Fiberglass Mutilates DNA
Accelerated cell growth likely precursor to cancer
By Robert Horowitz
Three different kinds of glass fibers were poisonous to cells and damaged DNA in
studies performed by a team of doctors at NIOSH, the medical research arm of the
U.S. Department of Labor. Damaged DNA can unleash a process of accelerated and
even unrestrained cell growth, and the new research shows cells with
fiberglass-damaged DNA exhibited these tendencies. Although the exact mechanism
by which cancers and tumors grow is not yet deciphered, damaged DNA and abnormal
cellular reproduction is widely thought to be the first step.
Additional research on glass fiber geno- and cytotoxicity is currently on hold
because of a lack of money at NIOSH (National Institute for Occupational Safety
and Health) and the Department of Labor. A final decision on whether to continue
glassfiber experiments-and when-is pending. The newly-elected Republican
Congress headed by Newt Gingrich, however, is threatening to completely
eliminate NIOSH.
NIOSH researchers set out to answer three questions about glass fibers: whether
they can introduce a transformation in the structure and form of cells, whether
the induction of "morphological" changes could be related to fiber
size, and whether cells thus transformed would exhibit accelerated, tumor-like (neoplastic),
growth.
"These results indicate that glass fibers are capable of transforming
mammalian (BALB/c-3T3) cells in vitro as a function of their physical properties
and that glass-fiber-induced transformed cells possess neoplastic
characteristics."
The experiment used three types of glass fibers, one microfiber from Manville,
plus a microfiber and a general building insulation fiber manufactured by Owens
Corning. The fibers were precision milled to lengths and widths known to cause
cancer.
Prior research with cells from the lung of a Chinese hamster demonstrated the
respirable portion of Manville glass fibers caused breakage and fragmentation of
chromosomes. NIOSH researchers used a technique called micronucleus assay to
further explore this phenomenon. "The micronucleus assay is one of the most
frequently used short-term assay systems for the detection of genotoxic agents
and potential carcinogens," they say.
Micronuclei are fragments of cell nucleus; oftentimes these fragments either do
not have the correct number of chromosomes, or the chromosomes are damaged in
some way. This does not always prevent the cell from duplicating itself,
however, and passing along its incorrect genetic information.
Both Manville and Owens Corning microfibers (average diameters .2 and .18 micron
respectively) caused micronucleated and multinucleated cells, with those cells
given higher fiber doses exhibiting rates of chromosomal damage as much as five
times higher than positive controls-cells treated with a substance known to
damage DNA. As the dosage of fibers increased, the total number and percentage
of cells with damaged DNA increased commensurably. This is the sought-after
dose-response relationship which researchers deem critical. The larger fibers
(average diameter 7.3 microns) did not appear to damage chromosomes in the first
study.
Researchers stated the mutated genetic information is due to damage to the
"spindle," a colorless, narrow structure in the cell nucleus, along
which the chromosomes line up to divide during cell duplication.
In a second experiment using a different type of cell, NIOSH researchers
confirmed glass fibers cause cell transformation, with the number and percentage
of transformed cells clearly related to the amount of fibers administered and
their size. Small, very thin fibers, as expected, were the most damaging. In
this study, all three fibers exhibited cytotoxic tendencies; that is, they were
poisonous to cells. The survival rate of the cells was inversely related to the
higher dosage of fiberglass. The rate of cell transformation was also related to
dosage, with the large fibers showing a rate of transformation not as high as
the microfibers, but significantly higher than control groups.
The researchers then tested the transformed cells to see whether they
multiplied, or formed colonies, in agar, a gel-like algae extract. Compared to
cells which did not have altered chromosomes, the fiberglass-transformed cells
exhibited a greatly enhanced growth ability in the agar. This was measured in
two ways, one called "anchorage independent growth" and the other
called "transfection-mediated transformation." Both types of growth
were indicated at levels deemed to be significant through the use of the Poisson
regression equation, a common technique for determining whether a particular
statistic could occur by pure chance.
"The study showed that DNA from all glass-fiber-transformed cells
significantly increased morphological transformation (p < 0.01), indicating
that the transformed cells carried transforming genes," according to the
study. "Since both anchorage-independent growth and transfection-mediated
transformation were found in the glass-fiber-transformed cells, these findings
suggest that transformed cells induced by glass fibers may possess neoplastic
properties."
Next, the researchers used blot analysis and other techniques to determine
whether glass fibers could be activating oncogenes, portions of DNA which seem
to encourage prolific cell growth and tumor formation. To counteract oncogenes,
DNA also contains genes which suppress cell replication and tumor growth. The
researchers believe that oncogene activation resulted from glass fiber intrusion
into cells. They also noted that the DNA transformation resulting from
fiberglass damage was "morphologically indistinguishable" from DNA
mutated by a human bladder carcinoma.
To summarize their work, the researchers offered the following discussion:
"Results from these studies clearly demonstrate that glass fibers
induced transformation in a concentration-dependent manner. However, there are
differences in transforming activity among the three different glass fibers
studied, in which the sample of the shortest microfibers showed the highest
transforming potency, whereas the sample of the thick and longest length showed
the lowest activity. This seems to indicate that the glass fiber induced
transformation may be related to fiber size. These observations are comparable
to previous findings using other transformation systems, which showed that both
thin and thick glass fibers induced cell transformation in culture Syrian
hamster embryo cells, and that the cell transforming activity was higher with
thin than with thick glass fibers..."
"All transformed foci induced by three different glass fibers showed
typical characteristics of morphological transformation, such as random cellular
orientation, cell piling up and high saturation density. The transfection study
revealed that DNAs from glass fiber-transformed cells induced transfection-mediated
transformation in host NIH-3T3 cells, suggesting that the cells transformed by
glass fibers contain transforming genes. Furthermore, soft-agar cloning analysis
provided evidence that glass fiber-induced transformed cells possessed another
transformed property, anchorage independent growth. It has been reported that
the ability to grow in soft agar is correlated well with tumorogenicity in vivo.
Our study, therefore, indicated that transformed cells induced by glass fibers
contain many of the characteristics of neoplastic transformation.
"Carcinogenesis has been proposed to be a multi-step process, and it may
involve the activation of oncogenes and/or the inactivation of tumor-suppresser
genes. The actual mechanism of cell transformation induced by glass fibers is
unknown. With the Syrian hamster embryo cell system, Oshimura et al. showed that
glass fibers were positive in inducting both morphological transformation and
chromosomal changes. Recent studies by Liu et al. showed that glass fibers are
capable of inducing micronuclei in V79 cells.
"Using kinetochore analysis, this group further demonstrated that
glass-fiber-induced micronuclei resulted from spindle fiber damages. Based on
these findings, it can be postulated that cell transformation induced by glass
fibers may be related to chromosomal abnormalities. It has also been reported
that transfection-mediated transformation often results from the transference of
activated proto-oncogenes present in donor DNAs to their respect host cells.
Since positive results were found for gene transfection with DNAs from
glass-fiber-transformed cells, transforming genes derived from the alteration of
proto-oncogenes and/or tumor suppresser genes may also contribute to cell
transformation induced by glass fibers. To provide insight into the mechanisms
of potential glass fiber carcinogenesis, molecular analyses of these genes in
glass-fiber-induced transformed cells are now in progress."
But, in fact, such research is not in progress. Dr. Wen-Zong Whong, spokesman
for the group of researchers, told VOF he is now working on studies to define
the carcinogenic potential of silica. The directive to switch topics came from
NIOSH supervisors; Whong hopes to continue his work on fiberglass. The studies
which have been completed, he noted, will be published sometime in 1995.
"Clearly, fiberglass remains an important area" for research, said Dr.
Greg Wagner, Director of the NIOSH Division of Respiratory Disease Studies. But
the "priority of funding reflects the paucity of funding," he told VOF.
The decision whether to fund additional research on fiberglass has not yet been
made, Wagner said, and public interest in fiberglass research could influence
the decision. VOF's testimony in at a Department of Labor priorities meeting in
Washington D.C. in November, he recalled, was a step toward that end.
Dr. Whong and company's current research on silica could result in improved test
systems to learn about cancer-causing mechanisms, noted Wagner, which would
benefit future work on glass fiber carcinogenicity.
But there is some concern about whether NIOSH will be around at all in a few
years, if the conservative majority in Congress follows through on its threat to
place a moratorium on all new regulations and consolidate or eliminate agencies.
including NIOSH.
"It's a pretty serious threat," said Wagner. "I don't know what
is going to happen."
The studies cited in this report are all a product of: NIOSH, Division of
Respiratory Disease Studies, NIOSH, Morgantown WV 25605 USA. They are:
- Whong, WZ; Liu, YQ, et al: Induction of micronucleated and multinucleated
cells by glass fibers in cultured mammalian cells.
- Ong, T; Gao, HG, et al: Glass-fiber induced Cell Transformation and
Oncogene Activation in BALB/c-3T3 Cells.
- Gao, GH; Whong, et al: Morphological Transformation Induced by Glass
Fibers in BALB/c-3T3 Cells.