Journal
TOXICOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 67, Issue 2, Pages 275-283Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/toxsci/67.2.275
Keywords
human bronchial epithelial cells; silica; reactive oxygen species; free radicals; extracellular factors
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Funding
- NCI NIH HHS [CA 82598] Funding Source: Medline
- NCRR NIH HHS [P41 RR 01315] Funding Source: Medline
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Chronic inflammation and production of DNA-damaging reactive oxygen species (ROS) may be involved in silica-induced lung cancer. Studies to date have largely focused on silica-induced production of ROS by lung phagocytes. In this study, we investigated the hypothesis that particulate silica (DQ12) can also induce elevations in intracellular ROS in a cancer-target cell type, i.e., human bronchial epithelial cells (BECs), via an indirect mechanism that involves ROS-inducing extracellular factor(s) that occur upon the interaction of silica with culture medium. The intracellular production of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) in BECs was assessed by flow cytometry via monitoring dichlorofluorescein (DCF) fluorescence. Culture medium containing 10% human serum was incubated with silica particles in concentrations ranging from 10 to 50 mug/ml, and following incubation for 1 h and removal of the particles, the resulting supernatants were added to BECs. Silica-treated medium induced significant increases in intracellular H2O2 after the medium had been treated with as little as 10 mug/ml of the particles. Further, the level of ROS increases in BECs in response to silica-treated medium was found to be virtually identical to that induced in cells that were directly treated with silica in suspension. Based on enzyme inhibitory studies, the mechanism for this increased generation of intracellular ROS appears to involve both mitochondrial respiration and a NAD(P)H oxidase-like system. Spectrofluorimetric experiments with the antioxidant enzymes superoxide dismutase and catalase showed that superoxide anions (O-2(radical anion)) and H2O2 are generated in silica-treated medium, but these ROS do not fully account for the induction of the intracellular ROS response. Iron, on the other hand, was found to be crucial to the process. Our collective results suggest silica-aqueous medium interactions can lead to the generation of factor(s) that induce the intracellular production of potentially DNA-damaging ROS in BECs in a manner that does not require direct particle-cell interactions.
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