Title of article :
Cigarette smoke augments asbestos-induced alveolar epithelial cell injury: role of free radicals
Author/Authors :
David W. Kamp، نويسنده , , Marc J. Greenberger، نويسنده , , Jane S. Sbalchierro، نويسنده , , Scott E. Preusen، نويسنده , , Sigmund A. Weitzman، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
Pages :
12
From page :
728
To page :
739
Abstract :
Cigarette smoke augments asbestos-induced bronchogenic carcinoma by mechanisms that are not established. Alveolar epithelial cell (AEC) injury due to oxidant-induced DNA damage and depletion of glutathione (GSH) and adenosine triphosphate (ATP) may be one important mechanism. We previously showed that amosite asbestos-induces hydroxyl radical production and DNA damage to cultured AEC and that phytic acid, an iron chelator, is protective. We hypothesized that whole cigarette smoke extracts (CSE) augment amosite asbestos-induced AEC injury by generating iron-induced free radicals that damage DNA and reduce cellular GSH and ATP levels. Asbestos or CSE each caused dose-dependent toxicity to AEC (WI-26 and rat alveolar type I-like cells) as assessed by 51chromium release. The combination of asbestos (5 μg/cm2) and CSE (0.01–0.1%) caused synergistic injury whereas higher doses of each agent primarily had an additive toxic effect. Asbestos (5 μg/cm2) augmented CSE-induced (0.01–1.0%) AEC DNA damage over a 4 h exposure period as assessed by an alkaline unwinding, ethidium bromide fluorometric technique. These effects were synergistic in A549 cells and additive in WI-26 cells. Asbestos (5 μg/cm2) and CSE (0.5–1.0%) reduced A549 and WI-26 cell GSH levels as assessed spectrophotometrically and ATP levels as assessed by luciferin/luciferase chemiluminescence but a synergistic interaction was not detected. Phytic acid (500 μM) and catalase (100 μg/ml) each attenuated A549 cell DNA damage and depletion of ATP caused by asbestos and CSE. However, neither agent attenuated WI-26 cell DNA damage nor the reductions in GSH levels in WI-26 and A549 cells exposed to asbestos and CSE. We conclude that CSE enhance asbestos-induced DNA damage in cultured alveolar epithelial cells. These data provide additional support that asbestos and cigarette smoke are genotoxic to relevant target cells in the lung and that iron-induced free radicals may in part cause these effects.
Keywords :
free radical , asbestos , Cigarette smoke , reactive oxygen species , DNA damage , glutathione , Alveolar epithelial cells , ATP , Lung injury
Journal title :
Free Radical Biology and Medicine
Serial Year :
1998
Journal title :
Free Radical Biology and Medicine
Record number :
517992
Link To Document :
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