Grant Details
Grant Number: |
5U01CA232505-06 Interpret this number |
Primary Investigator: |
Belinsky, Steven |
Organization: |
Lovelace Biomedical Research Institute |
Project Title: |
DNA Repair Capacity Assays for Lung Disease Risk Assessment |
Fiscal Year: |
2022 |
Abstract
Project Summary
Lung cancer (LC) is the leading cancer-related cause of death and COPD is third among all cause
mortality. There are approximately 70 million current and former cigarette smokers (SM) in the US, although
only 15-20% and ~17% will be diagnosed with LC or COPD, respectively. Thus, differences in susceptibility
have been proposed to play an important role in LC and COPD disease etiology that also differs between non-
Hispanic white (NHW) and Hispanic ethnicity. Smoking is estimated to be the cause of 85% of LC deaths and
strongly associated with COPD. Exposure to other environmental respiratory carcinogens that include radon,
wood smoke, and particulate matter 2.5 µ (PM2.5) may interact with cigarette smoking or individually be
carcinogenic. LC in never smokers (NS) is increasing with 15-20,000 cases annually in the US. Risk factors
include environmental tobacco smoke (sidestream smoke is the major component), radon, wood smoke and
PM2.5. Wood smoke and PM2.5 are also associated with risk for COPD and most recently electronic
cigarettes have been shown to affect pulmonary function. All of these environmental exposures have
commonality in their ability to induce DNA damage. Reduced DNA repair capacity (DRC) has been shown to
be associated with LC largely through hospital-based case-control studies, but has not been rigorously studied
for COPD. These studies used the host cell reactivation or the mutagen sensitivity assay in response to
specific DNA damaging agents. A major goal for this RFA “Expanding Genome Integrity Assays to Population
Studies” is to develop and/or evaluate the performance of high throughput, functional DNA repair assays in the
context of assessing disease phenotype and pathogenesis in a population setting. Our approach to this charge
is to evaluate three emerging high throughput DRC assays – Litron in vitro flow cytometry-based MN assay,
Trevigen comet assay, and the Trevigen hOGG1 FLARETM comet assay. In addition, through collaboration with
Dr. Nagel, the performance of his flow cytometric host cell reactivation assay (FM-HCR) that measures the
ability of human cells to repair different types of damage within plasmids transfected into the cells will be
assessed. We will take advantage of two established cohorts, the LSC and New Mexico LC cohort to evaluate
these DRC assays for predicting LC risk in SM and NS (Aim 1) and COPD in SM (Aim 2) through the exposure
of their PMCs to total particulate matter (TPM) from mainstream and sidestream cigarette smoke, wood smoke,
electronic cigarette aerosol, and H2O2 (mimic for radon). Aim 3 will address the ability to use the PMCs as a
surrogate for risk prediction for LC and COPD by comparing the three DRC assays and exposures in primary
bronchial epithelial cells obtained by bronchoscopy and matched PMCs. In addition, the FM-HCR assay will
study controls from aims 1 and 2 that show the largest difference in DRC in response to one or more of the
exposures to determine if this assay can replicate that outcome. Whether one or more of the specific DNA
repair pathways (e.g., base excision) are driving the differences in DRC will also be determined.
Publications
None