AI Article Synopsis

  • Long-term exposure to aluminium chloride (AlCl) causes normal mouse mammary cells to form tumors and spread when injected into certain lab animals.
  • The study finds that AlCl induces chromosomal abnormalities in mammary cells, suggesting that its clastogenic effects may contribute to the cancer-promoting potential of aluminium.

Article Abstract

Genomic instability is generally considered as a hallmark of tumorigenesis and a prerequisite condition for malignant transformation. Aluminium salts are suspected environmental carcinogens that transform mammary epithelial cells in vitro through unknown mechanisms. We report here that long-term culture in the presence of aluminium chloride (AlCl) enables HC11 normal mouse mammary epithelial cells to form tumours and metastases when injected into the syngeneic and immunocompetent BALB/cByJ strain. We demonstrate that AlCl rapidly increases chromosomal structural abnormalities in mammary epithelial cells, while we failed to detect direct modulation of specific mRNA pathways. Our observations provide evidence that clastogenic activity-a well-recognized inducer of genomic instability-might account in part for the transforming abilities of aluminium in mammary epithelial cells.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7730342PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms21239332DOI Listing

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