Changes in the parous rat mammary gland environment are involved in parity-associated protection against mammary carcinogenesis - PubMed (original) (raw)
. 1998 Nov-Dec;18(6A):4115-21.
Affiliations
- PMID: 9891455
Changes in the parous rat mammary gland environment are involved in parity-associated protection against mammary carcinogenesis
T J Abrams et al. Anticancer Res. 1998 Nov-Dec.
Abstract
Parity in rats results in protection from methylnitrosourea (MNU)-induced mammary cancer. Our goal was to determine if systemic alterations in the mammary gland environment after a full-term pregnancy rendered the parous rat an inadequate host for promotion of initiated mammary epithelial cells to become cancerous. Lewis rat MNU-treated mammary epithelial cells were transplanted into uniparous (UP), age-matched virgin (AMV) (both 130-150 d), or young virgin (YV) (50-60 d) syngeneic hosts to examine if differences in the systemic environments of the three hosts had an effect on hyperplasia and cancer formation. More transplants in YV and AMV hosts contained hyperplasias and adenocarcinomas as compared to transplants in UP hosts. In addition, UP host transplants had significantly fewer numbers of hyperplastic lesions than transplants from the virgin hosts. The evidence presented here shows that the uniparous host environment is less supportive than that of the virgin host for hyperplasia and cancer development.