISSN - 0267-8357
DOI - 10.1093/mutage/gew053
Subject(s) - dna methylation , epigenetics , methylation , genotoxicity , microbiology and biotechnology , chemistry , carcinogenesis , methylated dna immunoprecipitation , cytotoxicity , dna microarray , gene expression , biology , gene , biochemistry , in vitro , toxicity , organic chemistry
Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are fibrous carbon-based nanomaterials with a potential to cause carcinogenesis in humans. Alterations in DNA methylation on cytosine-phosphate-guanidine (CpG) sites are potential markers of exposure-induced carcinogenesis. This study examined cytotoxicity, genotoxicity and DNA methylation alterations on human monocytic cells (THP-1) after incubation with single-walled CNTs (SWCNTs) and multi-walled CNTs (MWCNTs). Higher cytotoxicity and genotoxicity were observed after incubation with SWCNTs than incubation with MWCNTs. At the selected concentrations (25 and 100 µg/ml), DNA methylation alterations were studied. Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) was used to assess global DNA methylation, and Illumina 450K microarrays were used to assess methylation of single CpG sites. Next, we assessed gene promoter-specific methylation levels. We observed no global methylation or hydroxymethylation alterations, but on gene-specific level, distinct clustering of CNT-treated samples were noted. Collectively, CNTs induced gene promoter-specific altered methylation and those 1127 different genes were identified to be hypomethylated. Differentially methylated genes were involved in several signalling cascade pathways, vascular endothelial growth factor and platelet activation pathways. Moreover, possible contribution of the epigenetic alterations to monocyte differentiation and mixed M1/M2 macrophage polarisation were discussed.

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