Kalantzi, Olga I., Hewitt, Rebecca, Ford, Kirstie J., Cooper, Lee J., Alcock, Ruth E., Thomas, Gareth O., Morris, James A., McMillan, Trevor J., Jones, Kevin C. et al (2004) Low-dose induction of micronuclei by lindane. Carcinogenesis, 25 (4). pp. 613-622. ISSN 0143-3334
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Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/carcin/bgh048
Abstract
Environmental contaminants possessing hormonal activity have long been suspected of playing a role in cancer causation. What is unclear is whether such agents elicit their effects through genotoxic and/or epigenetic mechanisms. -Hexachlorocyclohexane (-HCH, lindane) was tested in the 10-12?10-4 M range. Chromosomal damage in MCF-7 breast cells and PC-3 prostate cells was assessed using the cytokinesis block micronucleus assay. Micronuclei (MNi) were scored in 1000 binucleate cells per treatment. Cell viability and cell cycle kinetics were also assessed, along with immunocytochemical and quantitative gene expression analyses of CDKN1A (P21WAF1/CIP1), BCL-2 and BAX. Following 24 h treatment, lindane (10-12?10-10 M) induced increases (up to 5-fold) in MNi in both cell lines. Increases in MNi occurred in the absence of DNA single-strand breaks or cytotoxicity and, compared with benzoapyrene and 2-amino-1-methyl-6-phenylimidazo4,5-bpyridine, at low concentrations. Lindane induced more MNi than the or {\ss} stereoisomers of HCH. Low dose lindane (10-12?10-10 M) significantly elevated the percentage of MCF-7 cells staining positive for Bcl-2 and of PC-3 cells staining positive for Bax. Only high dose lindane (10-4 M) disrupted cell cycle kinetics with increases in percentage of cells in G1 and decreases in percentage of cells in G2/M. Despite a comparable high dose lindane induction of cell cycle arrest, marked increases in expression of P21WAF1/CIP1 were observed only in MCF-7 cells, although in PC-3 cells a significant increase (P {\ensuremath{<}} 0.0005) in the percentage of cells staining positive for p21Waf1/Cip1 was seen. These results suggest that ?environmental? concentrations of lindane can induce a number of subtle alterations in breast and prostate cells in the absence of cytotoxicity.
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