Kunz H W, Tennekes H A, Port R E, Schwartz M, Lorke D, Schaude G
Environ Health Perspect. 1983 Apr;50:113-22. doi: 10.1289/ehp.8350113.
Chronic exposure of rodents to high dose levels of drugs, food additives and environmental chemicals frequently results in liver enlargement. Several of these compounds have been found to enhance the incidence of liver tumors in animals briefly exposed previously to hepatocarcinogens. Accordingly, it has been advanced that these agents act as tumor promoters. This contention has remained subject of controversy following reports that these substances may also cause liver tumors in noncarcinogen-treated rodents, particularly in those characterized by a relatively high incidence of "spontaneous" liver tumors. Since many of these chemicals are in common use, a crucial question would seem to be whether such effects are due to facilitation of the expression of pre-existing oncogenic potential, i.e., to tumor promotion, or to the synergistic action of weakly carcinogenic agents. As a result of mechanistic differences tumor promotion and syn-carcinogenesis must exhibit different dose-time-response characteristics, and, accordingly, it should be possible, in principle, to discriminate between these phenomena. However, since tumor manifestation periods in low-dose groups frequently exceed the animals average lifespan, this approach may not always yield conclusive data, unless a sensitive early marker of carcinogenic activity can be employed. There is evidence that enzyme-deficient preneoplastic areas in liver can be used for this purpose. A strong quantitative correlation between carcinogen dose, the extent of ATPase deficient areas, and the subsequent appearance of tumors has now been established for a number of hepatocarcinogens. Experimental data are consistent with the concept that two critical events (hits) are required for induction of ATPase deficiency in hepatocytes. The first hit is carcinogen-dependent, whereas the second hit would seem to be due to time-dependent event(s). Tumor-promoters, such as phenobarbital, were found to accelerate and increase formation of preneoplastic islets. This evidence, together with data indicating that the compound is devoid of carcinogenic potential, suggests that phenobarbital may be operative at relatively early stages of hepatocarcinogenesis by increasing the probability of the occurrence of the time-dependent second hit. Such effects are dose-dependent and appear to be related to the induction of liver enlargement. The changes in hepatocellular ploidy status and atypical nuclear figures observed during phenobarbital treatment and cessation thereof, suggest that this compound might induce abnormal redistributions of genetic material. It is postulated that these cytological changes may result in phenotypical manifestation of recessive oncogenic information.
啮齿动物长期接触高剂量的药物、食品添加剂和环境化学物质常常会导致肝脏肿大。已发现其中几种化合物会增加先前短暂接触过致癌物的动物肝脏肿瘤的发生率。因此,有人提出这些物质起到肿瘤促进剂的作用。然而,有报道称这些物质也可能在未接受致癌物处理的啮齿动物中引发肝脏肿瘤,尤其是在那些“自发”肝脏肿瘤发生率相对较高的动物中,此后这一论点一直存在争议。由于这些化学物质中有许多被广泛使用,一个关键问题似乎是,这种效应是由于促进了已存在的致癌潜能的表达,即肿瘤促进作用,还是由于弱致癌剂的协同作用。由于作用机制不同,肿瘤促进作用和协同致癌作用必然表现出不同的剂量 - 时间 - 反应特征,因此原则上应该能够区分这些现象。然而,由于低剂量组的肿瘤表现期常常超过动物的平均寿命,除非能够采用致癌活性的敏感早期标志物,否则这种方法可能并不总能得出确凿的数据。有证据表明肝脏中酶缺乏的癌前区域可用于此目的。现已针对多种肝癌致癌物确定了致癌物剂量、ATP酶缺乏区域的范围与随后肿瘤出现之间的强定量相关性。实验数据与这样的概念一致,即肝细胞中诱导ATP酶缺乏需要两个关键事件(打击)。第一个打击依赖于致癌物,而第二个打击似乎是由于时间依赖性事件。已发现肿瘤促进剂,如苯巴比妥,会加速并增加癌前胰岛的形成。这一证据,连同表明该化合物无致癌潜能的数据,表明苯巴比妥可能通过增加时间依赖性第二个打击发生的概率,在肝癌发生的相对早期阶段起作用。这些效应是剂量依赖性的,并且似乎与肝脏肿大的诱导有关。在苯巴比妥治疗期间及其停止后观察到的肝细胞倍性状态和非典型核形态的变化,表明该化合物可能诱导遗传物质的异常重新分布。据推测,这些细胞学变化可能导致隐性致癌信息的表型表现。