Methylation of DNA guanine during the course of induction of liver cancer in hamsters by hydrazine or dimethylnitrosamine
Autor: | J. D. MacEwen, Ronald C. Shank, Paul M. Newberne, W S Bosan, C L Gaworski |
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Rok vydání: | 1987 |
Předmět: |
Male
Cancer Research medicine.medical_specialty Guanine Hamster Methylation Dimethylnitrosamine chemistry.chemical_compound Liver Neoplasms Experimental Cricetinae Internal medicine medicine Animals Tissue Distribution Hydrazine (antidepressant) Carcinogen Mesocricetus biology DNA General Medicine medicine.disease biology.organism_classification Hydrazines Endocrinology Liver Biochemistry chemistry Toxicity Carcinogens Hydrazine sulfate Liver cancer |
Zdroj: | Carcinogenesis. 8:439-444 |
ISSN: | 1460-2180 0143-3334 |
DOI: | 10.1093/carcin/8.3.439 |
Popis: | Hydrazine is carcinogenic to the mouse and rat, but three earlier studies have reported no carcinogenicity of hydrazine in the hamster. Administration of hydrazine to mice, rats and hamsters results in rapid methylation of liver DNA guanine for which endogenous formaldehyde appears to be the source of the methyl moiety. Hamsters were given hydrazine sulfate at 170, 340 and 510 mg/l in the drinking water for 2 years [average dose of 4.6, 8.3 and 10.3 mg hydrazine (free base)/kg body wt over the 2-year period], during which levels of methylation of DNA guanine in liver, kidney and lung, and histopathologic examinations of these tissues were carried out; dimethylnitrosamine, as a positive control, was administered at 10 mg/l in the drinking water (average dose of 1.1 mg/kg body wt over the 4-month measurement period). Both 7-methylguanine and O6-methylguanine were readily detectable at 6 months exposure in hamsters given hydrazine or dimethylnitrosamine; in hydrazine-treated animals only trace amounts of these bases could be detected after 12 months exposure; these bases were again detected in liver DNA at exposure times of 18 and 24 months. Hepatocellular carcinomas were observed in hamsters treated at the highest dose of hydrazine sulfate after 78 weeks of exposure; the incidence of liver cancer was dose-related over the course of the experiment: 32% for hamsters exposed to 510 mg hydrazine sulfate/l, 12% for 340 mg/l and none at 170 mg/l. Hamsters given dimethylnitrosamine developed high levels of 7-methylguanine and even higher levels of O6-methylguanine and both liver cholangiocellular carcinomas (73% incidence), as reported before, and hepatocellular carcinomas (27% incidence), a new finding. These results demonstrate for the first time that hydrazine is a liver carcinogen in the hamster and provide new information regarding the accumulation of DNA damage during the entire induction period for the carcinomas. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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