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ToxSci Advance Access originally published online on March 14, 2006
Toxicological Sciences 2006 91(2):393-405; doi:10.1093/toxsci/kfj155
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© The Author 2006. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society of Toxicology. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Phenobarbital Induces Progressive Patterns of GC-Rich and Gene-Specific Altered DNA Methylation in the Liver of Tumor-Prone B6C3F1 Mice

Ammie N. Bachman*, Jennifer M. Phillips{dagger} and Jay I. Goodman*,1

* Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology and {dagger} Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824

Received January 3, 2006; accepted March 2, 2006

Altered DNA methylation contributes to tumorigenesis by affecting gene expression in a heritable fashion. Phenobarbital (PB) is a nongenotoxic rodent carcinogen which induces global hypomethylation and regions of hypermethylation in mouse liver. Liver tumor–sensitive (B6C3F1) and –resistant (C57BL/6) male mice were administered 0.05% (wt/wt) PB in drinking water for 2 or 4 weeks, and a 2-week recovery was included following each dosing period. DNA was isolated from liver (target) and kidney (nontarget) tissues. The methylation status of GC-rich regions of DNA was assessed via methylation-sensitive restriction digestion, arbitrarily primedpolymerase chain reaction, and capillary electrophoretic separation of products. PB-induced regions of altered methylation (RAMs) which carry forward from an early to a later time point are more likely to be mechanistically relevant as compared to those that do not. Twelve of 69 RAMs (17%) present in B6C3F1 liver at 2 weeks were also seen at 4 weeks, while only 1 of the 123 RAMs (< 1%) present in C57BL/6 liver was seen at 4 weeks. In the B6C3F1 mice, 57 unique (as compared to the C57BL/6) regions of altered hepatic methylation (RAMs), predominantly hypomethylation, were observed at 2 weeks, increasing to 86 at 4 weeks. Changes in methylation were largely reversible. Altered methylation in liver was highly dissimilar to that of kidney. Following 4 weeks PB, bisulfite sequencing revealed hypomethylation of Ha-ras in B6C3F1, but not C57BL/6, which correlated with increased gene expression. These data indicate that (1) progressive, nonrandom changes in methylation provide an epigenetic mechanism underlying the ability of PB to cause mouse liver tumorigenesis and (2) susceptibility to tumorigenesis is related inversely to the capacity to maintain normal patterns of methylation.

Key Words: DNA methylation; B6C3F1; phenobarbital; Ha-ras; epigenetic; liver.


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