Chronic arsenic exposure suppresses proteasomal and autophagic protein degradation

Environ Toxicol Pharmacol. 2024 Apr:107:104398. doi: 10.1016/j.etap.2024.104398. Epub 2024 Feb 23.

Abstract

Ubiquitin Proteasomal System (UPS) and autophagy dysregulation initiate cancer. These pathways are regulated by zinc finger proteins. Trivalent inorganic arsenic (iAs) displaces zinc from zinc finger proteins disrupting functions of important cellular proteins. The effect of chronic environmental iAs exposure (100 nM) on UPS has not been studied. We tested the hypothesis that environmental iAs exposure suppresses UPS, activating autophagy as a compensatory mechanism. We exposed skin (HaCaT and Ker-CT; independent quadruplicates) and lung (BEAS-2B; independent triplicates) cell cultures to 0 or 100 nM iAs for 7 or 8 weeks. We quantified ER stress (XBP1 splicing employing Reverse Transcriptase -Polymerase Chain Reaction), proteasomal degradation (immunoblots), and initiation and completion of autophagy (immunoblots). We demonstrate that chronic iAs exposure suppresses UPS, initiates autophagy, but suppresses autophagic protein degradation in skin and lung cell lines. Our data suggest that chronic iAs exposure inhibits autophagy which subsequently suppresses UPS.

Keywords: Arsenic; Autophagy; Environmental exposure; Ubiquitin proteasomal system.

MeSH terms

  • Arsenic* / toxicity
  • Arsenicals*
  • Autophagy
  • Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex
  • Proteolysis

Substances

  • Arsenic
  • Arsenicals
  • Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex