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- Title
The Tg.AC Transgenic Mouse as a Screening Tool for Anticarcinogens: Broccoli Juice Protected Against 12-O-Tetradecanoylphorbol-13-Acetate (TPA) But Not Benzo[a]Pyrene (B[a]P)-Induced Skin Tumors.
- Authors
Spencer, Pamela J.; Yano, Barry L.; Gollapudi, B. Bhaskar
- Abstract
The Tg.AC mouse model was used to assess the utility of a short-term screening assay to evaluate compounds with suspected carcinogenic/anticarcinogenic activity. Crude broccoli juice (BROC) was evaluated for antitumorigenic effects against 12-Otetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) and benzo[a]pyrene (B[a]P)-induced tumors. Groups of female mice were dosed three times a week (200 µL/mouse) with one of the following: acetone vehicle control, TPA (2.5 µg/mouse), B[a]P (250 µg/mouse), BROC/TPA, or BROC/B[a]P. BROC (200 µL, 1:1 acetone) was dermally administered 1 h prior to the administration of either TPA or B[a]P to evaluate anticarcinogenic activity. Papilloma numbers were recorded weekly for each mouse. Following 13 weeks of treatment, samples from the dermal test site from all mice were examined histologically. B[a]P-induced tumors were evaluated for transgene expression by RT-PCR and immunohistochemically for cyclin D1 and p53 proteins. TPA and B[a]P induced tumors in all surviving mice. BROC showed effective antitumorigenic activity against TPA but not B[a]P. Tumor development was distinct between TPA (small, benign papillomas) and B[a]P (large, ulcerated, squamous cell carcinomas). The transgene v-Ha-ras, cyclin D1, and p53 proteins were highly expressed in B[a]P tumors where progression to malignancy was rapid (
- Subjects
TRANSGENIC mice; CARCINOGENICITY; LABORATORY mice; TISSUE plasminogen activator; TOXICOLOGY
- Publication
Toxicology Mechanisms & Methods, 2006, Vol 16, Issue 4, p189
- ISSN
1537-6516
- Publication type
Academic Journal
- DOI
10.1080/15376520600620141