This Key Event Relationship is licensed under the Creative Commons BY-SA license. This license allows reusers to distribute, remix, adapt, and build upon the material in any medium or format, so long as attribution is given to the creator. The license allows for commercial use. If you remix, adapt, or build upon the material, you must license the modified material under identical terms.
Relationship: 346
Title
Increased, Induced Mutations in Critical Genes leads to Tumorigenesis, Hepatocellular carcinoma
Upstream event
Downstream event
AOPs Referencing Relationship
| AOP Name | Adjacency | Weight of Evidence | Quantitative Understanding | Point of Contact | Author Status | OECD Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AFB1: Mutagenic Mode-of-Action leading to Hepatocellular Carcinoma (HCC) | non-adjacent | Moderate | Low | Agnes Aggy (send email) | Open for citation & comment | EAGMST Under Review |
Taxonomic Applicability
Sex Applicability
Life Stage Applicability
There is no direct evidence addressing AFB1 induced critical gene mutations and the subsequent progression through AHF to HCC. In general it is clear that chemicals that induce the critical cancer gene mutations have a mutagenic MOA for the adverse outcome pathway for cancer. The cells that are mutant for the critical cancer gene undergo a change in phenotype and clonally expand into pre-neoplastic lesions, some of which go on to form hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC).
| ID | Experimental Design | Species | Upstream Observation | Downstream Observation | Citation (first author, year) | Notes |
|---|
| Title | First Author | Biological Plausibility |
Dose Concordance |
Temporal Concordance |
Incidence Concordance |
|---|
Biological Plausibility
Dose Concordance Evidence
Temporal Concordance Evidence
Incidence Concordance Evidence
Uncertainties and Inconsistencies
No data on the relationship between cells with mutations in specific critical genes and the induction of HCC. A substantial body of general information and evidence, is, however available on the etiology of tumors and the involvement of mutations in cancer relevant genes in that etiology.
Detecting mutation in the critical cancer gene following AFB1 exposure is technically challenging, and the techniques to do this are not widely available. Because there is no quantitative information for the induction of these mutations, there is no data-driven quantitative understanding of the relationship between the AFB1-induced critical cancer gene mutations and HCC.
Response-response Relationship
Time-scale
Known Feedforward/Feedback loops influencing this KER
While exposure to AFB1 does result in the formation of HCC in various species, experiments investigating codon 249 mutation in the tumors of nonhuman primates, ducks, rats and squirrels do not show a high frequency of this mutation.
Taxonomic Applicability (of this KER)
e.g., Rats, Mice, Woodchucks, Humans, Monkeys, Birds, Trout, Tree shrews This specific KER has not been directly measured; however, there is indirect evidence for rats, humans, and trout.