Mechanisms of carcinogenicity are discussed for metals and their compounds, classified as carcinogenic to humans or considered to be carcinogenic to humans: arsenic, antimony, beryllium, cadmium, chromium, cobalt, lead, nickel and vanadium. Physicochemical properties govern uptake, intracellular distribution and binding of metal compounds. Interactions with proteins (e.g., with zinc finger structures) appear to be more relevant for metal carcinogenicity than binding to DNA. In general, metal genotoxicity is caused by indirect mechanisms. In spite of diverse physicochemical properties of metal compounds, three predominant mechanisms emerge: (1) interference with cellular redox regulation and induction of oxidative stress, which may cause oxidative DNA damage or trigger signaling cascades leading to stimulation of cell growth; (2) inhibition of major DNA repair systems resulting in genomic instability and accumulation of critical mutations; (3) deregulation of cell proliferation by induction of signaling pathways or inactivation of growth controls such as tumor suppressor genes. In addition, specific metal compounds exhibit unique mechanisms such as interruption of cell-cell adhesion by cadmium, direct DNA binding of trivalent chromium, and interaction of vanadate with phosphate binding sites of protein phosphatases.
Zinc is essential for cell proliferation and differentiation, especially for the regulation of DNA synthesis and mitosis. On the molecular level, it is a structural constituent of a great number of proteins, including enzymes of cellular signaling pathways and transcription factors. Zinc homeostasis in eukaryotic cells is controlled on the levels of uptake, intracellular sequestration in zinc storing vesicles ('zincosomes'), nucleocytoplasmic distribution and elimination. These processes involve the major zinc binding protein metallothionein as a tool for the regulation of the cellular zinc level and the nuclear translocation of zinc in the course of the cell cycle and differentiation. In addition, there is also increasing evidence for a direct signaling function for zinc on all levels of signal transduction. Zinc can modulate cellular signal recognition, second messenger metabolism, protein kinase and protein phosphatase activities, and it may stimulate or inhibit activities of transcription factors, depending on the experimental systems studied. Zinc has been shown to modify specifically the metabolism of cGMP, the activities of protein kinase C and mitogen activated protein kinases, and the activity of transcription factor MTF-1 which controls the transcription of the genes for metallothionein and the zinc transporter ZnT-1. As a conclusion of these observations new hypotheses regarding regulatory functions of zinc ions in cellular signaling pathways are proposed.
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