Arsenic exposure constitutes one of the most widespread environmental carcinogens, and is associated with increased risk of many different types of cancers. Here we report that arsenite (As[III]) can induce both replication-dependent DNA double-strand breaks (DSB) and homologous recombination (HR) at doses as low as 5 mM (0.65 mg/l), which are within the typical doses often found in drinking water in contaminated areas. We show that the production of DSBs is dependent on active replication and is likely to be the result of conversion of a DNA single-strand break (SSB) into a toxic DSB when encountered by a replication fork. We demonstrate that HR is required for the repair of these breaks and show that a functional HR pathway...
Arsenic is an established human carcinogen. However, there has been much controversy about the shape...
It is known in humans and mouse models, that drinking water exposures to arsenite (As+3) leads to im...
The underlying mechanisms of arsenic carcinogenicity are still not fully understood. Mechanisms curr...
The mechanism(s) by which arsenic exposure contributes to human cancer risk is unknown; however, sev...
Background: Rapid industrialization is discharging toxic heavy metals into the environment, disturbi...
Chronic arsenic exposure is known to enhance the genotoxicity/carcinogenicity of other DNA-damaging ...
Arsenic is a human skin, lung, and urinary bladder carcinogen, and may act as a cocarcinogen in the ...
Sources of arsenic exposure include air, water, and food from both natural and anthropogenic sources...
Base excision repair (BER) is crucial for development and for the repair of endogenous DNA damage. H...
Exposure to arsenic in contaminated drinking water is an emerging public health problem that impacts...
We have evaluated the molecular responses of human epithelial cells to low dose arsenic to ascertain...
Although inorganic arsenic is classified as a human carcinogen, lack of an appropriate animal model ...
Inorganic arsenic compounds have been classified as Group 1 carcinogens by IARC. Despite its strong ...
Inorganic arsenic is an environmental carcinogen that may act through multiple mechanisms including ...
<div><p>Arsenic is a well-established human carcinogen of poorly understood mechanism of genotoxicit...
Arsenic is an established human carcinogen. However, there has been much controversy about the shape...
It is known in humans and mouse models, that drinking water exposures to arsenite (As+3) leads to im...
The underlying mechanisms of arsenic carcinogenicity are still not fully understood. Mechanisms curr...
The mechanism(s) by which arsenic exposure contributes to human cancer risk is unknown; however, sev...
Background: Rapid industrialization is discharging toxic heavy metals into the environment, disturbi...
Chronic arsenic exposure is known to enhance the genotoxicity/carcinogenicity of other DNA-damaging ...
Arsenic is a human skin, lung, and urinary bladder carcinogen, and may act as a cocarcinogen in the ...
Sources of arsenic exposure include air, water, and food from both natural and anthropogenic sources...
Base excision repair (BER) is crucial for development and for the repair of endogenous DNA damage. H...
Exposure to arsenic in contaminated drinking water is an emerging public health problem that impacts...
We have evaluated the molecular responses of human epithelial cells to low dose arsenic to ascertain...
Although inorganic arsenic is classified as a human carcinogen, lack of an appropriate animal model ...
Inorganic arsenic compounds have been classified as Group 1 carcinogens by IARC. Despite its strong ...
Inorganic arsenic is an environmental carcinogen that may act through multiple mechanisms including ...
<div><p>Arsenic is a well-established human carcinogen of poorly understood mechanism of genotoxicit...
Arsenic is an established human carcinogen. However, there has been much controversy about the shape...
It is known in humans and mouse models, that drinking water exposures to arsenite (As+3) leads to im...
The underlying mechanisms of arsenic carcinogenicity are still not fully understood. Mechanisms curr...