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COMMENTARY
Smoking and lung cancera new role for an old toxicant?
The Cancer Center, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455
Denissenko et al. (1) reported in 1996 that benzo[a]pyrene-7,8-diol-9,10-epoxide (BPDE), a metabolite of the widely studied polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) carcinogen benzo[a]pyrene (BaP), produced a characteristic pattern of DNA damage in the p53 tumor suppressor gene of lung cells. This pattern was remarkably similar to that observed in the commonly mutated p53 gene isolated from lung tumors in smokers. In view of the central role of the p53 gene in carcinogenesis, the results of this widely quoted study, which were reproduced subsequently with related PAH metabolites and by other methods (2, 3), have been described as a "smoking gun," confirming that PAHs were the major carcinogenic agents in cigarette smoke. But life is not so simple. Cigarette smoke contains >4,000 compounds and >60 established carcinogens (4). In addition to PAH, there are carcinogenic nitrosamines, aromatic amines, aldehydes, volatile organic compounds, oxidants, and metals. As discussed in refs. 5 and 6, some of these compounds or their metabolites, similar to BPDE and other PAH diol epoxides, cause G-to-T transversions in DNA, as commonly observed in the p53 and K-ras genes in smoking-induced lung tumors. These other agents might also cause patterns of DNA damage in the p53 gene similar to those seen with BPDE. Confirming this possibility, Feng et al. (7) report in a recent issue of PNAS that acrolein, a toxic compound occurring in cigarette smoke at levels up to 10,000 times greater than those of BaP, produces essentially the same spectrum of DNA damage in the p53 gene of human lung cells as that caused by BPDE. These results are summarized in Fig. 1 and suggest that acrolein and related compounds might be more important in cigarette smoke-induced lung cancer than previously recognized. Feng et al. also show that, like BPDE, acrolein reacts preferentially at methylated CpG sites in the p53 gene. Moreover, acrolein inhibits repair of BPDEDNA adducts. Considering that cigarette smoking causes 30% of all cancer deaths in developed countries (4), more research is necessary on the possible role of acrolein and related aldehydes as potential causes of lung cancer in cigarette smokers.
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350 ng per cigarette (8). Hoffmann et al. (9) performed extensive studies showing that subfractions of cigarette smoke condensate highly enriched in PAH were its major tumor initiators on mouse skin. BaP and other PAHs cause lung tumors in laboratory animals when administered by inhalation or instillation in the lung or trachea (5). This research can be viewed in context of other studies that clearly established PAHs as the major carcinogenic agents in coal tars and other related combustion products, known causes of cancer of the lung and skin in humans (1012). The uptake of PAH by smokers is greater than in nonsmokers, as demonstrated by quantitation of urinary PAH metabolites (13). Cigarette smoking induces PAH metabolism in human lung via the Ah receptor, leading to the formation of BPDEDNA adducts, which have been detected in some analyses of human lung DNA (5). Together with the results of the Denissenko et al. study (1), there is considerable evidence supporting the role of PAH as one group of causative agents for lung cancer in smokers, and a recent working group of the International Agency for Research on Cancer evaluated BaP as "carcinogenic to humans" (14).
Acrolein is an intense irritant and displays a range of toxic effects.
Levels of acrolein in cigarette smoke are 1898 µg per cigarette (8). Acrolein is an intense irritant and displays a range of toxic effects, including cilia toxicity (15, 16). With the exception of one study in which bladder tumors were produced by an initiationpromotion protocol in rats treated with acrolein (by i.p. injection) followed by dietary uracil, no carcinogenic effects of acrolein have been reported, perhaps because of efficient scavenging by glutathione and related sulfhydryls (17). An International Agency for Research on Cancer working group concluded that there was inadequate evidence for its carcinogenicity in experimental animals (16). Acrolein is widely believed to be responsible for the bladder toxicity of the chemotherapeutic agent cyclophosphamide. Thus, in laboratory animals, the carcinogenicity of acrolein, if it exists at all, is clearly substantially less than that of PAH or tobacco-specific nitrosamines.
My laboratory first characterized acroleinDNA adducts in 1984 (18), and subsequent studies demonstrated that one of these adducts causes GT mutations in human DNA (19), consistent with the data reported by Feng et al. (7) and with the most common types of mutations in the p53 gene from smokers. Chung and coworkers (20, 21) have identified acrolein and crotonaldehydeDNA adducts in a variety of human tissues by using a specially designed 32P-postlabeling technique and report that their levels are higher in oral tissue from smokers than nonsmokers. My laboratory has recently obtained mass spectrometric evidence for the closely related crotonaldehydeDNA adducts in human lung (22). Further mass spectrometric analyses of DNA from smokers' lungs for acroleinDNA adducts are clearly needed. Many studies have used a general 32P-postlabeling technique to analyze DNA from the lungs of smokers. The results of these studies consistently demonstrate the presence of a "diagonal radioactive zone," or DRZ, in this DNA from smokers, with adduct levels consistently higher than in nonsmokers (23). The origin of the DNA adducts comprising the DRZ is unknown, and they are often referred to in the literature as "hydrophobic DNA adducts" or even "aromaticDNA adducts." Gupta and colleagues (24) recently demonstrated that these adducts are not derived from PAH or aromatic amines and presented evidence that they could be formed from aldehydes such as formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, and crotonaldehyde. Collectively, these data provide intriguing leads pertinent to a possible role of acrolein and related aldehydes in smoking-induced lung cancer, despite its apparently low carcinogenicity in laboratory animals. As pointed out by Feng et al. (7), identification of compounds responsible for lung cancer in smokers is critical, because ultimately levels of these compounds can be regulated to decrease the probability of cancer development in smokers, of whom there are
45 million in the United States and 1.2 billion worldwide (4, 25).
One caveat to the study by Feng et al. (7) is the concentrations used: 2 µM BPDE and 60 µM acrolein. These are clearly higher than would be encountered in the lungs of smokers, possibly by as much as 100-fold. We do not know whether these high concentrations might produce spurious effects. It is possible that there might be an undetected toxic reaction resulting in the release of a common substance unrelated to BPDE or acrolein that damages the p53 gene in the manner reported, although the results obtained in strictly chemical systems would argue against that. Doseresponse studies would be desirable if sensitive enough methods can be developed.
In summary, the results reported by Feng et al. (7) are potentially important. Although not diminishing the solid evidence that PAH and tobacco-specific nitrosamines are causes of lung cancer in smokers, the results clearly raise the possibility that acrolein and related aldehydes are significant contributors to this generally fatal disease.
Footnotes
Author contributions: S.S.H. wrote the paper.
The author declares no conflict of interest.
See companion article on page 15404 in issue 42 of volume 103.
© 2006 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA
References
Companion article to this Commentary:
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