2-AAF-induced tumor development in nucleotide excision repair-deficient mice is associated with a defect in global genome repair but not with transcription coupled repair

2005 
Abstract The nucleotide excision repair (NER) pathway comprises two sub-pathways, transcription coupled repair (TCR) and global genome repair (GGR). To establish the importance of these separate sub-pathways in tumor suppression, we exposed mice deficient for either TCR ( Csb ), GGR ( Xpc ) or both ( Xpa ) to 300 ppm 2-acetylaminofluorene (in feed, ad libitum) in a unique comparative exposure experiment. We found that cancer proneness was directly linked to a defect in the GGR pathway of NER as both Xpa and Xpc mice developed significantly more liver tumors upon 2-AAF exposure than wild type or Csb mice. In contrast, a defect in TCR appeared to act tumor suppressive, leading to a lower hepatocellular tumor response in Xpa mice (tumor incidence of 25%) as compared to Xpc mice (53% tumor-bearing mice). The link between deficient GGR and tumor proneness was most pronounced in the liver, but this phenomenon was also found in the urinary bladder. As tumor induction by 2-AAF appeared almost exclusively dependent on a defect in GGR, we examined whether gene mutation induction in the non-transcribed lacZ locus could reliably predict tumor risk. Interestingly, however, short-term 2-AAF exposure induced lac Z mutant levels in Csb mice almost as high as those found in Xpa or Xpc mice. This indicates that lac Z mutant frequencies are not correlated with a specific DNA repair defect and eventual tumor outcome, at least not in the experimental design presented here.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    49
    References
    23
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []