Chronic inflammatory processes induce oxidative stress and lipid peroxidation (LPO), hereby generating DNA-reactive aldehydes such as trans-4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (HNE). Etheno-modified DNA bases are inter alia generated by reaction of DNA with HNE. Using an immunoaffinity-(32)P-postlabeling method, the authors have investigated etheno-DNA adduct levels 1,N (6)-ethenodeoxyadenosine (epsilondA) and of 3,N (4)-ethenodeoxycytidine (epsilondC) in the pancreas of chronic pancreatitis patients and in the colon of patients with inflammatory bowel disease. Both epsilondA and epsilondC levels were found to be significantly, 3 and 28 times, respectively, elevated in the inflamed pancreatic tissue. In contrast, only epsilondC was found to be increased in affected colonic mucosa of Crohn's disease (19 times) and of ulcerative colitis patients (4 times) when compared to asymptomatic tissues. In all three cancer-prone diseases, the mean epsilondC-levels in tissues were five- to ninefold higher than those of epsilondA. Differential or impaired DNA repair pathways of these adducts, known to occur by two different glycosylases are implicated. K-ras in pancreatic tumors and K-ras and p53 in colon mucosa in long-standing inflammatory bowel disease are known to be highly mutated. The conclusion is that promutagenic etheno-DNA adducts are generated as a consequence of chronic inflammation, acting as a driving force to malignancy in cancer-prone inflammatory diseases.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ars.2006.8.1003 | DOI Listing |
Int J Mol Sci
February 2024
WROVASC-Regional Specialist Hospital in Wroclaw, Research and Development Centre, Kamieńskiego 73a, 51-124 Wroclaw, Poland.
Excessive consumption of food rich in saturated fatty acids and carbohydrates can lead to metabolic disturbances and cardiovascular disease. Hyperlipidemia is a significant risk factor for acute cardiac events due to its association with oxidative stress. This leads to arterial wall remodeling, including an increase in the thickness of the intima media complex (IMT), and endothelial dysfunction leading to plaque formation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenes Environ
June 2021
Department of Biochemistry, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, 638B Robinson Research Building, 2200 Pierce Avenue, Nashville, TN, 37232-0146, USA.
Etheno (and ethano) derivatives of nucleic acid bases have an extra 5-membered ring attached. These were first noted as wyosine bases in tRNAs. Some were fluorescent, and the development of etheno derivatives of adenosine, cytosine, and guanosine led to the synthesis of fluorescent analogs of ATP, NAD, and other cofactors for use in biochemical studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Biol Chem
August 2021
Department of Biochemistry, School of Medicine, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center, Nashville, Tennessee, USA. Electronic address:
Etheno (ε)-adducts, e.g., 1,N-ε-guanine (1,N-ε-G) and 1,N-ε-adenine (1,N-ε-A), are formed through the reaction of DNA with metabolites of vinyl compounds or with lipid peroxidation products.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Res Toxicol
August 2020
Masonic Cancer Center, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455, United States.
Cigarette smoking is an important source of human exposure to toxicants and carcinogens and contributes significantly to cancer morbidity and mortality worldwide. Acrolein, a widespread environmental pollutant, is present in relatively high amounts in cigarette smoke and can react directly with DNA to form DNA adducts, which serve as important biomarkers for the assessment of exposure to acrolein and its potential role in smoking related cancer. Etheno-DNA adducts are promutagenic DNA lesions that can derive from exogenous chemicals as well as endogenous sources, including lipid peroxidation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Res Toxicol
July 2020
Chemical Industry Institute of Toxicology, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27709, United States.
Acrylonitrile (ACN), which is a widely used industrial chemical, induces cancers in multiple organs/tissues of rats by unresolved mechanisms. For this report, evidence for ACN-induced direct/indirect DNA damage and mutagenesis was investigated by assessing the ability of ACN, or its reactive metabolite, 2-cyanoethylene oxide (CEO), to bind to DNA in vitro, to form select DNA adducts [N7-(2'-oxoethyl)guanine, ,3-ethenoguanine, 1,-ethenodeoxyadenosine, and 3,-ethenodeoxycytidine] in vitro and/or in vivo, and to perturb the frequency and spectra of mutations in the hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase () gene in rats exposed to ACN in drinking water. Adducts and frequencies and spectra of mutations were analyzed using published methods.
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