Wickliffe Jeffrey K, Dertinger Stephen D, Torous Dorothea K, Avlasevich Svetlana L, Simon-Friedt Bridget R, Wilson Mark J
Department of Global Environmental Health Sciences, School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana, 70112.
Litron Laboratories, 3500 Winton Place, Rochester, New York, 14623.
Environ Mol Mutagen. 2016 Dec;57(9):668-677. doi: 10.1002/em.22058. Epub 2016 Oct 14.
Obesity increases the risk of a number of chronic diseases in humans including several cancers. Biological mechanisms responsible for such increased risks are not well understood at present. Increases in systemic inflammation and oxidative stress, endogenous production of mutagenic metabolites, altered signaling in proliferative pathways, and increased sensitivity to exogenous mutagens and carcinogens are some of the potential contributing factors. We hypothesize that obesity creates an endogenously mutagenic environment in addition to increasing the sensitivity to environmental mutagens. To test this hypothesis, we examined two in vivo genotoxicity endpoints. Pig-a mutant frequencies and micronucleus frequencies were determined in blood cells in two independent experiments in 30-week old male mice reared on either a high-fat diet (60% calories from fat) that exhibit an obese phenotype or a normal-fat diet (10% calories from fat) that do not exhibit an obese phenotype. Mice were assayed again at 52 weeks of age in one of the experiments. N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea (ENU) was used as a positive mutation control in one experiment. ENU induced a robust Pig-a mutant and micronucleus response in both phenotypes. Obese, otherwise untreated mice, did not differ from non-obese mice with respect to Pig-a mutant frequencies in reticulocytes or micronucleus frequencies. However, such mice, had significantly higher and sustained Pig-a mutant frequencies (increased 2.5-3.7-fold, p < 0.02) in erythrocytes as compared to non-obese mice (based on measurements collected at 30 weeks or 30 and 52 weeks of age). This suggests that obesity, in the absence of exposure to an exogenous mutagen, is itself mutagenic. Environ. Mol. Mutagen. 57:668-677, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
肥胖会增加人类患多种慢性疾病的风险,包括多种癌症。目前,对于导致此类风险增加的生物学机制尚不清楚。全身炎症和氧化应激增加、诱变代谢物的内源性产生、增殖途径中信号传导改变以及对外源诱变剂和致癌物的敏感性增加是一些潜在的促成因素。我们假设,肥胖除了会增加对环境诱变剂的敏感性外,还会营造一种内源性诱变环境。为了验证这一假设,我们检测了两个体内遗传毒性终点。在两项独立实验中,分别测定了30周龄雄性小鼠血细胞中的Pig-a突变频率和微核频率,这些小鼠分别以呈现肥胖表型的高脂饮食(60%的热量来自脂肪)或不呈现肥胖表型 的正常脂肪饮食(10%的热量来自脂肪)饲养。在其中一项实验中,小鼠在52周龄时再次接受检测。在一项实验中,使用N-乙基-N-亚硝基脲(ENU)作为阳性突变对照。ENU在两种表型中均诱导出强烈的Pig-a突变和微核反应。在网织红细胞中的Pig-a突变频率或微核频率方面,未接受其他处理的肥胖小鼠与非肥胖小鼠没有差异。然而,与非肥胖小鼠相比(基于30周龄或30周龄和52周龄时收集的测量数据),此类小鼠红细胞中的Pig-a突变频率显著更高且持续存在(增加了2.5至3.7倍,p < 0.02)。这表明,在未接触外源诱变剂的情况下,肥胖本身具有诱变作用。《环境与分子诱变》57:668 - 677, 2016年。© 2016威利期刊公司