Fong L Y, Sivak A, Newberne P M
J Natl Cancer Inst. 1978 Jul;61(1):145-50. doi: 10.1093/jnci/61.1.145.
Dietary zinc deficiency increases the incidence of and shortens the lag time for induction of esophageal tumors in rats by methylbenzylnitrosamine (MBN). Groups of control and zinc-deficient outbred Charles River CD rats were given 24, 17, 8, or 4 doses of MBN, administered twice weekly by intragastric intubation at doses of 2 mg/kg body weight. Between 58 and 93 days after the beginning of treatment, all rats were killed and examined. The frequency of esophageal tumors in the zinc-deficient groups was significantly higher than in the corresponding control groups. Following ip injection of [methyl-14C]MBN, DNA and RNA of esophagus and liver were more noticeably labeled than kidney, lung, and small intestine, which exhibited only modest labeling. In vitro incubation with [14C]MBN of tissue slices from esophagus, liver, kidney, and small intestine produced similar results. This pattern correlates well with the results of our studies of MBN-induced esophageal tumorigenesis.