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Carcinogenesis Advance Access published online on January 9, 2006

Carcinogenesis, doi:10.1093/carcin/bgi325
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© The Author 2006. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org
Received April 16, 2005
Revised May 31, 2005
Accepted December 20, 2005

MOLECULAR EPIDEMIOLOGY AND CANCER PREVENTION

Enhanced tumorigenesis in p53 knockout mice exposed in utero to high-dose vitamin Ea

Connie S. Chen 1 and Peter G. Wells 2 *

1 Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
2 Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Department of Pharmacology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

* To whom correspondence should be addressed.
Peter G. Wells, E-mail: pg.wells{at}utoronto.ca


   Abstract

The limited antioxidative capacity of the embryo and fetus may increase their risk for cancer initiation and/or promotion by reactive oxygen species (ROS)-mediated oxidative DNA damage and/or signaling. To determine if cancer can originate in utero, a high dietary dose of the antioxidant vitamin E (VE) (10% dl-{alpha}-tocopherol-acetate) was given to cancer-prone p53 knockout mice throughout pregnancy. Although reducing fetal death (p<0.05), in utero exposure to VE enhanced postnatal tumorigenesis in both +/- (p<0.04) and -/- (p<0.0008) p53-deficient offspring. VE did not alter maternal weights, offspring p53 genotypic distribution or tumor spectrum. Constitutive embryonic DNA oxidation in untreated -/- p53 embryos (gestational day [GD] 13) was higher than in +/- and +/+ p53 littermates (p<0.05). VE reduced DNA oxidation in -/- p53 embryos (p<0.05) without affecting +/- and +/+ p53 littermates. VE had contrasting, tissue-dependent effects on fetal (GD 19) DNA oxidation, with reductions in -/- and +/- p53-deficient fetal brains (p<0.01), increases in skin (p<0.05), and no effect in liver and thymus. The 250-fold increase in dietary VE levels produced only 1.6- to 6.3-fold, tissue-dependent increases in tissue concentrations. The greatest increase, in fetal skin, correlated with increased DNA oxidation in that tissue in -/- and +/- p53-deficient fetuses, and enhanced tumorigenesis in these genotypes. These results show that some cancers may originate in utero, and the risk can be enhanced by embryonic and fetal exposure to high dietary levels of VE. The elevated DNA oxidation in some tissues of untreated -/- p53 offspring suggests that ROS may contribute to their higher baseline tumor incidence. The limited and tissue-dependent disposition of VE indicates substantial conceptal regulation. The similarly selective and contrasting effects of VE on DNA oxidation may contribute to its controversial protective efficacy, and suggest that its effects on tumorigenesis are cell-specific, possibly in high doses involving a pro-oxidative mechanism.

Keywords: tumorigenesis; reactive oxygen species; p53 knockout mice; vitamin E; fetal oxidative DNA damage.
a Preliminary reports of this research were presented at the annual meetings of the Society of Toxicology (Toxicol. Sci. [Supplement: The Toxicologist] 61: No.1502, 2002) and the American Association for Cancer Research (Proc. of the Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research, 43: No. 4303, 2002). Supported by grants from the National Cancer Institute of Canada and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.
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