Environmental and Radiation Health Sciences Directorate, Health Canada, Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0K9, Canada.
Toxicol Appl Pharmacol. 2013 Dec 1;273(2):269-80. doi: 10.1016/j.taap.2013.05.027. Epub 2013 Jun 2.
Forestomach tumors are observed in mice exposed to environmental carcinogens. However, the relevance of this data to humans is controversial because humans lack a forestomach. We hypothesize that an understanding of early molecular changes after exposure to a carcinogen in the forestomach will provide mode-of-action information to evaluate the applicability of forestomach cancers to human cancer risk assessment. In the present study we exposed mice to benzo(a)pyrene (BaP), an environmental carcinogen commonly associated with tumors of the rodent forestomach. Toxicogenomic tools were used to profile gene expression response in the forestomach. Adult Muta™Mouse males were orally exposed to 25, 50, and 75 mgBaP/kg-body-weight/day for 28 consecutive days. The forestomach was collected three days post-exposure. DNA microarrays, real-time RT-qPCR arrays, and protein analyses were employed to characterize responses in the forestomach. Microarray results showed altered expression of 414 genes across all treatment groups (± 1.5 fold; false discovery rate adjusted P ≤ 0.05). Significant downregulation of genes associated with phase II xenobiotic metabolism and increased expression of genes implicated in antigen processing and presentation, immune response, chemotaxis, and keratinocyte differentiation were observed in treated groups in a dose-dependent manner. A systematic comparison of the differentially expressed genes in the forestomach from the present study to differentially expressed genes identified in human diseases including human gastrointestinal tract cancers using the NextBio Human Disease Atlas showed significant commonalities between the two models. Our results provide molecular evidence supporting the use of the mouse forestomach model to evaluate chemically-induced gastrointestinal carcinogenesis in humans.
在接触环境致癌物的小鼠中观察到前胃肿瘤。然而,由于人类缺乏前胃,因此该数据与人类的相关性存在争议。我们假设,了解接触前胃致癌物后早期的分子变化将为评估前胃癌在人类癌症风险评估中的适用性提供作用机制信息。在本研究中,我们使小鼠接触苯并(a)芘(BaP),这是一种与啮齿动物前胃肿瘤常见相关的环境致癌物。使用毒理基因组学工具来分析前胃中的基因表达谱。成年 Muta™Mouse 雄性经口暴露于 25、50 和 75 mgBaP/kg 体重/天,连续 28 天。暴露后三天收集前胃。采用 DNA 微阵列、实时 RT-qPCR 阵列和蛋白质分析来表征前胃中的反应。微阵列结果显示,所有处理组的 414 个基因的表达发生改变(± 1.5 倍;经错误发现率调整的 P ≤ 0.05)。与外源性代谢物代谢相关的基因明显下调,与抗原处理和呈递、免疫反应、趋化作用和角蛋白细胞分化相关的基因表达增加,并且在处理组中呈剂量依赖性。使用 NextBio 人类疾病图谱,将本研究中前胃中差异表达的基因与包括人类胃肠道癌在内的人类疾病中的差异表达基因进行系统比较,显示两种模型之间存在显著的相似性。我们的结果为使用小鼠前胃模型来评估人类化学诱导的胃肠道致癌作用提供了分子证据。