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Query: UMLS:C0596263 (
carcinogenesis
)
64,820
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Syrian golden hamsters were fed four diets in experiments designed to evaluate the effects of the interaction of dietary fat and protein on
carcinogenesis
induced by N-nitrosobis(2-oxopropyl)amine [(BOP) CAS: 60599-38-4]. The diets consisted of two levels of dietary fat [4.5 g (low fat, LF) or 18 g (high fat, HF) of corn oil/385 kilocalories (kcal)]. These levels were fed with each of two levels of dietary protein [9 g low-protein (LP) and 36 g high-protein (HP)
casein
/385 kcal]. The four diets were fed to two separate groups of hamsters at two different periods in their life-span. For testing of the effects of diet on tumor initiation, one group received the diets from 3 to 7 weeks of age. At 8 weeks, they were given injections sc of 10 mg BOP/kg body weight and placed on a control diet [9 g corn oil (medium fat) and 18 g
casein
(medium protein)/385 kcal]. The other group received control diet until 8 weeks of age, at which time they were given injections of BOP and placed on the four diets. This group was designed to test the effects of the diets on tumor development. BOP-induced lesions in the lungs, liver, common bile duct, gallbladder, and kidneys are described; results in the pancreas were reported separately. In hamsters fed the four diets after BOP treatment, the LF-LP groups had the fewest tumors, the LF-HP-fed and HF-LP-fed groups had intermediate yields of tumors, and the hamsters given HF-HP diet exhibited the largest numbers of neoplasms. Several specific tumor types showed a similar pattern. For example, the pulmonary adenoma incidence, which was low in the non-BOP-treated hamsters, was higher in the HF-HP group than in those fed LF-HP diet after BOP, but it was not influenced by fat at the LP level. In addition, renal adenomas were observed at a low incidence in non-BOP-treated hamsters and in hamsters fed LF-LP levels before or after BOP treatment (0.5% incidence) but were present at an 8% incidence in all other BOP-treated groups. The incidence of biliary cystic adenomas was highest in male hamsters that received HF diets, irrespective of BOP treatment, and BOP treatment resulted in increased yields of this lesion in females only in groups given HF-LP diet.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effects of the interaction of dietary fat and protein on N-nitrosobis(2-oxopropyl)amine-induced carcinogenesis and spontaneous lesions in Syrian golden hamsters. 385 80
The role of interactions between dietary fat and protein in experimental pancreatic cancer was determined in Syrian golden hamsters treated with N-nitrosobis(2-oxopropyl)amine (BOP). Two levels of corn oil [4.5 and 18 g/385 kilocalorie (kcal)] were fed with each of two levels of
casein
(9 g/385 kcal and 36 g/385 kcal), either before or after a single sc injection of BOP (10 mg/kg body wt) at 8 weeks of age. Control diet was fed at other times (9 g corn oil and 18 g
casein
/385 kcal). The pancreatic ductular carcinoma incidence and multiplicity (average No. of tumors/tumor-bearing animals) increased as dietary fat and protein levels rose in hamsters fed the four diets after carcinogen treatment. Enhanced
carcinogenesis
by high-fat (HF) diets occurred only in hamsters fed the high-protein (HP) level, and protein effects were seen only with the HF diets. The low-fat-low-protein (LF-LP) diet inhibited pancreatic
carcinogenesis
among the hamsters given the four diets before BOP treatment. Pancreatic adenoma yields were elevated in hamsters given either HF or HP diets following BOP treatment, by comparison with the low levels. However, when diets were fed before BOP treatment, an increased yield occurred with the rise in protein, but the yield was reduced in males with the increase in fat. Acinar cell nodules were observed primarily in hamsters fed LP levels after BOP, and their multiplicity was highest in those given the HF diet. The interaction between dietary fat and protein demonstrated the interdependence of the effects of these two nutrients on pancreatic
carcinogenesis
in hamsters.
...
PMID:Interaction of dietary fat and protein on pancreatic carcinogenesis in Syrian golden hamsters. 630 22
The effect of dietary selenium levels on 7,12-dimethylbenzanthracene (DMBA)-induced mammary tumors was examined in mice fed a semi-purified diet (20%
casein
, 50% sucrose, 5% corn oil). (C57BLxDBA/2f)F1 (BD2F1) female mice were fed diets containing 0.2, 0.5, 1.0 and 2.0 p.p.m. selenium starting at 7 weeks of age. The mammary tumor incidence was 56, 30, 25 and 16%, respectively, after the mice were on the diet for 9 months. In a second experiment, BALB/cV female mice were fed diets containing 0.2 and 2.0 p.p.m. selenium. After 9 months on the diet, the mammary tumor incidence was 39 and 7%, respectively. Both strains of mice grew equally well on the 0.2 and 2.0 p.p.m. selenium diets indicating that the highest dietary selenium level was compatible with normal growth. The selenium concentration and selenium dependent-glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px) activity of mammary glands from control BD2F1 mice fed 0.2, 1.0 and 2.0 p.p.m. dietary selenium was examined at 8, 9 and 10 months of age. As in previous experiments in adult BALB/c mice, the concentration of mammary gland selenium, but not GSH-Px activity, increased with increasing levels of dietary selenium. These results document that nutritional levels of dietary selenium (0.5 p.p.m. Se) as well as non-toxic higher levels (2.0 p.p.m. Se) inhibit DMBA-induced mammary tumorigenesis.
Carcinogenesis
1983 Sep
PMID:Effect of dietary selenium levels on 7,12-dimethylbenzanthracene-induced mouse mammary tumorigenesis. 641 77
A 3 X 3 factorial experiment was conducted to examine how protein content (8, 16, 32% of kilocalories from
casein
) and fat content (12, 24, 48% of kilocalories from corn oil) interact to influence 7,12-dimethylbenz(a)anthracene (DMBA)-induced breast
carcinogenesis
in rats. Forty weanling Sprague-Dawley rats were assigned to each of 9 diets fed ad libitum. After 4 weeks each rat received DMBA (20 mg/kg) via gastric intubation. No substantial statistical interactions of protein and fat were observed on tumor incidence. Increasing dietary corn oil increased the percentage of rats with palpable tumors. Rats fed diets containing 12, 24 and 48% of kilocalories from corn oil showed 35, 49 and 70% tumor prevalence at necropsy, and the total number of tumors per fat level was 65, 81 and 182, respectively. Each doubling of dietary fat concentration approximately doubled the odds of a rat developing a tumor. Multiple tumors were more common with the highest corn oil intake. The odds of finding a second tumor in rats with one tumor increased by a factor of 7.5 when fat kilocalories were increased from 24 to 48% compared to a decrease of one-third when fat kilocalories were increased from 12 to 24%. Dietary corn oil significantly increased the prevalence of adenocarcinomas and adenomas but not fibroadenomas. Dietary protein did not significantly affect tumor prevalence. However, tumors palpated in rats fed 16% of kilocalories as protein regressed more frequently than in rats fed low or high protein diets. Multiple logistic-regression results indicate that, in addition to the response to dietary corn oil, tumorigenesis was increased in rats with greater ad libitum food consumption. This conclusion is supported by reanalysis that used direct rate adjustment and average partial association tests.
...
PMID:The combined effects of dietary protein and fat on 7,12-dimethylbenz(a)anthracene-induced breast cancer in rats. 642 93
The effects of supplementing a 14%
casein
diet with 5% L-arginine on rat mammary tumors induced by 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA) and N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU) were investigated. Dietary arginine supplementation had no significant effect on food intake or growth. In rats treated with either DMBA or MNU, tumor incidence was not significantly affected, but the number of new tumors appearing each week and the cumulative tumor weight per rat were significantly decreased in rats fed 5% arginine diets. In vitro experiments indicated that arginine had no effect on the enzymatic conversion of DMBA to electrophilic DNA-binding metabolites. The decreased tumorigenicity of both MNU and DMBA in rats given supplemental arginine suggests that this amino acid has an inhibitory effect on stage(s) of chemical carcinogenesis other than bioactivation of procarcinogens.
Carcinogenesis
1984 Dec
PMID:Effect of arginine on the carcinogenicity of 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]-anthracene and N-methyl-N-nitrosourea. 643 92
Differentiation of the stem cell line rat mammary (Rama) 25 to alveolar-like cells can be monitored by the increase in production of domes (hemispheric blisters) in the cell monolayer and immunoreactive
casein
in the tissue culture medium. This step was accelerated not only by the synthetic inducer dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) but also by all-trans-retinol, all-trans-retinal, all-trans-retinoic acid (RA), and all-trans-retinyl acetate (concentration range, 0.04-4 microM) in the presence of the hormones prolactin, hydrocortisone (HC), insulin, and 17 beta-estradiol; 9-cis-all-trans-retinal was without effect. A combination of RA and HC was active in producing doming, whereas RA, all four hormones, and serum were required for maximum production of immunoreactive
casein
. The retinoids in the same concentration range also caused a reduction in the DNA synthetic rate in a similar time period. When Rama 25 cells were treated with RA and the four hormones yielding the droplet and doming cultures, subsequent injection of these cells into young, female inbred nu/nu (nude) mice led to a reduced incidence of tumors compared with injections of untreated cells. Tumorigenic variant cell lines were selected previously from Rama 25 that were either elongated and failed to differentiate at all to doming and
casein
-secreting cultures (Rama 521) or that did so spontaneously but whose rates were not accelerated by addition of DMSO (Rama 259). Both Rama 521 and Rama 259 failed to respond to the retinoids and hormones in producing domes and immunoreactive
casein
, in decreasing DNA synthetic rates, and in lowering the incidence of tumors induced by injection of the cell lines into nude mice. Thus the anticancer activity of the retinoids in rat mammary gland
carcinogenesis
may be due in part to their differentiation-inducing properties.
...
PMID:Retinoid-specific induction of differentiation and reduction of the DNA synthesis rate and tumor-forming ability of a stem cell line from a rat mammary tumor. 657 40
The possible effects of dietary protein on pancreatic cancer induced in outbred Syrian golden hamsters by N-nitrosobis(2-oxopropyl)amine (BOP) were studied. Three levels of
casein
as protein at low [LP = 9 g/385 kilocalories (kcal)], medium (MP = 18 g/385 kcal), or high levels (HP = 36 g/385 kcal) were fed in two sequences to 4 groups of hamsters. The effects of protein level on the initiation phase of BOP
carcinogenesis
were examined in hamsters fed LP or HP from 3 through 7 weeks of age, followed by MP for the remainder of their lives. The role of protein level on the promotional (developmental) phase of
carcinogenesis
was evaluated in hamsters fed (from 3 through 7 wk of age) MP, followed by LP or HP for the rest of their lives. One-half of the hamsters from each of the 4 groups received a single sc BOP injection (10 mg/kg body wt) at 8 weeks of age. Changes in diet from one type to the other occurred 2 days after BOP treatment. An MP diet fed before and after BOP served as the experimental control diet. The results demonstrated that the LP diet inhibited the developmental phase of
carcinogenesis
only in females, whereas the MP and HP diets did not affect initiation or promotion of cancer in either sex. The inhibitory effect of the LP diet in pancreatic carcinogenicity only in females calls for further studies.
...
PMID:Modifying factors in pancreatic carcinogenesis in the hamster model. IV. Effects of dietary protein. 657 92
Content of proteinases and trypsin inhibitor was studied in non-malignant and malignant tumors as well as in blood serum of 120 patients with mammary gland neoplasm. In malignant tumors activity of acid and
casein
-degrading proteinases was increased as compared with non-impaired tissue of mammary gland. Activity of proteolytic enzymes in non-malignant tumors corresponded to an intermediate value between the activity in malignant tumors and in non-impaired tissue. Content of the trypsin inhibitor was distinctly increased in non-malignant tumors and unaltered -- in malignant tissues. The inhibitor content was increased in blood serum of patients with metastases in lymphoid nodes. These data demonstrate the activation of proteolysis in malignant mammary gland and suggest a possible role of proteolytic enzymes in
carcinogenesis
.
...
PMID:[Proteolytic enzymes and their inhibitors in the tumors and blood serum of patients with breast neoplasms]. 705 47
This paper examines the relationship between feeding a diet rich in protease inhibitors and the reduction of mammary cancer induced by x-irradiation in Sprague-Dawley rats. Of a total of 145 irradiated animals, 44% of the 45 rats fed a raw soybean diet containing a high concentration of protease inhibitor developed mammary tumors as compared to 74% of 50 rats fed a
casein
diet containing no protease inhibitor. Animals fed Purina rat chow which contained low levels of protease inhibitor exhibited a 70% mammary tumor incidence. No spontaneous neoplasms were found in any of the non-irradiated animals on the raw soybean diet whereas about 10% of the animals on the protease-free diet developed tumors. Thus, soybeans which are rich in protease inhibitors reduced the induction of mammary cancer in x-irradiated rats. This work suggests that diets rich in protease inhibitors may contribute to reducing cancer incidence in man.
Carcinogenesis
1980 Jun
PMID:Soybean diet lowers breast tumor incidence in irradiated rats. 719 9
The membrane and cytosolic protein phosphorylation patterns in the early stages of diethylnitrosamine-induced rat liver
carcinogenesis
, promoted by 2-acetylaminofluorene in the diet plus partial hepatectomy (DEN-AAF-PH), were analyzed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis in animals fed a low protein (5%
casein
) diet, or the original high protein (24%
casein
) diet, in order to modulate the development of GST-P-positive preneoplastic lesions. Compared with untreated controls, membrane and cytosolic protein phosphorylation patterns changed only slightly in low protein-fed rats 7 days post-hepatectomy, with no appearance of enzyme-altered hyperplastic foci in the liver sections. By contrast, high protein-fed animals demonstrated GST-P-positive preneoplastic lesions 7 days post-hepatectomy and several acidic and more basic high M(r) phosphorylated membrane (between 97 and 116 kDa) as well as cytosolic (between 97 and 200 kDa) proteins could be detected. In the presence of enzyme-altered hepatocytes in the liver sections, low protein-fed rats demonstrated at 60 days post-hepatectomy cytosolic protein phosphorylation patterns remarkably similar to those shown by 24%
casein
-fed animals at 7 days post-hepatectomy, suggesting close correlation between protein phosphorylation patterns and development of preneoplastic lesions during the early stages of DEN-AAF-PH liver
carcinogenesis
. This may arise by a constitutive activation of one or more signal transduction pathways, possibly involving protein kinase C, during liver tumour promotion.
...
PMID:Membrane and cytosolic protein phosphorylation patterns in the early stages of DEN-induced hepatocarcinogenesis in rats fed a high or low protein diet. 749 66
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