Carcinogenesis, Vol 18, 1103-1107, Copyright © 1997 by Oxford University Press
PT Allen and LA Poirier
An 18-month carcinogenicity study was conducted in male weanling F344 rats
(28/group) to examine the effects of the simultaneous feeding of selected
concentrations of ethionine and 0.05% phenobarbital in a normal chow diet.
The effects of a 1-6-week feeding of phenobarbital and ethionine on the
hepatic levels of the related metabolites S- adenosylmethionine,
S-adenosylhomocysteine and S-adenosylethionine were also examined.
Ethionine at 0.3% or 0.1% induced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCCa) at
incidences of 90% (19/21) and 89% (24/27), respectively. Adding
phenobarbital to the 0.1% ethionine diet reduced the incidence of HCCa to
36% (10/28) and reduced the number of liver tumor-associated deaths
occurring prior to terminal sacrifice from 10/27 to 1/28. No hepatic tumors
were observed in rats fed 0, 0.003, 0.01, or 0.03% ethionine. Phenobarbital
alone or combined with 0.03% ethionine produced no hepatic tumors. Dietary
ethionine at 0.1% reduced the intracellular hepatic level of
S-adenosylmethionine to <50% of that seen in control rats. Phenobarbital
alone had little effect on either S- adenosylmethionine or
S-adenosylhomocysteine levels. The combination of phenobarbital and 0.1%
ethionine led to increases in the hepatic levels of S-adenosylmethionine of
40-60% after 3 and 6 weeks of feeding, compared to those seen in rats
receiving 0.1% ethionine alone. Ethionine feeding resulted in high levels
of S-adenosylethionine in the livers. Combining phenobarbital with
ethionine in the diet led to 30- 50% reductions in hepatic
S-adenosylethionine content. The results indicate that phenobarbital
inhibits hepatocarcinogenesis by ethionine, that ethionine may cause HCCa
via methyl group insufficiency, and that at levels of < or =0.03%
ethionine did not show evidence of tumorigenicity.
ARTICLES
Suppression by phenobarbital of ethionine-induced hepatocellular carcinoma formation and hepatic S-adenosylethionine levels
National Center for Toxicological Research, Division of Nutritional Toxicology, Jefferson, AR 72079, USA.
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