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The genetic control of chemically and radiation-induced skin tumorigenesis: A study with carcinogenesis-susceptible and carcinogenesis-resistant mice

TitleThe genetic control of chemically and radiation-induced skin tumorigenesis: A study with carcinogenesis-susceptible and carcinogenesis-resistant mice
Publication TypeArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Year of Publication2002
AuthorsPazzaglia, Simonetta, Mancuso Mariateresa, Rebessi S., Di Majo V., Tanori Mirella, Biozzi G., Covelli V., and Saran Anna
JournalRadiation Research
Volume158
Pagination78-83
ISSN00337587
Keywordsanimal experiment, animal model, Animals, article, cancer incidence, cancer resistance, cancer susceptibility, chemical carcinogenesis, controlled study, exon, gene amplification, gene locus, gene mutation, Genes, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, genetic regulation, Inbred Strains, Ionizing radiation, male, Mice, mouse, mutation, Neoplasms, nonhuman, oncogene H ras, papilloma, Phenotype, phorbol 13 acetate 12 myristate, priority journal, radiation carcinogenesis, radiation dose, Radiation-Induced, ras, skin carcinogenesis, Skin Neoplasms, squamous cell carcinoma, Tetradecanoylphorbol Acetate, Trixis, tumor promotion, X ray, X-Rays
Abstract

Outbred carcinogenesis-resistant (Car-R) and carcinogenesis-susceptible (Car-S) mouse lines were generated by phenotypic selection for resistance or susceptibility to two-stage skin carcinogenesis. These two Car mouse lines differ by >100-fold in susceptibility. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that a subset of genetic loci responsible for susceptibility or resistance to chemical skin tumorigenesis may also be involved in radiation-induced skin tumorigenesis. Skin tumorigenesis was tested in groups of Car-S/R mice after X-ray initiation and 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) promotion. We found that ionizing radiation can initiate skin tumors in Car-S mice but not in Car-R mice. In Car-S mice, the most effective radiation doses (6 and 10 Gy given in four fractions) gave a threefold increase in tumor multiplicity and a twofold increase in tumor incidence compared to a TPA-only control group. We performed a molecular analysis of Hras gene mutations in skin tumors of Car-S mice induced by X-ray initiation/TPA promotion or by TPA promotion alone. The most notable difference emerging from the comparison of these mutation patterns is the high incidence (∼50%) of papillomas lacking Hras gene mutations in X-ray-initiated/TPA-promoted papillomas compared to 13% in papillomas induced by TPA alone, suggesting that lack of Hras gene mutations is a consistent feature of radiation-induced papillomas. © 2002 by Radiation Research Society.

Notes

cited By 6

URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0036305347&partnerID=40&md5=b271b8a02187f5db4eea2705940ab347
DOI10.1667/0033-7587(2002)158[0078:TGCOCA]2.0.CO;2
Citation KeyPazzaglia200278