Abstract
Although asbestos is a well-established lung carcinogen, there currently is no suitable human cell model in which to examine the underlying cellular and molecular changes associated with fiber-mediated bronchial carcinogenesis. Using a recently established transformation model based on a human papillomavirus-immortalized human bronchial epithelial cell line, we successfully transformed these BEP2D cells after a single, 7-day treatment with a 20-microgram/ml (4 micrograms per cm2 area) dose of Union Internationale Contre le Cancer (UICC) Rhodesian chrysotile fibers. Asbestos treatment resulted in a surviving fraction of 0.18 compared to control cells. Transformed cells developed through a series of sequential steps, including altered growth kinetics, resistance to serum-induced terminal differentiation, and anchorage-independent growth, before becoming tumorigenic to form progressively growing tumors in nude mice. Seven tumorigenic cell lines were isolated and determined to be of human epithelial origin based on immunofluorescent staining of keratin and isozyme analysis. Analysis of tumor DNA revealed no mutations at either codon 12 or 13 in any the ras oncogenes. An independent role for K-ras mutation in fiber carcinogenesis, therefore, cannot be confirmed. This model provides a unique opportunity to study the cellular and molecular changes at the various stages in fiber-mediated neoplastic transformation of human bronchial epithelial cells.