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Distinct Gene Expression Profiles in Immortalized Human Urothelial Cells Exposed to Inorganic Arsenite and Its Methylated Trivalent Metabolites
Author(s) -
Pei-Fen Su,
Yujie Hu,
Ing-Kang Ho,
Yang-Ming Cheng,
TeChang Lee
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
environmental health perspectives
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.257
H-Index - 282
eISSN - 1552-9924
pISSN - 0091-6765
DOI - 10.1289/ehp.8174
Subject(s) - arsenite , sodium arsenite , microbiology and biotechnology , gene expression , cell culture , carcinogenesis , gene , chemistry , carcinogen , biology , microarray analysis techniques , arsenic , biochemistry , genetics , organic chemistry
Inorganic arsenic is an environmental carcinogen. The generation of toxic trivalent methylated metabolites complicates the study of arsenic-mediated carcinogenesis. This study systematically evaluated the effect of chronic treatment with sodium arsenite (iAs(III)), monomethylarsonous acid (MMA(III)), and dimethylarsinous acid (DMA(III)) on immortalized human uroepithelial cells (SV-HUC-1 cells) using cDNA microarray. After exposure for 25 passages to iAs(III) (0.5 microM), MMA(III) (0.05, 0.1, or 0.2 microM), or DMA(III) (0.2 or 0.5 microM), significant compound-specific morphologic changes were observed. A set of 114 genes (5.7% of the examined genes) was differentially expressed in one or more sets of arsenical-treated cells compared with untreated controls. Expression analysis showed that exposure of cells to DMA(III) resulted in a gene profile different from that in cells exposed to iAs(III) or MMA(III), and that the iAs(III)-induced gene profile was closest to that in the tumorigenic HUC-1-derived 3-methylcholanthrene-induced tumorigenic cell line MC-SV-HUC T2, which was derived from SV-HUC-1 cells by methylcholanthrene treatment. Of the genes affected by all three arsenicals, only one, that coding for interleukin-1 receptor, type II, showed enhanced expression, a finding confirmed by the reduced increase in NF-kappaB (nuclear factor kappa B) activity seen in response to interleukin-1beta in iAs(III)-exposed cells. The expression of 11 genes was suppressed by all three arsenicals. 5-Aza-deoxycytidine partially restored the transcription of several suppressed genes, showing that epigenetic DNA methylation was probably involved in arsenical-induced gene repression. Our data demonstrate that chronic exposure to iAs(III), MMA(III), or DMA(III) has different epigenetic effects on urothelial cells and represses NF-kappaB activity.

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