Retinoid prevents transformation of cultured mammary glands by procarcinogens but not by many activated carcinogens (original) (raw)

Nature volume 285, pages 581–584 (1980) Cite this article

Abstract

Specific hormones1,2 in concert with epidermal growth factor3 induce the mouse mammary gland in serum-free whole organ culture to undergo two physiological cycles3, each consisting of lobuloalveolar development, differentiation and involution (regression). In addition, chemical carcinogens cause an epithelial transformation, which is operationally defined by the presence of nodule-like alveolar lesions that have escaped the hormonal controls of lobuloalveolar development4–9. The transformed mammary glands are also dysplastic, metaplastic4,5 and oncogenic6. Chemically analogous non-carcinogens have little or no transforming activity4,8. Furthermore, transformation by the carcinogen 7,12-dimethylbenz[_a_]anthracene (DMBA) is prevented, suppressed and apparently reversed by retinoid5 (chemical related to vitamin A). The retinoid acts anti-promotionally, that is, it apparently blocks the transformation process at a stage after the interaction of carcinogen with critical cellular target(s). We report here that the ability of retinoid to prevent mammary gland transformation anti-promotionally is largely limited to carcinogens (procarcinogens) that require metabolic activation to become reactive. Mammary gland transformations caused by low concentrations of procarcinogens are blocked by the retinoid 2-retinylidene-5,5-dimethyl-1,3-cyclohexanedione (retinylidene dimedone). In contrast, transformations by five activated carcinogens and by high concentrations of procarcinogens are not prevented. The present findings suggest important limitations of retinoids in the prevention of epithelial transformation by chemical carcinogens.

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Authors and Affiliations

  1. The Institute for Cancer Research, Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 19111
    Michael S. Dickens & Sam Sorof

Authors

  1. Michael S. Dickens
  2. Sam Sorof

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Dickens, M., Sorof, S. Retinoid prevents transformation of cultured mammary glands by procarcinogens but not by many activated carcinogens.Nature 285, 581–584 (1980). https://doi.org/10.1038/285581a0

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