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CHROMOSOME INSTABILITY DRIVES METAL-INDUCED LUNG CANCER

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Principal Investigator: Wise, John Pierce
Institute Receiving Award University Of Louisville
Location Louisville, KY
Grant Number R35ES032876
Funding Organization National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
Award Funding Period 01 Aug 2021 to 30 Jun 2029
DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death with little improvement in survivability over many decades. Understanding and support for lung cancer have suffered from the stigma that the disease is merely a consequence of tobacco use, when in fact other agents are a major factor in the disease. Many people with lung cancer have never used tobacco and only a minority of tobacco users actually get lung cancer. However, while lung cancer kills more people than colon, breast and prostate cancer combined, it receives less federal funding than each of these cancers alone. Chromosome instability (CIN) is a hallmark of lung cancer. All established lung carcinogens cause CIN, yet the mechanisms for how they do have received little attention. Metal exposure is a worldwide health concern. Metals cause lung cancer, and carcinogenic metals are a component in tobacco. Metals are poor mutagens but potently induce CIN, yet, how metals cause lung cancer and CIN is poorly understood. We focus our R35 program on understanding the mechanisms for how metal carcinogens induce CIN in lung cancer. We use hexavalent chromium [Cr(VI)], a human lung carcinogen of major public health concern, as our primary metal of interest, although we will compare Cr(VI) outcomes with other metal lung carcinogens. We will study how Cr(VI) induces structural and numerical CIN, considering human lung fibroblast, epithelial and induced pluripotent stem cell models. We will progress our studies from individual cell types to more complex, three-dimensional, mixed cell culture studies. We enhance and deepen our understanding of these mechanisms with a One Environmental Health approach, which leverages the ability of wildlife to resist Cr(VI)-induced CIN and provide novel insights into its carcinogenic mechanism. Moreover, we maximize the impact of these findings by translating our outcomes into animals and into a powerful and unique collection of human subjects and populations ranging from workers with primarily Cr(VI) exposure, to workers with a mixed metal exposure including Cr. This combined approach of humans, animals and cell lines with One Environmental Health tools will give us unprecedented insight into how metals induce structural and numerical CIN. In particular, we will define: 1) key mechanisms for metal-induced CIN; 2) how these mechanisms persist and are heritable at the cellular level to cause neoplastic disease; and 3) how they translate to animals and humans. Thus, our proposed R35 program will revolutionize our understanding of Cr(VI), CIN, metal carcinogenesis, and lung cancer while also providing important insights for other cancers that involve CIN. Outcomes will include major scientific breakthroughs in understanding: 1) how metals cause normal human lung cells to become neoplastic; 2) how to detect this neoplastic transformation when it occurs; 3) how to more effectively target lung cells that have transformed and 4) how to prevent neoplastic change from occurring, leading to improved risk assessment, treatments, and health outcomes for people exposed to metals.
Science Code(s)/Area of Science(s) Primary: 69 - Respiratory
Secondary: 03 - Carcinogenesis/Cell Transformation
Publications See publications associated with this Grant.
Program Officer Frederick Tyson
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