4.7 Article

Aristolactam-DNA adducts are a biomarker of environmental exposure to aristolochic acid

期刊

KIDNEY INTERNATIONAL
卷 81, 期 6, 页码 559-567

出版社

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ki.2011.371

关键词

Aristolochia; aristolochic acid; DNA adducts; endemic nephropathy; nephrotoxicity; upper urinary tract cancer

资金

  1. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences [5 P01 ES04068, R01 ES019564]
  2. Fogarty International Center of the NIH [1R03TW007042]
  3. Zickler Family Foundation
  4. Croatian Ministry of Science [108-0000000-0329]

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Endemic (Balkan) nephropathy is a chronic tubulointerstitial disease frequently accompanied by urothelial cell carcinomas of the upper urinary tract. This disorder has recently been linked to exposure to aristolochic acid, a powerful nephrotoxin and human carcinogen. Following metabolic activation, aristolochic acid reacts with genomic DNA to form aristolactam-DNA adducts that generate a unique TP53 mutational spectrum in the urothelium. The aristolactam-DNA adducts are concentrated in the renal cortex, thus serving as biomarkers of internal exposure to aristolochic acid. Here, we present molecular epidemiologic evidence relating carcinomas of the upper urinary tract to dietary exposure to aristolochic acid. DNA was extracted from the renal cortex and urothelial tumor tissue of 67 patients that underwent nephroureterectomy for carcinomas of the upper urinary tract and resided in regions of known endemic nephropathy. Ten patients from nonendemic regions with carcinomas of the upper urinary tract served as controls. Aristolactam-DNA adducts were quantified by P-32-postlabeling, the adduct was confirmed by mass spectrometry, and TP53 mutations in tumor tissues were identified by chip sequencing. Adducts were present in 70% of the endemic cohort and in 94% of patients with specific A: T to T: A mutations in TP53. In contrast, neither aristolactam-DNA adducts nor specific mutations were detected in tissues of patients residing in nonendemic regions. Thus, in genetically susceptible individuals, dietary exposure to aristolochic acid is causally related to endemic nephropathy and carcinomas of the upper urinary tract. Kidney International (2012) 81, 559-567; doi: 10.1038/ki.2011.371; published online 9 November 2011

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