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Epidemiology and Prevention |
Biomedical Research Centre, Ninewells Hospital and Medical School, University of Dundee, Dundee DD1 9SY, Scotland [V. P. K., E. M. E., S. A. C., R. M., J. D. H.]; Medical Research Council Toxicology Unit, Hodgkin Building, University of Leicester, Leicester LE1 9HN, England [M M. M., D. J. J., G. E. N.]; Zeneca Central Toxicology Laboratory, Alderley Park, Macclesfield, Cheshire SK10 4TJ, England [G. J. M.], United Kingdom
| ABSTRACT |
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GST A5 subunit in rat liver, causing
elevations of between 25- and 35-fold in hepatic levels of these
proteins. Induction was not limited to AFAR and GSTA5: treatment with
CMRN caused similar increases in the amount of the class-
GST P1
subunit and NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase in rat liver.
Immunohistochemistry demonstrated that the overexpression of AFAR,
GSTA5, GSTP1, and NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase affected by CMRN is
restricted to the centrilobular (periacinar) zone of the lobule,
sometimes extending almost as far as the portal tract. This pattern of
induction was also observed with ethoxyquin, oltipraz, and
trans-stilbene oxide. By contrast, induction of these
proteins by ß-naphthoflavone and diethyl maleate was predominantly
periportal. Northern blotting showed that induction of these phase II
drug-metabolizing enzymes by CMRN was accompanied by similar increases
in the levels of their mRNAs. To assess the biological significance of
enzyme induction by dietary CMRN, two intervention studies were
performed in which the ability of the benzopyrone to inhibit either
AFB1-initiated preneoplastic nodules (at 13 weeks) or
AFB1-initiated liver tumors (at 50 weeks) was investigated.
Animals pretreated with CMRN for 2 weeks prior to administration of
AFB1, and with continued treatment during exposure to the
carcinogen for a further 11 weeks, were protected completely from
development of hepatic preneoplastic lesions by 13 weeks. In the
longer-term dietary intervention, treatment with CMRN before and during
exposure to AFB1 for a total of 24 weeks was found to
significantly inhibit the number and size of tumors that subsequently
developed by 50 weeks. These data suggest that consumption of a
CMRN-containing diet provides substantial protection against the
initiation of AFB1 hepatocarcinogenesis in the rat. | INTRODUCTION |
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Although primates and rats are sensitive to AFB1,
the mouse can tolerate high levels of the mycotoxin without showing
signs of acute liver damage or of developing liver cancer. (See Refs.
7, 8, 9, 10
for further details about the selective toxicity of
AFB1.) Investigations into the metabolic basis
for the natural variation in sensitivity of laboratory animals to the
mycotoxin suggest that it is the high basal expression of GST, which
inactivates the exo-8,9-epoxide, rather than either high
levels of epoxide hydrolase, which might detoxify epoxidated
AFB1, or low levels of CYP, which activate
AFB1, that plays a pivotal role in protection
against carcinogenesis (7)
. Specifically, liver
cytosols prepared from adult male mice normally possess
50-fold
higher levels of GST activity toward epoxidated
AFB1 than do hepatic cytosols from male rats or
humans (7
, 11)
. Depletion of GSH can result in a 25-fold
increase in the sensitivity of murine liver to form
AFB1-DNA adducts (8)
. The enhanced
capacity of mouse liver to detoxify
AFB1-8,9-epoxide is attributable to a class-
transferase (9
, 10)
; for reviews of GSH and GST in drug
resistance, see (12
, 13)
. Consistent with the hypothesis
that the level of GST influences sensitivity to carcinogenesis,
Townsend et al. (14)
have reported that stable
transfection of the murine class-
transferase A3 subunit [also
called Yc (9
, 10)
] into a hamster V79 cell line confers a
5-fold increase in resistance to the cytotoxic effects of
AFB1 and a 3.3-fold reduction in the amount of
DNA adducts formed following exposure to the mycotoxin.
In addition to GST-catalyzed conjugation of AFB1 with GSH, other detoxification mechanisms exist that probably contribute to resistance to the mycotoxin. Following oxidation by CYP, the resulting epoxidated AFB1 can hydrolyze to AFB1-8,9-dihydrodiol (15) ; this may be catalyzed by epoxide hydrolase or occur spontaneously. At physiological conditions, the latter metabolite can rearrange to generate a reactive dialdehyde that modifies lysyl residues in proteins through Schiff bases (15 , 16) . A member of the AKR superfamily has been isolated that catalyzes the reduction of AFB1-dialdehyde to AFB1-dialcohol (17) . This aflatoxin aldehyde reductase, designated AFAR, is only distantly related to other mammalian AKRs (18) and has subsequently been placed in the AKR7 family (19) . It has been proposed that AFAR reduces the cytotoxicity of AFB1 by preventing the binding of the dialdehydic form of the mycotoxin to primary amine groups in intracellular proteins (17) . Provocatively, in humans, it has recently been shown that the AFAR gene is located on chromosome 1 in a region that frequently is deleted in sporadic colorectal and liver cancer, suggesting that the protein may function in humans to inhibit tumorigenesis (20) .
The ability of chemical agents to prevent the development of cancer has provoked much interest as a means of reducing the incidence of neoplastic disease in human populations (21) . Because it is highly improbable that AFB1-producing molds can be eradicated from the environment, chemoprevention is an attractive strategy to protect individuals from the risk of liver cancer caused by exposure to the mycotoxin. At present, the antischistosomal drug OPZ is being investigated as a chemopreventive agent against AFB1 hepatocarcinogenesis in humans (22) , but it is desirable to develop alternative therapies for this purpose.
Using the rat as an experimental model, the phenolic antioxidants BHA
and EQ, and the dithiolethione OPZ have been reported to inhibit
AFB1 hepatocarcinogenesis (reviewed in Ref.
23
). Similarly, PB and ß-NF, synthetic model
inducers of drug-metabolizing enzymes, as well as I3C, a breakdown
product of glucosinolates generated during consumption of cruciferous
vegetables, have also been reported to inhibit either
AFB1-initiated liver cancer or the in
vivo binding of AFB1 to hepatic DNA in the
rat (23, 24, 25, 26)
. Identification of the genes that are induced
by chemopreventive agents has focused primarily on synthetic
antioxidants and dithiolethiones (26, 27, 28, 29)
. Some of these
agents induce GSTA5, a rat class-
transferase subunit [originally
called Yc2 or 10 (12)
] that
possesses high glutathione conjugating activity toward
AFB1-8,9-epoxide (27
, 30)
. Although
AFAR has been shown to be highly inducible by BHA, butylated
hydroxytoluene, EQ, and 1,2-dithiole-3-thione (17
, 28
, 31
, 32)
, and modestly inducible by I3C, OPZ, and phenethyl
isothiocyanate (24
, 31
, 32) , little is known about
its regulation by other chemopreventive agents.
Relatively few studies have documented the ability of naturally occurring chemicals to induce AKR or GST isoenzymes. In the present report, the roles of CMRN, BITC, and I3C in regulating the levels of these two enzyme systems in rat liver of both sexes were explored because they are present in vegetable-enriched diets that are believed to protect against malignant disease (33) . Previous studies in male rats have shown that feeding them diets containing I3C diminishes events associated with tumorigenesis (24 , 25) . This indole has not, however, been studied in the female rat. The possible chemopreventive effects of CMRN and BITC against AFB1 have not been investigated in either sex of the rat. Experiments are now described to determine whether CMRN, BITC, and I3C enhance detoxification of AFB1 by inducing AFAR and/or GSTA5. The regulation of these detoxication enzymes has been studied in both sexes because the expression of at least one of the proteins, GSTA5, is sexually dimorphic in the rat (27) . In this study NQO has been used as a positive control because it is inducible by a wide range of chemopreventive agents (34 , 35) . Significantly, the promoter of the rat NQO1 gene contains both an ARE and an XRE enhancer (36) that together are responsive to metabolizable antioxidants, Michael reaction acceptors, and planar aromatic compounds (12 , 35 , 36) . To establish whether the pattern of gene expression increased by these phytochemicals is distinct from that achieved by synthetic drugs, their effects on the levels of AFB1-detoxication enzymes in rat liver was compared with the effects of BHA, EQ, and OPZ, as well as with model inducers of detoxication enzymes.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Animals
Test Feeding with Chemopreventive Agents to Identify Potent
Enzyme Inducers.
Ten-week-old male and female Fischer 344 rats, obtained from Harlan
Olac Ltd. (Bicester, Oxon, United Kingdom), were housed in Moredun
isolators (Moredun Animal Health Ltd., Edinburgh, Scotland) under
negative pressure with 12-h light and dark cycles at a temperature
range of 1923°C and a humidity of 4060%. Animals were allowed to
acclimatize for 2 weeks before being fed either a normal diet (powdered
RM1 diet supplemented with 2% arachis oil) or normal diet containing
the inducing agent of interest. Each test compound was administered to
three male and three female Fischer rats, and during the experiment
they were given free access to food and water. The chemopreventive
agents were provided in the animal food for 2 weeks in the following
amounts: BHA, 0.75% (w/w); BITC, 0.5% (w/w); CMRN, 0.5% (w/w); EQ,
0.5% (w/w); I3C, 0.5% (w/w); and OPZ, 0.075% (w/w). DEM [at 0.5%
(w/w)] was administered for 5 days in the food. The t-SO
(at 400 mg/kg) was dissolved in 0.5 ml of arachis oil, before daily
i.p. administration on 3 consecutive days, and ß-NF (at 200 mg/kg)
was dissolved in PBS before daily i.p. administration for 7 consecutive
days. PB was added to the drinking water at a concentration of 0.1%
(w/v) for 7 days.
Short-Term Intervention with CMRN to Study Development of
Preneoplastic Foci.
Six groups of eight 12-week-old male F344 rats were administered one of
the following experimental diets for 13 weeks: group 1, RM1 control
maintenance diet throughout; group 2, 0.05% (w/w) CMRN in RM1 diet
throughout; group 3, 2 ppm AFB1 in RM1 diet for 6
weeks, followed by RM1 control diet for 7 weeks; group 4, 2 ppm
AFB1 in RM1 throughout; group 5, 0.05% (w/w)
CMRN in RM1 diet for 2 weeks followed by 2 ppm
AFB1 in RM1 diet containing 0.05% (w/w) CMRN for
11 weeks; group 6, 2 ppm AFB1 in RM1 diet for 6
weeks, followed by AFB1 in RM1 diet containing
0.05% (w/w) CMRN for 7 weeks. In these experiments,
AFB1 was dissolved in arachis oil and mixed into
powdered RM1 diet to give a final concentration of 2 ppm
AFB1 and 2% (w/w) arachis oil. CMRN was
similarly dissolved in arachis oil to give a final concentration of
0.05% (w/w) in the RM1 diet; a lower concentration of CMRN was used in
the intervention study than in the short-term feeding study because of
possible hepatotoxicity effects (38)
.
Long-Term Intervention with CMRN to Study Tumor Formation.
Six groups of eight 12-week-old male F344 rats were administered the
same diets described above. However, in this long-term study, the rats
were placed on CMRN- and AFB1-containing diets
for 24 weeks before being transferred onto a control diet from week 25
until termination of the experiment at week 50.
Tissue Preparation.
Animals were culled using CO2, and tissues were
removed immediately. Microsomal and cytosolic fractions were prepared
from fresh liver or from samples snap-frozen in liquid
N2 and stored at -70°C. Tissue slices were
taken into ice-cold acetone for immunohistochemistry and into buffered
formalin for H&E histology.
| Enzyme and Protein Assays |
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| Source and Production of Antibodies |
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Antibodies against rat NQO1 were prepared during the present study
using bacterially expressed protein. To this end, the cDNA for NQO1 was
cloned into the pET15b vector and transformed into Escherichia
coli BL21 pLysS to allow isopropyl
ß-D-thiogalactoside-inducible expression of
polyhistidine-tagged oxidoreductase. Two PCR steps were used to produce
a full-length rat NQO1 cDNA for ligation into pET15b:
the first involved generation of cDNA comprising the entire coding
sequence of NQO1 from pDTD55 (42)
, a clone that represents
codons 13274 of rat NQO1 (43)
; the second step involved
addition of an oligonucleotide to the 5'-end of the cDNA, which
provided EcoRI and NdeI restriction sites
immediately adjacent to the ATG initiation codon. In the first
reaction, pDTD55 (42)
was used as the template using the
forward 54-nt primer,
5'-ATGGCGGTGAGAAGAGCCCTGATTGTATTGGCCCACGCAGAGAGGACATCATTC-3',
corresponding to codons 118 of the native protein (43)
,
and the reverse 28-nt primer, 5'-CGCGGATCCGTCTAACTACATGGTATGG-3', which
contained 19 nucleotides corresponding to the distal 3'-untranslated
region of the cDNA, as well as an engineered BamHI site. PCR
was performed in a total volume of 100 µl of Pfu reaction
buffer, containing 40 ng of pDTD55, 10 µg of each of the two
oligonucleotides, 2 units of cloned Pfu DNA polymerase, 5%
(v/v) DMSO, and each of the four dNTPs at a concentration of 200
µM. Amplification was carried out for 30
cycles, each of which entailed denaturation of the template DNA at
94°C for 2 min, annealing of primers at 56°C for 2 min, and
extension at 72°C for 3 min. Finally, the amplified product was
purified using QIAquick PCR purification kit (QIAGEN Ltd, Crawley,
United Kingdom) before an aliquot was used as template for the
second PCR step. During the second step, the forward 28-nt primer,
5'-CCGGAATTCATATGGCGGTGAGAAGAGC-3', containing the first 17 coding
nucleotides of NQO1, along with the same reverse primer used in the
first PCR step, was used in amplification under conditions identical to
those described above. The resulting product was purified, digested
with EcoRI and BamHI, and ligated into
pBluescript SK+ that had been similarly treated. This construct
(pBS-NQO1) was transformed into E. coli NM522 cells, and the
DNA insert was sequenced over 200 bp from both 5' and 3' ends to
establish that the primers had been incorporated into the cDNA
satisfactorily. Lastly, the insert in pBS-NQO1 was removed by digestion
with NdeI and BamHI and ligated into pET15b that
had been restricted with the same enzymes. The resulting plasmid
(pET-NQO1) was transformed into E. coli strain BL21 pLysS
and used to produce polyhistidine-tagged NQO1 that was purified on a
HiTrap Chelating column as described for human AKR (39)
.
From 1.2 liters of bacterial culture,
1 mg of homogeneous rat NQO1
was obtained. Aliquots (100 µg of protein) of purified NQO1 in
complete Freunds adjuvant were used as primary immunogen in female
New Zealand White rabbits, whereas NQO1 (100 µg of protein) in
Freunds incomplete adjuvant was used in each of three booster
immunizations on days 28, 42, and 56 after the initial immunization;
bleeds were collected on day 1 (pre-immune sera) and day 70 (working
antibodies).
| Western Blotting |
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| Resolution of AKR Isoenzymes |
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5 g of liver in 20
mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.2; the pH was adjusted with
buffer at room temperature prior to transfer to 4°C) containing 1
mM DTT (buffer A), and were dialyzed for 18 h against two changes, each of 2 liters, of buffer A before being
subjected to Q-Sepharose chromatography. To ensure comparability, the
control liver cytosol and the chemopreventive agent-treated cytosol
were each applied to columns of identical size (1.6 x 40.0 cm) that were equilibrated and eluted (31.5 ml/h) with buffer A
and, following application of the samples to the columns, were
developed in parallel with 0120 mM NaCl in
buffer A from the same gradient-forming reservoir. After the gradient
was complete, the remaining AKRs were eluted with 250
mM NaCl in buffer A. The volume of column
fractions collected was kept constant at 6.3 ml throughout the study. | Quantitation of GST Subunits by Reversed-Phase HPLC |
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, -µ, and -
GST isoenzymes were
eluted from the affinity column as a single pool with 10 mM
GSH in 200 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH 9.0). The
affinity-purified material was dialyzed against two 1-liter changes of
buffer B before individual GST subunits were resolved by reversed-phase
HPLC using a 0.46 x 25.0 cm Brownlee
C18 column (7 µm particle size; 300 Å pore
size). The chromatography conditions used were similar to those
described elsewhere (37)
; a gradient of 3556%
acetonitrile formed in aqueous 0.1% (v/v) trifluoroacetic acid was
formed over 60 min using Waters 510 HPLC pumps to deliver solvent at
1.0 ml/min. Aliquots of affinity-purified GST protein (40100 µg)
were injected for HPLC analysis; the sample applied to the HPLC column
was normalized on the basis of the amount of total liver cytosolic
protein loaded onto the glutathione-agarose affinity column. The amount
of each GST subunit was estimated from the peak area at 214 nm, using
the following molar absorption coefficients
(
214): GSTA1, 29.5 x 104; GSTA2, 29.5 x 104; GSTA3, 31.1 x 104; GSTA4, 30.5 x 104; GSTA5, 31.1 x 104; GSTM1, 43.1 x 104; GSTM2, 44.1 x 104; and GSTP1, 30.2 x 104. | Northern Blotting |
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| Immunohistochemistry |
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| Statistical Analyses |
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| RESULTS |
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Consumption of Phytochemicals Causes Enhanced Detoxification of
AFB1-Dialdehyde in Livers of Male and Female Rats.
Table 1
shows that AFAR activity is increased in the livers of rats fed diets
containing BITC, CMRN, and I3C. CMRN produced a dramatically greater
increase in hepatic reductase activity than did either BITC or I3C. In
males, the increase in catalytic activity toward
AFB1-dialdehyde was estimated to be
400-fold
and in females, it was found to be
125-fold. By contrast, the
increased activity in livers from rats of either sex fed diets
containing BITC or I3C was between 5- and 7-fold. The synthetic
antioxidants EQ and BHA, which were supplemented in the diet at amounts
similar to the phytochemicals, appeared to be less potent inducers of
AFAR activity than CMRN; treatment with antioxidants caused increases
in reductase activity of between 10- and 110-fold in male rats and
between 5- and 20-fold in female rats. DEM, a GSH-depleting agent, was
a more effective inducer of AFAR activity in male rats than was BITC or
I3C, but it was not as effective as CMRN. The only compound that
appeared to be as effective as CMRN at inducing AFAR activity in male
rats was t-SO, a model inducer of phase II drug-metabolizing
enzymes; the dosing schedule for this drug differed significantly from
that used for the phytochemicals, and this must be recognized when
making comparisons.
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The relative increase in hepatic 2-CBA reductase activity produced by CMRN was greater than those observed with synthetic antioxidants. Male rats treated with BHA, EQ, or OPZ showed increases in 2-CBA reductase activity in the liver of 3.0-, 9.0-, and 2.3-fold, respectively, whereas female rats similarly treated showed increases of 2.2-, 9.6-, and 1.6-fold. The increase in reductase activity toward 2-CBA produced by CMRN was, however, comparable to those produced by the model inducers of drug-metabolizing enzymes DEM and t-SO; both of these increased 2-CBA reductase activity in the livers of male rats, but only t-SO caused a major increase in female rat liver.
The Ability of Phytochemical-containing Diets to Enhance Hepatic
Transferase Activity toward AFB1-8,9-Epoxide Is More Marked
in Male than in Female Rats.
Feeding rats diets that contained BITC, CMRN, or I3C resulted in a
significant increase in hepatic GST activity (Table 2)
. In males, the increase varied between
10- and 65-fold, and
although the increase was less marked in female rats, this is in part
due to the sexually dimorphic expression of GSTA5, the major
AFB1-metabolizing rat transferase subunit. It had
been established previously that the female rat possesses higher
constitutive hepatic levels of transferase activity toward epoxidated
AFB1 than the male (27)
. Consistent
with differences in the basal levels of the GSTA5 subunit in male and
female rat liver, an
11-fold difference in
AFB1-GSH-conjugating activity was observed
between the two sexes on control diet (Table 2)
. Despite the relatively
elevated basal GST activity toward AFB1 in female
rat liver, BITC, CMRN, and I3C further increased this activity between
1.8- and 2.6-fold.
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Regulation of AFAR and GSTA5 in Rat Liver by Phytochemicals and
Other Xenobiotics.
Western blotting was carried out to determine whether the increases in
hepatic reductase and transferase activities toward
AFB1 in the treated rats were due to elevation of
AFAR and GSTA5 protein. Western blotting showed that the control livers
from male and female rats contained levels of AFAR that were barely
detectable. However, large amounts of AFAR were observed in samples
from all of the animals treated with cancer chemopreventive agents
(Fig. 1)
. Consistent with previous studies, the amount of AFAR was increased
15-fold, as estimated by phosphorimaging, in male rats fed
EQ-containing diets (31)
. The phytochemicals BITC, CMRN,
and I3C were all found to increase the level of AFAR protein in liver
extracts. As might have been predicted from the data in Table 1
, the
CMRN-containing diet was shown to produce a dramatic 40-fold increase
in AFAR. By comparison, the BITC- and I3C-containing diets produced
just modest increases in the protein concentration. Increases of a
magnitude similar to those obtained with CMRN were observed in
t-SO-treated rats, whereas ß-NF treatment also increased
the content of AFAR significantly in male and female livers. In
agreement with the AKR activities presented in Table 1
, OPZ was found
to be a significantly better inducer of AFAR in livers of male rats
than in livers of female rats.
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Pleotropic Effects of Phytochemicals on Phase II Drug-metabolizing
Enzymes in Male and Female Rats.
To ascertain that the effects of BITC, CMRN, and I3C on drug metabolism
were not restricted to AFAR and GSTA5, Western blotting experiments
were performed using antibodies against other members of the AKR and
GST superfamilies, as well as those against NQO1. Antibodies against
rat aldehyde reductase, aldose reductase, 3
-hydroxysteroid
dehydrogenase, and
4-3-ketosteroid-5ß
reductase failed to provide any evidence that these proteins are
inducible in rat liver by BITC, CMRN, or I3C (data not shown). However,
probing the blots with a range of antibodies against class-
, -µ,
and -
GST showed that many of the rat transferase subunits are
responsive to the dietary additives used in this study. Among the
phytochemicals studied, CMRN proved a potent inducer of the class-
GSTP1 subunit (Fig. 1)
. The relative increases in the levels of the A5
and P1 polypeptides following treatment with different xenobiotics
suggest that these enzymes are co-induced by at least some of the
compounds investigated, such as EQ, t-SO, and ß-NF, but
not by others, such as I3C and PB.
Immunoblotting with antibodies against NQO1 showed that this protein is
present at higher levels in female rat livers than male rat livers
(Fig. 1)
. The amount of NQO1 was found to be increased significantly in
the livers of male and female rats fed diets containing either CMRN or
I3C. Little induction of NQO1 was apparent in hepatic cytosols of
either male or female rats fed BITC-containing diets. The synthetic
chemopreventive agents EQ and OPZ induced NQO1 in both sexes, whereas
induction by BHA appeared to be less pronounced in the livers of male
rats than in female rats. Similarly, induction of NQO1 by ß-NF is
less pronounced in the livers of male rats than in female rats.
Inducible Expression of AFAR, GST, and NQO in Different Zones of
the Liver.
In untreated animals of both sexes, the GSTA5 subunit and NQO1 were
localized to hepatocytes in the centrilobular areas, whereas GST P1-1
was confined to the biliary epithelium. Staining for AFAR was
indistinct but appeared in centrilobular areas in both sexes, with some
periportal staining in females. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated that
hepatocytes in the centrilobular, midzonal, and periportal regions, as
well as biliary epithelial cells, all have the capacity to respond to
chemopreventive agents and model inducers. The regions where induction
occurred were found to vary with the agent under investigation, and in
some cases with the enzyme being induced (Table 3)
. For most of the compounds examined, the pattern of induction was
similar in both sexes, albeit with some variation in intensity.
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Increased nuclear localization of the GSTA5 and GSTP1 subunits and NQO1 was apparent with some treatments. OPZ, EQ, DEM, and ß-NF were capable of inducing nuclear localization of all three proteins, whereas CMRN and t-SO affected only GST P1-1 and NQO1.
Induction by CMRN of Hepatic Carbonyl-reducing Enzymes Is Limited
to AFAR.
In view of the dramatic induction of hepatic AFAR protein by CMRN, it
was of interest to determine whether other carbonyl-reducing enzymes
might be inducible by this phytochemical. Hepatic cytosolic AKR
isoenzymes from male and female rats fed the control diet were
subjected to anion exchange chromatography, and both yielded a single
peak of 2-CBA reductase activity that was eluted by the final 250
mM NaCl step (Fig. 2)
. In cytosol from rats fed the CMRN-containing diet, this highly
anionic peak was essentially unchanged in size. However, a major
additional peak of 2-CBA activity that eluted from Q-Sepharose at
65
mM NaCl (between fractions 60 and 80) was found in the
livers from these treated rats. This additional peak coeluted with the
2-CBA reductase activity from rats fed EQ-containing diet, indicating
that it is chromatographically indistinguishable from authentic AFAR
protein (data not shown).
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CMRN Induction of GST Subunits in Rat Liver.
The immunoblotting described above showed that GSTA5 and GSTP1 are
highly inducible by CMRN. Examination of the Coomassie Blue-stained
SDS-PAGE gel suggested that the hepatic content of other transferases
might also be increased by this compound. HPLC was therefore used to
resolve a total of nine GST subunits (A1, A2, A3, A4, A5, M1, M2, M3,
and P1) from rat liver to determine whether these were inducible. As
shown in Fig. 3
, both male and female rats fed CMRN-containing diets showed relative
increases in A2, A3, A5, M1, and P1; in males the increases in A2, A3,
A5, M1, and P1 were 4.5-, 1.7-, 20-, 1.5-, and >60-fold, respectively,
whereas in females the increases in A2, A3, A5, M1, and P1 were 4.3-,
1.3-, 6.0-, 4.4-, and >80-fold. In these experiments, no obvious
increases in A1, A4, M2, or M3 were observed (Table 4)
.
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CMRN Inhibits AFB1 Tumorigenesis.
The prediction made from the short-term intervention study of
preneoplastic foci, that CMRN would block AFB1
hepatocarcinogenesis, was in part also borne out in the long-term
study. Although all animals exposed to AFB1 for
24 weeks developed multiple liver tumors, those that were pretreated
with CMRN were partly protected against tumor formation. However, the
livers of seven of the eight animals pretreated with CMRN were found to
have some macroscopic lesions (Table 6
, group 11). Although this finding was disappointing, the
liver tumors in the rats pretreated with CMRN were generally fewer in
number and smaller than in the rats that received no CMRN or received
CMRN only subsequent to AFB1 exposure.
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| DISCUSSION |
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Prevention of AFB1 Hepatocarcinogenesis by CMRN.
On the basis of the hypothesis that induction of phase II
drug-metabolizing enzymes confers resistance to
AFB1, a 2-week test feeding study was undertaken
to establish which phytochemicals are capable of inducing rat AFAR and
GSTA5. In this study, BITC, CMRN, and I3C were investigated as examples
of phytochemicals, present in garden cress, tonka beans, and Brussels
sprouts, respectively, that have been reported to increase GST activity
toward CDNB (12)
. As shown in Tables 1
and 2
, all of these
compounds when administered at 0.5% in RM1 diet increased the
catalytic capacity of rat liver to detoxify AFB1.
Among these compounds, CMRN was found to be particularly effective at
inducing AFAR and GSTA5, with the relative level of overexpression
being at least equal to that observed with the synthetic antioxidants
EQ and BHA.
The enzyme induction results suggested that feeding rats diets
containing CMRN should inhibit AFB1-initiated
liver cancer. Furthermore, the facts that CMRN is efficiently absorbed
by the liver and causes enzyme induction in several regions of the
liver (Table 3)
suggest that this phytochemical should be effective at
conferring resistance to AFB1. This hypothesis
was tested using both preneoplastic foci and tumors as biological end
points. Evidence suggests that the incidence of cholangiofibroma,
cholangiocarcinoma, and parenchymal liver cell tumors may be increased
in rats receiving 0.5% CMRN but not in rats receiving 0.2% CMRN
(47)
. In the intervention studies, it was therefore
decided to supplement the diet with 0.05% CMRN rather than the higher
dose used in the 2-week screening experiment. Rats fed diets containing
0.05% CMRN were found to possess between 3.0- and 6.0-fold increases
in hepatic AKR and GST activity toward AFB1. When
a 13-week feeding protocol was used, CMRN treatment prior to exposure
to AFB1 prevented the formation of hepatic
preneoplastic nodules (Table 5)
. In addition, when included in a
24-week feeding protocol, CMRN significantly reduced the final liver
tumor burden in both number and size at 50 weeks (Table 6)
. Both the
13- and 24-week feeding studies demonstrated that addition of CMRN to
the diet after a 6-week exposure to AFB1 was much
less effective at inhibiting tumorigenesis than when CMRN was used
prior to exposure to AFB1.
Induction of Multiple Phase II Drug-metabolizing Enzymes by CMRN.
Although the present study represents the first evidence that CMRN can
prevent AFB1 hepatocarcinogenesis, this
phytochemical has been shown previously to protect rodents against
PAHs. It has, for example, been reported that administration of CMRN
can prevent DMBA-initiated mammary carcinoma in the rat
(48)
. In addition, Wattenberg et al.
(49)
have shown that CMRN can prevent
benzo(a)pyrene from causing tumors of the forestomach in the
mouse.
In view of the ability of CMRN to confer resistance against multiple
chemical carcinogens, it is possibly not surprising that consumption of
diets containing this compound results in overexpression of a spectrum
of detoxication systems. The ability of CMRN to induce hepatic
detoxication proteins is not restricted to the
AFB1-metabolizing enzymes AFAR and those GSTs
containing the A5 subunit. In rat liver, CMRN was also found to
markedly increase the level of the GSTP1 polypeptide and NQO1.
Induction of the GST A2, A3, and M1 subunits was also observed (Fig. 3)
. The effect of CMRN on expression of drug-metabolizing enzymes in
rat mammary gland was not explored in the present study. Because GST
P1-1 efficiently detoxifies a number of epoxides formed from PAHs
(12)
, presumably overexpression of this transferase
accounts for the chemopreventive effects of CMRN against DMBA-initiated
mammary carcinoma in the rat. Furthermore, the GSTP1 subunit has been
shown to inhibit c-jun-NH2-kinase
(50)
, and the overexpression of this class-
transferase
may also influence signaling pathways in the mammary gland that
influence cell proliferation or apoptosis. Induction of NQO1 is likely
to protect against the cytotoxic effects of PAHs by inhibition of redox
cycling (51)
; although overexpression of NQO1 is not the
principal mechanism of CMRN-induced resistance against DMBA, it is
clear from gene knockout experiments that this reductase protects
against the redox-cycling agent menadione (52)
. It is
therefore concluded that CMRN not only increases the ability of the rat
to detoxify AFB1, but through GSTP1
overexpression, it increases resistance to PAHs.
Mechanism of Enzyme Overexpression Affected by CMRN.
Northern blotting showed that the steady-state levels of the mRNAs for
AFAR, GSTA5, GSTP1, and NQO1 are elevated in CMRN-treated liver,
indicating that overexpression is regulated primarily at the nucleic
acid level rather than at the protein level. It remains to be
established whether the increases in these mRNAs involve
transcriptional activation of the respective genes or stabilization of
their message. The rat AFAR gene has not been described to
date, and therefore the molecular mechanisms involved in its regulation
are not known. However, the promoters of GSTP1 and
NQO1 contain enhancers, designated GPEI (53)
and ARE (36)
, that have been demonstrated to respond to
the BHA metabolite t-BHQ (54)
. The 5'-flanking region of
GSTA5 also contains a putative ARE (55)
. The
presence of these enhancers suggests that the GSTA5,
GSTP1, and NQO1 genes are probably regulated at
the transcriptional level rather than by mRNA stabilization. It should
be noted that the 5'-flanking region of rat NQO1 contains an
XRE (36)
, and therefore this enhancer may contribute to
induction of the quinone oxidoreductase by some of the compounds, such
as ß-NF and I3C (12)
. The upstream region of
GSTP1 does not, however, contain an XRE, and therefore the
co-induction of GSTP1, NQO1, GSTA5 and AFAR proteins by CMRN is most
likely to occur through an ARE/GPEI (56)
. Further work is
required to resolve this issue and to determine which transcription
factors mediate induction by CMRN.
It is probable that CMRN has to be metabolized for it to act as an enzyme inducer, although it is unclear what modification is required to achieve maximal induction. CMRN is subject to species-specific oxidation by CYP, a process that results in variable amounts of 7-hydroxycoumarin, 3-hydroxycoumarin, and o-hydroxyphenylpropionic acid being produced by the rat and mouse (57) . Despite these species-specific differences in the biotransformation of CMRN, the benzopyrone is an excellent inducer of hepatic GST activity in both the rat and mouse (12) . Dinkova-Kostova et al. (58) have found that CMRN and its 7-hydroxylated metabolite are poor inducers of NQO activity in the murine hepatoma Hepa 1c1c7 cell line. By contrast, these workers have shown that 3-hydroxycoumarin is a potent inducer of NQO activity in Hepa 1c1c7 cells (58) . It was suggested that the ability of 3-hydroxycoumarin to undergo keto-enol tautomerism might be the chemical feature responsible for it acting as a highly effective inducing agent. Alternatively, once hydroxylated at the 3 position, the pyrone ring structure of CMRN can open to yield o-hydroxyphenylacetaldehyde, which in turn is converted in vivo to o-hydroxyphenylacetic acid (59) . At present, it is not known whether it is 3-hydroxycoumarin that serves as the ultimate inducing agent, or whether this is achieved by "downstream" ring-opened metabolites.
The data in Figs. 1
2
3
4
demonstrate that CMRN is an excellent inducer of
AFAR, GSTA2, GSTA5, GSTP1, and NQO1. As discussed above, evidence
suggests that a metabolite of CMRN probably transcriptionally activates
gene expression through the ARE and the related GPEI enhancer. Should
this hypothesis be correct, it is anticipated that the extraordinary
potency of CMRN as an inducing agent will be explained either because
its metabolism by CYP generates free radicals or because it is
converted into a strong Michael reaction acceptor (34
, 35
, 56)
. It has been pointed out that among phenylpropenoids that
are potential chemopreventive agents, the better enzyme inducers
possess o-hydroxyl groups on the aromatic ring (58
, 60)
. This chemical signature is present on ring-opened
metabolites formed from 3-hydroxycoumarin (59)
, and it is
possible that o-hydroxyphenylacetaldehyde and/or
o-hydroxyphenylacetic acid serve as effective inducing
agents because of this feature.
Specificity in Protein Induction Caused by Different
Chemopreventive Agents.
In addition to induction of AFAR, GSTA5, GSTP1, and NQO1 by CMRN,
treatment with EQ, BHA, and ß-NF also resulted in overexpression of
all four proteins. By contrast, other xenobiotics did not cause
coordinated overexpression of these proteins. For example, both BITC
and I3C induced AFAR and GSTA5, but neither phytochemical induced GSTP1
in hepatocytes. BITC proved to be a weak inducer of NQO1 in livers of
male rats and failed to induce NQO1 in livers of female rats. I3C
induced NQO1 in both male and female rat livers. The drug OPZ induced
AFAR and GSTA5, but it only modestly increased the amounts of GSTP1 and
NQO1. The model inducer t-SO also exhibited unexpected
specificity in that it was a potent inducer of AFAR but was relatively
ineffective at inducing NQO1. At present it is unclear why these
xenobiotics display selective induction of genes that are widely
regarded as being coordinately regulated. It appears likely that the
sequence context of different AREs affects their function. (See Ref.
61
for further discussion about this point.) Certainly,
the data shown in Fig. 1
indicate that in vivo the GPEI
enhancer in GSTP1 and the ARE enhancer in NQO1
are functionally distinct.
An aspect of chemoprevention that has attracted little attention is
that of variability in the site of action of different agents. The
immunohistochemistry shown in Fig. 5
(and summarized in Table 3
) revealed heterogeneity within the liver
where enzyme induction occurs. Many of the agents have been found to
act primarily in the centrilobular zone, with the more potent inducers,
such as CMRN, causing increased protein expression in the midzonal and
periportal regions of the liver. Several of the inducing agents,
however, affected increased protein expression primarily in the
periportal zone of the liver, with less induction being observed in the
centrilobular zone. Thus, dietary treatment with OPZ caused induction
of AFAR, GSTA5, GSTP1, and NQO1 almost exclusively in the centrilobular
region of the liver (Table 3)
. Treatment with CMRN also resulted in
increased expression of these proteins in the centrilobular region, but
induction was found to extend throughout the liver. By contrast,
induction of AFAR, GSTA5, GSTP1, and NQO1 by ß-NF and DEM was found
to be mostly limited to the periportal zone of the liver.
|
Sex-specific Effects of Chemopreventive Agents.
Over the past 10 years, a large number of studies into the mechanisms
of cancer chemoprevention have been reported. Many of the
investigations that have used rodents as experimental models have
focused on the male rat or male mouse. Few studies have considered that
the effects of chemopreventive agents might be sexually dimorphic.
Clearly, this is an important point that frequently is overlooked. In
the rat, the GSTA5 subunit is known to be expressed constitutively in
the livers of females at significantly higher levels than in males
(27)
. In the rat, GSTA5 is regulated by growth hormone and
testosterone (62)
, and the 5'-flanking region of the gene
contains a putative estrogen-responsive half-site (55)
.
The present report provides evidence that certain of the agents studied induce detoxication enzymes in a sex-specific fashion. The GSTA5 subunit was generally found to be more inducible in the livers of male rats than in female rats. In addition, it was noted that OPZ, I3C, BHA, BITC, PB, and DEM were significantly better at inducing AFAR in male rats than in female rats. Conversely, induction of NQO1 by CMRN, I3C, BHA, and ß-NF was found to be more marked in livers of female rats than male rats.
Induction of Human Phase II Drug-metabolizing Enzymes.
An increasing body of literature indicates that human detoxication
genes are inducible (13
, 56)
. However, relatively little
is known about the regulation of AFAR, GST, and NQO isoenzymes in
humans by phytochemicals. Two human AFAR cDNAs have been cloned
(40
, 63) , and although the expression of one of these
varies significantly in livers from different individuals
(63)
, it has not been established whether either is
inducible. In this context, it should be noted that among human AKRs,
dihydrodiol dehydrogenase has been found to be inducible in HepG2
hepatoma cells by ß-NF, ethacrynic acid, and t-BHQ (64)
and also in HT29 colon carcinoma cells by ethacrynic acid, t-BHQ, and
DEM (65)
. Induction of human AKRs by phytochemicals has
not been reported.
By contrast with AKR, more is known about regulation of GST. In primary
human hepatocytes, class-
and class-µ GST have been shown to be
inducible by 3-methylcholanthrene, PB, OPZ, and 1,2-dithiole-3-thione
(66)
. The first three of these inducing agents are
synthetic compounds, and although 1,2-dithiole-3-thione has been
reported to be present in cruciferous vegetables, this finding has been
disputed (67)
. Induction of these isoenzymes by BITC,
CMRN, or I3C has not been described, but the level of class-
GST has
been shown to be increased
30% in the colonic epithelium of
volunteers who consumed 300 g of Brussels sprouts daily for 7 days
(68)
.
ODwyer et al. (69)
reported a significant
increase in expression of phase II drug-metabolizing enzymes in the
colonic mucosa of patients who were placed on various doses of OPZ. The
cohort of patients investigated all had an increased risk of colorectal
cancer. Increases of up to 4-fold were noted in the expression of NQO1
in these individuals. Furthermore, an increase of 5.5-fold was noted in
the level of
-glutamylcysteine synthase in these patients. Together,
these results suggest that enhancement of detoxification and
antioxidant capacity by chemopreventive agents is feasible in the
clinical setting. Certainly, induction of these cytoprotective systems
by chemopreventive "blocking" agents is not a phenomenon unique to
rodents. The clinical value of such prophylactic strategies remains to
be established.
Concluding Comments.
This report describes the identification of phytochemicals that are
effective inducers of AFB1 detoxication enzymes.
The study showed that CMRN is highly effective at inducing not only
AFAR and GSTA5, but also certain other drug-metabolizing enzymes. On
the basis of this information, the hypothesis that enzyme induction by
CMRN would confer resistance to AFB1
tumorigenesis was tested in the rat. The results from dietary
intervention showed that CMRN consumption does indeed provide
protection against initiation of AFB1
hepatocarcinogenesis. The data presented in this report also reveal the
ability of different phytochemicals and synthetic drugs to induce
different enzymes in the liver in zone- and sex-specific fashions.
Furthermore, certain inducing agents possess the ability to cause
nuclear translocation of drug-metabolizing enzymes, thereby emphasizing
the complexity of gene-environment interactions.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
| FOOTNOTES |
|---|
1 Supported by Grant G9322073PA from the Medical
Research Council and contract FS1709 from Ministry of Agriculture,
Fisheries and Food. E. M. E. is a Beit Memorial Research
Fellow. S. A. C. holds a CASE Medical Research Council Ph.D.
studentship. ![]()
2 These authors contributed equally to this
work. ![]()
3 Present address: Department of Bioscience and
Biotechnology and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Strathclyde,
Glasgow G1 1XW, Scotland, United Kingdom. ![]()
4 To whom requests for reprints should be
addressed, at the Biomedical Research Centre, Ninewells Hospital and
Medical School, Level 5, University of Dundee, Dundee DD1 9SY,
Scotland, United Kingdom. E-mail: hayes{at}icrf.icnet.uk ![]()
5 The abbreviations used are: AFB1,
aflatoxin B1; CYP, cytochrome P450; GST, glutathione
S-transferase; GSH, reduced glutathione; AKR, aldo-keto
reductase; AFAR, aflatoxin B1 aldehyde reductase; OPZ,
(oltipraz) 4-methyl-5-pyrazinyl-3H-1,2-dithiole-3-thione;
BHA, butylated hydroxyanisole; EQ, (ethoxyquin)
6-ethoxy-1,2-dihydro-2,2,4-trimethylquinoline; PB,
phenobarbital; ß-NF, ß-naphthoflavone; I3C,
indole-3-carbinol; CMRN, coumarin; BITC, benzyl isothiocyanate; NQO,
NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase; ARE, antioxidant responsive element;
XRE, xenobiotic responsive element; DEM, diethyl maleate;
t-SO, trans-stilbene oxide; CDNB,
1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene; 2-CBA, 2-carboxybenzaldehyde; HPLC,
high-pressure liquid chromatography; GAPDH,
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase; PAH, polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbon; DMBA, dimethylbenz(a)anthracene; GGT,
-glutamyl transpeptidase; GPEI, glutathione
S-transferase P enhancer I; t-BHQ,
tert-butylhydroquinone. ![]()
6 V. P. Kelly, L. S. Ireland, E. M.
Ellis, and J. D. Hayes, unpublished results. ![]()
Received 8/23/99. Accepted 12/16/99.
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