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1247788 
Journal Article 
Gene expression changes in human lung cells exposed to arsenic, chromium, nickel or vanadium indicate the first steps in cancer 
Clancy, HA; Sun, H; Passantino, L; Kluz, T; Muñoz, A; Zavadil, J; Costa, M 
2012 
Yes 
Metallomics
ISSN: 1756-5901
EISSN: 1756-591X 
784-793 
English 
The complex process of carcinogenesis begins with transformation of a single cell to favor aberrant traits such as loss of contact inhibition and unregulated proliferation - features found in every cancer. Despite cancer's widespread prevalence, the early events that initiate cancer remain elusive, and without knowledge of these events cancer prevention is difficult. Here we show that exposure to As, Cr, Ni, or vanadium (V) promotes changes in gene expression that occur in conjunction with aberrant growth. We exposed immortalized human bronchial epithelial cells to one of four metals/metalloid for four to eight weeks and selected transformed clonal populations based upon anchorage independent growth of single cells in soft agar. We detected a metal-specific footprint of cancer-related gene expression that was consistent across multiple transformed clones. These gene expression changes persisted in the absence of the progenitor metal for numerous cell divisions. Our results show that even a brief exposure to a carcinogenic metal may cause many changes in gene expression in the exposed cells, and that from these many changes, the specific change(s) that each metal causes that initiate cancer likely arise. 
• Arsenic Hazard ID
     1. Initial Lit Search
          PubMed
          WOS
          ToxNet
     4. Considered through Oct 2015
     5. Additions through Oct 2015
     6. Cluster Filter through Oct 2015
• Arsenic (Inorganic)
     1. Literature
          PubMed
          Toxline, TSCATS, & DART
          Web of Science
     4. Adverse Outcome Pathways/Networks Screening
          Relevant
• Arsenic MOA
     4. Adverse Outcome Pathways
          Gene expression changes
     5. Health Effect
          Respiratory Effects
          Cancer
     1. MOA Literature Screening
          MOA Cluster
• Chromium VI
     Considered
          Potentially Relevant Supplemental Material
               Mechanistic
• Vanadium Compounds - Problem Formulation
     Items Screened
     Literature Search: Jan 2010 - Mar 2019
          PubMed
          WoS
     Combined data set
          Dataset for title/abstract screening
               Supplemental (TIAB)
     Supplemental material
          Mechanistic
• Vanadium Inhalation
     Literature Search: Jan 2010 – Mar 2019
          PubMed
          WoS
     Combined Dataset
          Dataset for title/abstract screening
               Supplemental (TIAB)
     Supplemental material
          Mechanistic (genotoxic)
          Mechanistic (nongenotoxic)
• Vanadium Pentoxide (Draft, 2011)