Asbestos, lung cancers, and mesotheliomas: from molecular approaches to targeting tumor survival pathways

NH Heintz, YMW Janssen-Heininger… - American journal of …, 2010 - atsjournals.org
NH Heintz, YMW Janssen-Heininger, BT Mossman
American journal of respiratory cell and molecular biology, 2010atsjournals.org
Fifteen years have passed since we published findings in the AJRCMB demonstrating that
induction of early response fos/jun proto-oncogenes in rodent tracheal and mesothelial cells
correlates with fibrous geometry and pathogenicity of asbestos. Our study was the first to
suggest that the aberrant induction of signaling responses by crocidolite asbestos and
erionite, a fibrous zeolite mineral associated with the development of malignant
mesotheliomas (MMs) in areas of Turkey, led to altered gene expression. New data …
Fifteen years have passed since we published findings in the AJRCMB demonstrating that induction of early response fos/jun proto-oncogenes in rodent tracheal and mesothelial cells correlates with fibrous geometry and pathogenicity of asbestos. Our study was the first to suggest that the aberrant induction of signaling responses by crocidolite asbestos and erionite, a fibrous zeolite mineral associated with the development of malignant mesotheliomas (MMs) in areas of Turkey, led to altered gene expression. New data questioned the widely held belief at that time that the carcinogenic effects of asbestos in the development of lung cancer and MM were due to genotoxic or mutagenic effects. Later studies by our group revealed that proto-oncogene expression and several of the signaling pathways activated by asbestos were redox dependent, explaining why antioxidants and antioxidant enzymes were elevated in lung and pleura after exposure to asbestos and how they alleviated many of the phenotypic and functional effects of asbestos in vitro or after inhalation. Since these original studies, our efforts have expanded to understand the interface between asbestos-induced redox-dependent signal transduction cascades, the relationship between these pathways and cell fate, and the role of asbestos and cell interactions in development of asbestos-associated diseases. Of considerable significance is the fact that the signal transduction pathways activated by asbestos are also important in survival and chemoresistance of MMs and lung cancers. An understanding of the pathogenic features of asbestos fibers and dysregulation of signaling pathways allows strategies for the prevention and therapy of asbestos-related diseases.
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