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Comparative developmental and phenotypic properties of altered hepatocyte foci and hepatic tumors in rats
Authors:C Peraino  B A Carnes  F J Stevens  E F Staffeldt  J J Russell  A Prapuolenis  J A Blomquist  S D Vesselinovitch  R R Maronpot
Affiliation:Biological, Environmental, and Medical Research Division, Argonne National Laboratory, Illinois 60439.
Abstract:Previous investigations in this laboratory have provided evidence that histochemically detectable altered hepatocyte foci and hepatic tumors appearing in rats given a single neonatal treatment with a low dose of carcinogen followed by chronic dietary phenobarbital administration are developmentally independent. The present investigation further evaluates developmental relationships among these lesions. Altered hepatocyte foci were divided into two subclasses consisting of foci that were detectable by histochemical as well as by hematoxylin-eosin staining [designated hist(+)/morph(+) foci] and those foci that were detectable solely by histochemical staining [designated hist(+)/morph(-) foci]. The developmental and phenotypic properties of the hist(+)/morph(-) foci, hist(+)/morph(+) foci, and hepatic tumors were compared in rats initiated once neonatally with different doses of diethylnitrosamine and promoted with dietary phenobarbital from weaning. The morph(+) and morph(-) lesion subclasses were distinguishable on the basis of several developmental characteristics. Hist(+)/morph(+) foci were present at low frequency until at least 150 days after initiation. Although the development of hist(+)/morph(-) foci was essentially complete at that point, the rate of appearance of hist(+)/morph(+) increased significantly. The diethylnitrosamine dose response of the hist(+)/morph(+) foci followed the histochemical marker patterns of the tumor lesion class more closely than that of the hist(+)/morph(-) group. The rates of expression of the hist(+)/morph(+) foci increased with the increasing level of histochemical complexity, whereas the rates of expression of the hist(+)/morph(-) foci groups were inversely correlated to their complexity level. Although the average focus size or diameter in the hist(+)/morph(+) groups was greater than that of the hist(+)/morph(-) foci, the focus growth rates of morph(+) and morph(-) subsets matched for histochemical phenotype were comparable. The complexity level and individual marker distribution patterns of the hist(+)/morph(+) focus class were more similar to tumor patterns than to the distribution patterns of the hist(+)/morph(-) lesion class. The results suggest the following. (a) The development of lesion classes with successively greater deviation from normalcy does not occur via lineal progression from less to more deviated forms within a given lesion class. The three lesion classes appear to develop independently, with the developmental characteristics of each lesion class determined at the time of initiation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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