Title: Chemical Carcinogenesis
1Chemical Carcinogenesis
- David.bell_at_nottingham.ac.uk
- http//dmg.nott.ac.uk/teaching/msc1.ppt
- http//dmg.nott.ac.uk/teaching/cancer/cancer.html
2Do chemicals cause cancer ?
- Epidemiology
- The study of illness in populations
- Correlate with influences on the population, eg
diet, work, geography - 1775
- The surgeon, Percival Potts, noted that coal
sweeps had a high incidence of cancer, scrotal
cancer. He hypothesised that the cancer was due
to their intimate and prolonged exposure to coal
dust.
3Latency
Cancer takes 10-50 years to develop in man
1900- Cigarette smoking an accepted habit
1940- rise in male lung cancer- alarm
1960- smoking is shown to be the cause of lung
cancer
1960-2000. People who started smoking before
1960 die of lung cancer Lung cancer is the most
frequent site of cancer in UK men
4Is cancer increasing ?
5Epidemiology issues
- Long latency period- up to 20 years
- Poor for prediction
- Sensitive against low background
- e.g. haemangiosarcoma is vanishingly rare in the
general population, vs high levels in workers
exposed to vinyl chloride monomer - Insensitive against common cancers
- Difficult to isolate the cause of cancer
- Unless you are testing for that cause
- Small studies are confounded by sampling error
6Causes of cancer
Note that diet, tobacco, occupation, alcohol and
pollution are principally chemically-induced
cancers.
7Screening for carcinogens
- Animal tests
- 50 animals per group
- Maximal tolerated dose (MTD), and 25
- Cost 250 000
- Time 2 years (rat or mouse)
- Definitive, identification of specific chemicals
8Problems with bioassay
- The US National Toxicology Programme has tested gt
500 compounds, with selection based on
environmental relevance - Approx 50-66 of all chemicals cause cancer
9Nitrosamines
- Cause cancer in mouse, rat, monkey, guinea-pig,
rabbit, fowl, newt, trout - Wide range of organs affected
- Formed in food in the presence of nitrate, and
acid, ie pickles - Potent
R1
N
NO
R2
10Nitrosamines
O-H
CH2
CH3
Oxidation
N
NO
N
NO
CH3
CH3
The methyl carbonium ion is a powerful
electrophile, and reacts quickly with
macromolecules.
H2-CO
CH3-NN-OH
N2
CH3-N2
CH3
OH-
11Electrophiles
- Chemical entities which react with centres having
a surplus of electrons, or nucleo-philes. - Protein, RNA and DNA contain nucleophilic sites
12Electrophiles and DNA 2
H
- There are multiple reactions of electrophiles
with DNA - O6 methyl guanine is promutagenic
- The alkylated base mispairs G-T, instead of G C
- This leads to inaccurate repair, and mutations in
DNA - N7-G also promutagenic
N7
O
N
N
N
N
H2N
Guanine
dR
13Genotoxicity
- Toxicity to the genome- hence genotoxicity
14Benzo(a)pyrene
1
Bay region
2
10
3
9
4
8
5
7
6
K region
High electron density at Bay and K regions Planar
molecule
15Benzo(a)pyrene
- Typical PAH
- Ubiquitous
- Coal tar, organic matter
- Formed during combustion of organics
- Cooking !
- Oils, especially used at high temperature
- Chemically inert
- Principal active agent in coal tar
16B(a)P metabolism
Multiple sites of metabolism combination of
metabolism at multiple sites. Highly
complex metabolic pathways.
2
10
3
9
4
8
5
7
6
Hydroxylation- reactive phenols and quinones
17The ultimate carcinogen
Cytochrome P450
O
B(a)P 7,8 epoxide
Epoxide hydrolase
P450
O
OH
OH
OH
OH
((anti))B(a)P 7,8 dihydrodiol 9,10 epoxide
B(a)P 7,8 dihydrodiol
18Is BPDE important ?
- Analysis of B(a)P- DNA adducts
- BPDE should be more carcinogenic than BP
- Dose mice at birth and autopsy at 7 months. Lung
tumours/mouse are shown.
19Adducts from B(a)P
- Adducts form on C10- N2 of dG using the BPDE on
DNA in vitro - The same adducts are formed in vivo on DNA
- Mutations in the ras oncogene with BaP are
typified by G-T transitions at codon 12 or 13
20DNA repair
- Methylnitrosourea (MNU) is a direct alkylating
agent - In rats, it has tissue-specificity, with
brain-specific tumorigenesis - DNA-adduct levels are similar in brain in liver
- Adducts are removed rapidly in liver, but persist
in brain
21DNA damage ? cancer
DNA damage is similar between the two
strains Tumour development is markedly
different Therefore other factors control the
development of cancer
22Do adducts cause cancer ?
- Chemically synthesise DNA-adducts, insert into
plasmid and transform into E. coli - Measure amount of mutations in prokaryotic DNA
- Treat a cellular proto-oncogene with carcinogen
in vitro - Transform DNA into cells, and look for cellular
transformation
23How many adducts for cancer ?
- For a 50 incidence of tumours in rat liver
- Estimate from 50 to 2000 adducts/ 108 nucleotides
(2 per 100 000) - Variation
- Measurement
- Repair
- Different compounds and adducts
24Ames assay
- Relies on the concept that DNA-damaging, or
mutagenic, agents will cause cancer - Uses a disabled Salmonella Typhimurium, with
defective cell wall, allowing easy import of
chemicals - Look for mutations in genes for Histidine
biosynthesis - Mutant genes will allow survival and growth of
the bacteria
25Ames assay 2
His- Salmonella
Histidine Deficient plates
Plate chemical
Control plate
Benefits two day assay very cheap
26Ames III
- Ames test detects direct acting mutagens
- Add liver homogenate (the S9, 9000g supernatant)
to cells to detect mutagens which require
activation - Some chemicals are mutagenic, but not
carcinogenic - Many chemicals are carcinogenic, but not mutagenic
27The numbering of the beast
4
6
3
5
7
8
2
10
9
1
2,3,7,8 tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) One of
the most potent of a variety of related
compounds Long half-life in humans (6 years)
28Tumour incidence in rats
TCDD- ng/kg day
29TCDD and cancer
- Tumorigenic in rat, mouse, guinea pig and fish
(everything tested) - Primate study aborted when total dose of 2 mg/kg
lead to death - In rat, the lowest carcinogenic dose was 1.4
ng/kg/day (Plt0.05) for thyroid tumours - MTD 71ng/kg/day
30A prototypical non-genotoxin
- TCDD is a potent carcinogen
- Very weak/ no mutagenicity in Ames test
- No activity in tests of initiation activity
- Maximum estimate for binding of TCDD to rat liver
DNA 1 molecule per 1011 bases - 1 per 107- 105 for known carcinogens
- TCDD is a non-genotoxic carcinogen
31Rodent Bioassay Bias
- 60 of chemicals are carcinogenic
- Liver Bias
- Mouse liver tumours are 45-60 of mouse
carcinogens - Rat liver tumours are 20-30 of rat carcinogens
- Chemicals which induce mouse liver tumours only
are 30 Ames positive - Non-carcinogens are 30 Ames
32Does cancer progress ?
Model originally set up dosing mouse skin
DMBA
Vehicle control- 6 months
0 tumours
DMBA
Croton oil- 6 months
Multiple tumours
DMBA
Croton oil- 6 months
0 tumours
33Promotion
- Use subcarcinogenic dose of initiating agent
- The promoting agent is not carcinogenic per se
- The promoting agent enhances the effect of the
genotoxic initiating agent - Long delay possible between administration of
initiating agent and promoting agent - Promotion is reversible
34The active ingredient
- TPA, or tetradecanoyl phorbol acetate
- TPA causes hyperplasia in mouse skin
- TPA activates protein kinase C
- Cell-signalling receptor
- Diacyl-glycerol is an endogenous activator
- Inappropriate activation of programme of cell
growth
35Mechanisms of promotion
- Skin promotors
- Okadaic acid
- Inhibitor of protein phosphatases
- TCDD
- Activates the Ah receptor
- Wounding
36Promotion in different tissues
- Colon
- Bile acids, high fat diet
- Bladder
- Saccharin
- Mammary gland
- Hormones, high fat diet
37Why Risk Assess ?
- Unsatisfactory to wait for epidemiology
- HAZARD
- The ability to cause cancer
- RISK
- What is the chance of it doing so ?
- Paracelsus
- All substances are poisons there is none which
is not a poison. The right dose differentiates a
poison and a remedy
38Hazard Assessment
- Use of Maximal Tolerated Dose (MTD) in two-animal
bioassay - High dose required to obtain a significant result
- Human exposure at low dose
- How to extrapolate from high dose to low dose ?
39Extrapolation
Data
Extrapolation
40Extrapolation
US/ Europe 1 cancer in 106 is tolerable UK
guidelines more flexible
Extrapolation
41Extrapolation 3
No Observed Effect Level
NOEL
42Linear extrapolation
- Mechanism associated with genotoxicity
- 1 DNA adduct may lead to a single mutation may
lead to cancer - No safe dose
- Any amount of chemical will cause cancer
- Conservative
43Linear extrapolation
- Carcinogens may require metabolic activation
- Enzyme kinetics are non-linear
- Trichloroethylene produces lung tumours in mouse,
but not rat - TCE metabolised to chloral in mouse
- P450 mediated species differences (TCE.pdf)
44Linear extrapolation
- Non-genotoxic carcinogens activate receptors
- Receptor activation follows non-linear kinetics
V
Substrate
45Is linear extrapolation correct ?
- Linearity has been tested for acetyl-aminofluorene
, which produces liver and bladder cancers- down
to 1 - Linear for liver cancer 30-150 ppm
- Non-linear for bladder cancer
- NOEL of 60 ppm
- Increased bladder DNA synthesis above 60 ppm AAF
46Linear extrapolation
- For a chemical which causes cancer
- Extrapolate linearly to a level which causes
cancer at 1 in 106 - i.e. MTD/ 1 000 000
- Applies to pesticides/ fungicides/ industrial
chemicals/ etc - Pharmaceuticals risk/ benefit balance
- UK regulation less clear
47Carcinogen exposure
- gt60 of all chemicals are carcinogens
- Food is composed of chemicals
- Plants produce a variety of secondary products
- Pesticides
- Of a selection of plant pesticides, 27/52 were
carcinogenic
48Carcinogen exposure
- Estimate that people eat 1.5 g of natural
pesticides per day - 2g of burnt food products
- 50 carcinogens
- 1 cup of coffee contains 32mgs of known
carcinogenic chemicals ( gt1000 untested)
49Carcinogen exposure
- Epidemiology fruit veg are beneficial
- It is not clear that there is evidence that low
dose effects are significant for human cancer - Compare lt0.1mg of synthetic pesticides
- Why regulate synthetic pesticides when 99.99 of
pesticides are natural chemicals ?
50Chemical carcinogenesis
- Chemicals are involved in human cancer
- Reaction of chemical with DNA
- Some chemicals require metabolic activation
- Non-genotoxic chemicals
- Activation of cellular receptors
- Difference between hazard and risk