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Carcinogenesis |
Department of Environmental Medicine, National Institute of Public Health, 0403 Oslo [J. E. P., I-L. S., T. H., E. N., J. A.], and Department of Pathology, Ullevål University Hospital, N-0407 Oslo [E. M. L.], Norway
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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ACF, putative preneoplastic lesions in the colon of carcinogen-treated rodents, have been used as a short-term bioassay to evaluate the role of nutritional components and chemopreventive agents at an early stage of colon carcinogenesis (8) . They are scored by light microscopic examination of the mucosal surface and have also been identified in patients with sporadic colorectal cancer and patients with FAP (9) . Although ACF share many morphological, genetic, and biochemical features with colonic tumors (7 , 10) , there is not a simple association between ACF formation and tumorigenesis. In carcinogen-treated rodents, a negative correlation between ACF formation and tumor formation (11) and a discrepancy between distribution of ACF and distribution of tumors (12) is even reported. In carcinogen-treated rodents and patients with sporadic colorectal cancer, the number of tumors is minuscule compared with the large number of ACF, indicating that only a very small fraction of ACF progresses to the stage of a tumor (9 , 11) . This is consistent with the observation that a large fraction of ACF is hyperplastic whereas only a small fraction of ACF shows dysplasia, a hallmark of malignant potential (9 , 13) . In contrast, most ACF in FAP patients are dysplastic, and their histopathology resembled that of the numerous adenomas developing (9) . It has been proposed that only the dysplastic ACF progress to adenomas and adenocarcinomas (7) and that these lesions are closely related to APC mutations. In AOM-treated rats, small dysplastic lesions undetectable as ACF by surface examination and with ß-catenin gene mutations have been described in histopathological sections (14) . Such mutations were also observed in rat and mouse colonic tumors (15 , 16) . Increased expression of ß-catenin has been reported in colonic tumors of AOM-treated mice and in spontaneous intestinal tumors of Min/+ mice (17) .
Contrary to the hypothesis that ACF are preneoplastic lesions, we did not observe spontaneous formation of such classical ACF in the colon of Min/+ mice (18) , although we demonstrated preliminarily that classical ACF may be formed in AOM-treated Min/+ mice (19) . However, in untreated Min/+ mice we discovered small lesions of a different type, which we denoted ACFMin. In contrast to classical ACF, these lesions were not elevated above the surrounding mucosa, and their detection was totally dependent on methylene blue staining and transillumination. ACFMin exhibited dysplastic crypts similar to those found in adenomas. Also, the C57Bl/6J background of Min/+ mice is susceptible to AOM-induced ACF formation (20) .
The aim of the present work was to monitor the development of classical ACF and ACFMin in the colon of AOM-treated Min/+ mice to evaluate their role as potential precursors of adenomas. To ensure a large tumor outcome, AOM was given at weeks 1 and 2 after birth, when the Min/+ mice are particularly susceptible to carcinogens (21) . The morphological relationship between the lesions was examined by histopathology and expression of ß-catenin as determined by immunohistochemistry.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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AOM Treatment.
AOM from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, MO) was dissolved in 0.9% NaCl. Min/+ mice or their +/+ littermates were given 5 mg/kg body weight AOM s.c. at weeks 1 and 2 after birth, when the animals were particularly susceptible to carcinogens (21)
. Other groups of mice received similar volumes of the vehicle 0.9% NaCl. The mice were killed by cervical dislocation at 7 or 11 weeks of age.
Scoring of Classical ACF, ACFMin, and Tumors.
The colons were removed, rinsed in ice-cold PBS, slit open longitudinally, and fixed flat between wet (PBS) filter papers for 48 h in 10% neutral buffered formalin prior to 30-s staining with 0.2% methylene blue (George T. Gurr Ltd., London, United Kingdom) dissolved in the same formalin solution. At least 24 h after staining, the mucosa was examined by transillumination in an inverse LM (18)
. Criteria used to identify AC constituting classical ACF were their increased size, bright blue staining, slightly elevated appearance from the surrounding mucosa, and often a more elongated shape of the luminal opening. The size of classical ACF was scored as focal crypt multiplicity (AC/classical ACF). Criteria used to identify aberrant crypts constituting ACFMin were their increased size, bright blue staining, and flat appearance hidden in the surrounding mucosa. Because the ACFMin were not observed as elevated structures, their bright blue staining observed with transillumination was essential for identification. The size of ACFMin was scored as AC/ACFMin. Lesions with more than 12 aberrant crypts were scored as tumors, and their diameters were scored with an eyepiece graticule. The relationship between tumor diameter (d) and crypt multiplicity (c) was empirically determined to be: c = 0.5 x d2.
Scanning Electron Microscopy.
Areas with mucosal lesions, identified by LM surface examination of whole-mount colon preparations, were dissected, washed in PBS, and dehydrated in a graded series of ethanol from 70100%, before critical point drying (Balzers Union, Balzers, Liechtenstein) from CO2. The dried specimens were oriented and mounted on stubs under a stereomicroscope and then sputter-coated with platinum. SE was carried out using a JSM 840 SEM [Japan Electron Optical Laboratory (JEOL), Tokyo, Japan] operated at 15 keV.
Histopathological Examination.
Areas with mucosal lesions, identified by LM surface examinations of whole-mount colon preparations, were dissected, embedded in paraffin wax, cut in parallel with the mucosal surface, and stained with H&E.
Immunohistochemistry.
Paraffin-embedded formalin fixed sections were prepared; deparaffinized; and rehydrated in xylene, graded alcohol, and water. The endogenous peroxidase activity was blocked by incubating the sections in 0.44% hydrogen peroxide for 30 min at room temperature. After the sections were blocked in normal goat serum for 20 min, they were incubated over night at 4°C with mouse monoclonal anti-ß-catenin antibody (Transduction Laboratories, Lexington, KY). Then the sections were incubated with goat antimouse antibody and ABC-AP reagent according to the manufacturers instructions (Vectorstain ABC-AP kit; Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA). Applying 3,3'-diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride containing 0.075% of hydrogen peroxide for 10 min showed peroxidase activity. The sections were stained with hematoxylin for 10 s and mounted with coverslips.
To reduce unspecific coloring we also tried an avidin/biotin blocking kit (Vector Laboratories) to quench the endogenous biotin/avidin and mouse-on-mouse blocking from Vector M.O.M. immunodetection kit (Vector Laboratories). None of these treatments improved the ß-catenin staining or reduced background coloring and were therefore not included in the protocol.
Statistical Analysis.
We used a two-way ANOVA (SigmaStat software; Jandel Scientific, Erkrath, Germany), after rank transformation of the data attributable to their non-normal distribution, in order to test the following null hypotheses: (a) there is no change from week 7 to 11; and (b) there is no effect of gender. The Bonferroni all pairwise multiple comparison procedure was used to isolate the groups that were different. The Mann-Whitney rank order test was used to compare two groups. A P < 0.05 was considered significant.
| RESULTS |
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24 h in formalin. Surprisingly, the dysplastic lesions in these preparations displayed both cytoplasmic and nuclear accumulation of ß-catenin (data not shown), indicating that nuclear immunostaining of ß-catenin was dependent on the duration of formalin fixation.
In the SEM, classical ACF were easily observed as elevated lesions (Fig. 2A)
with similar ultrastructure as the surrounding epithelium, including the presence of goblet cells. In contrast, ACFMin with few crypts displayed enlarged crypts with a flat appearance (Fig. 2B)
. Large ACFMin had enlarged and swollen crypts still with a relative flat appearance (Fig. 2C)
. ACFMin had less goblet cells compared with the background epithelium (Fig. 2C)
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56% of the ACFMin at week 7 had grown to the size of a tumor at week 11. With this presumed association between ACFMin growth and tumor formation, the ACFMin (Fig. 3B)
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| DISCUSSION |
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Contrary to what was reported for tumors of Min/+ mice (17) , we did not see significant nuclear immunostaining of ß-catenin in the dysplastic lesions. This was probably related to the long-term formalin fixation applied in the present study, because nuclear immunostaining of ß-catenin was indeed confirmed in dysplastic lesions from an additional experiment where the preparations were fixed no longer than 24 h. This is in concurrence with a previous study demonstrating that the immunohistochemical detection of nuclear ß-catenin in colorectal tumors may be dependent on the method of fixation (22) .
The fact that AOM treatment led to the formation of ACFMin in both Min/+ mice and in +/+ mice indicated that these lesions are general precursors of adenomas in the colon. Although the ACFMin and tumors in both Min/+ mice and in +/+ mice were characterized by altered ß-catenin accumulation, the initiating mechanisms induced by AOM might be different in the two genotypes. In Min/+ mice, which harbor only one intact Apc allele, it is likely that the formation of ACFMin is initiated by the inactivation of the remaining wild-type Apc allele, leaving the crypt cell with lost Apc function. Such a mechanism, which implies that the Min/+ mice are more vulnerable than +/+ mice to AOM treatment, is consistent with the 50100-fold higher frequency of ACFMin observed in Min/+ mice than in +/+ mice at week 7. Accordingly, the tumor frequency at week 11 was
100-fold higher in Min/+ mice than in +/+ mice. Furthermore, genetic analyses of lesions from untreated Min/+ mice (5, 6, 7)
and Min/+ mice treated with N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea (23)
suggest that intestinal tumorigenesis in these animals are dependent on somatic events that lead to the inactivation of both Apc alleles. On the other hand, in AOM-treated +/+ mice, which harbor two intact Apc alleles, it is more likely that ß-catenin gene mutation rather than "two hits" at the Apc locus is the main cause of lost ß-catenin control. This speculation accords with results from other studies in wild-type rodents. Interestingly, the morphological feature of ACFMin appears identical to the histologically altered crypts with macroscopically normal-like appearance recently identified in early rat colon carcinogenesis induced by AOM (14)
. Histologically altered crypts with macroscopically normal-like appearance, which could not be distinguished from normal adjacent crypts in whole-mount preparations examined by surface microscopy, were characterized by altered ß-catenin control and frequent ß-catenin gene mutations. Such alterations in ß-catenin were also observed in colonic tumors from rat and mouse (15, 16, 17)
. Additional genetic analyses of ACFMin in Min/+ mice and +/+ mice are required to elucidate the mechanisms for their altered ß-catenin accumulation.
We described previously ACFMin in the colon of untreated Min/+ mice as flat structures that could not be recognized in the SEM (21) . In the present study, we could identify large ACFMin by scanning electron microscopy probably because the lesions had developed large, swollen crypts that were slightly elevated upon expansion in the mucosa. Disrupted Apc control of the ß-catenin/Tcf pathway, a signal that is essential for the maintenance of the proliferative compartments of the intestine during embryogenesis (24) , may explain the immature (dysplastic) appearance of crypt cells constituting ACFMin. The relative flat appearance of ACFMin could be a result of disrupted Apc control of the cell cycle (25) and cell anchoring (26) , as well as disrupted Apc-driven migration (27) and apoptosis (28) . Furthermore, ACFMin resemble a subset of ACF, the dysplastic ACF, that are described previously as potential precursors of adenomas in rodent and human colon carcinogenesis (7 , 10 , 13 , 29) . Interestingly, these dysplastic ACF, which are characterized by their larger size (13 , 29) , accord with the fast growing ACFMin in our study. If these dysplastic ACF initially possess a flat morphology like small ACFMin, they might not be identified by conventional ACF scoring. However, at later stages they might be scored, as slightly elevated structures with dysplasia, like large ACFMin.
The induction of classical ACF by AOM was apparently not affected by Apc status because the number of these lesions was approximately the same in Min/+ and +/+ mice, and because they displayed normal ß-catenin expression. The classical ACF in our experiment resemble the previously described hyperplastic ACF, which are not assumed to be precursors of adenomas (9) . These hyperplastic lesions, which constitute the majority of ACF, are characterized by mutations in ras (7 , 9 , 30) rather than in Apc (7) or ß-catenin (14) . These lesions are frequent in tumor resistant mice treated with AOM (31) and in non-neoplastic colonic disease (27) .
In conclusion, we identified two distinct populations of altered crypts, ACFMin and classical ACF, in the colon of Min/+ mice after AOM treatment. Apparently, these populations represent separate directions of development already from the monocryptal stage. The ACFMin, which resemble the dysplastic ACF described previously, demonstrated a continuous development from the monocryptal stage to adenoma with fast crypt multiplication and altered control of ß-catenin. At the initial stage, the dysplastic lesions were flat structures hidden in the surrounding mucosa and therefore not detectable as ACF by conventional methods. In contrast, the classical ACF, which resemble the hyperplastic ACF as described in the literature, were characterized by slow growing crypts with normal ß-catenin expression, and they were probably not related to tumorigenesis. Additional studies are warranted to characterize the phenotypic and genotypic features of both types of ACF and their relationship to colonic carcinogenesis in FAP as well as in sporadic colorectal cancer.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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1 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed, at Department of Environmental Medicine, National Institute of Public Health, P.O. Box 4404 Nydalen, 0403 Oslo, Norway. Phone: 47-22-04-22-00; Fax: 47-22-04-22-43; E-mail: jan.alexander{at}folkehelsa.no ![]()
2 The abbreviations used are: FAP, familial adenomatous polyposis; AOM, azoxymethane; ACF, aberrant crypt foci; Min, multiple intestinal neoplasia; Apc, adenomatous polyposis coli; LM, light microscope; SEM, scanning electron microscope. ![]()
Received 11/28/00. Accepted 4/30/01.
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