ToxSci Advance Access originally published online on June 16, 2006
Toxicological Sciences 2006 93(1):34-40; doi:10.1093/toxsci/kfl041
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PCB 153, a Non-dioxinlike Tumor Promoter, Selects for ß-Catenin (Catnb)Mutated Mouse Liver Tumors




* Department of Toxicology, University of Tuebingen, 72074 Tuebingen, Germany;
Graduate Center for Nutritional Sciences, and
Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Molecular Genetics, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506;
Occupational and Environmental Health, College of Public Health, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242-5000; and ¶ Federal Institute for Risk Assessment, Center for Experimental Toxicology, 14195 Berlin, Germany
1 To whom correspondence should be addressed at Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Department of Toxicology, University of Tübingen, Wilhelmstrasse 56, 72074 Tübingen, Germany. Fax: +49-7071-29-2273. E-mail: albrecht.buchmann{at}uni-tuebingen.de.
Received April 11, 2006; accepted June 15, 2006
| ABSTRACT |
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Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are ubiquitous environmental toxicants which act as liver tumor promoters in rodents and can be classified as either dioxin-like or non-dioxin (phenobarbital [PB])like inducers of cytochrome P-450. Since we have previously shown that tumor promotion by PB leads to clonal outgrowth of ß-catenin (Catnb)mutated but not Ha-rasmutated mouse liver tumors, we were interested to know whether the non-dioxinlike tumor promoter 2,2',4,4',5,5'-hexachlorobiphenyl (PCB 153) shows the same selective pressure during tumor promotion. Male B6129SF2/J mice were given a single injection of N-nitrosodiethylamine (90 mg/kg body weight) at 9 weeks of age, followed by 39 weeks of treatment with PCB 153 (20 biweekly ip injections of 300 µmol/kg body weight) or corn oil as a control. Animals were killed 15 weeks after the last PCB 153 injection and liver tumors were identified by immunohistochemical staining of glutamine synthetase (GS) and analyzed for Catnb, Ha-ras, and B-raf mutations. Quantitative analyses revealed that GS-positive tumors were much larger and more frequent in livers from PCB 153treated mice than in control animals, whereas GS-negative tumors were similar in both groups. Almost 90% (34/38) of all tumors from PCB 153treated animals contained Catnb mutations, which compares to
45% (17/37) of tumors in the control group. Ha-ras and B-rafmutated liver tumors were rare and not significantly different between treatment groups. These results clearly indicate that PCB 153 strongly selects for Catnb-mutated, GS-positive liver tumors, which is similar to the known action of PB, a prototypical tumor promoter in rodent liver. Key Words: polychlorinated biphenyls; tumor promotion; mouse liver; ß-catenin; Catnb mutations.
| INTRODUCTION |
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Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are chemically stable, highly lipophilic, and persistent environmental toxicants. Although their production in Europe and in North America was banned more than two decades ago, PCBs are still being used in many parts of the world and are present in the human food chain worldwide (Fiedler, 2001
PCBs are assumed to act as tumor promoters in rodent liver by stimulating the clonal outgrowth of initiated cells, and there is experimental evidence that different types of tumor-promoting agents may act on different initiated cell populations which are characterized by defined genotypes and their corresponding phenotypes. Experimentally induced liver tumors from mice are known to harbor activating mutations in largely three different genes, Catnb, Ha-ras, or B-raf, which is in contrast to the situation in rats where the genetic lesions are less well understood. The types of mutations observed in mouse liver tumors strongly depend on the treatment regimen used for their induction. In mice treated with a single injection of liver carcinogens, such as N-nitrosodiethylamine (DEN), a high percentage of liver tumors possess mutations in Ha-ras (Buchmann et al., 1991a
; Maronpot et al., 1995
) or B-raf (Jaworski et al., 2005
), a downstream target in the Ras signal transduction pathway. By contrast, if liver tumors are induced in initiation-promotion experiments with PB, a prototypical tumor promoter in rodent liver,
80% of them contain activating mutations in the Catnb gene (coding for the oncoprotein ß-catenin), indicating that PB strongly selects for this type of initiated liver cells (Aydinlik et al., 2001
; Calvisi et al., 2004
). Other liver tumor promoters such as the peroxisome proliferator WY-14,643, however, primarily select for cell populations with other types of gene mutations (Moennikes et al., 2003
). Microarray analysis of global gene expression patterns in Ha-ras and Catnb-mutated liver tumors revealed characteristic differences which may be used for diagnostic purposes to identify either of the two tumor populations (Stahl et al., 2005
). For example, Catnb-mutated tumors strongly overexpress glutamine synthetase (GS) and several cytochrome P-450 isoforms, which, by contrast, are almost entirely absent in Catnb wild-type, presumably Ha-ras or B-rafmutated, tumors (Loeppen et al., 2002
, 2005
).
Human exposure scenarios generally include complex mixtures of different PCB congeners, dioxins and furans, raising the question of whether the individual constituents exert additive, synergistic, or possibly antagonistic effects (Schwarz and Appel, 2005
). So far, most initiation-promotion experiments with individual PCBs or mixtures have been performed in rats and there is only a limited number of studies with mice (for a review, see Glauert et al., 2001
). Mice would offer a valuable tool to address the question of whether dioxin-like and non-dioxinlike PCBs act on the same or different target cell populations since distinct tumor types with characteristic gene mutations can be discriminated. Previous studies with 2,3,7,8-tetrachloro-dibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) have shown that liver tumors from TCDD-treated mice contain Ha-ras mutations at a high frequency (Watson et al., 1995
), whereas Catnb-mutated liver tumors are rarely detectable (Devereux et al., 1999
). Since no comparable data are available with respect to PCBs, we analyzed the effects of 2,2',4,4',5,5'-hexachlorobiphenyl (PCB 153), a non-dioxin (PB)like PCB, on Catnb, Ha-ras, and B-raf mutations in liver tumors that were induced in B6129SF2/J mice according to an initiation-promotion protocol. This study provides insight into the selection processes involved in liver tumor promotion by individual PCB congeners.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Chemicals.
PCB 153 was synthesized, purified, and characterized as previously described (Schramm et al., 1985
Induction of liver tumors.
Male B6129SF2/J mice were treated at 9 weeks of age with a single ip injection of DEN (90 mg/kg body weight). After 2 weeks of recovery, one group of mice received 20 biweekly ip injections of PCB 153 (dissolved in corn oil; 300 µmol/kg bodyweight per injection). Mice of the control group were given 27 biweekly ip injections of the solvent corn oil. At the age of 64 weeks (15 weeks after the last PCB 153 injection), animals were sacrificed and the livers were isolated and stored at 80°C.
Immunohistochemical analyses.
For quantification of liver tumors, frozen liver sections (10 µm) were stained immunohistochemically for GS, as recently described (Loeppen et al., 2002
), using a primary anti-GS polyclonal antibody (1:1000; Sigma-Aldrich, Taufkirchen, Germany), a secondary peroxidase-conjugated anti-rabbit IgG antibody (1:20; Dako, Hamburg, Germany), and 3-amino-9-ethylcarbazole/H2O2 as substrates.
Quantification of GS-positive and GS-negative liver tumors was performed by projecting the GS-stained sections onto a digitizer screen (10- to 50-fold magnification), and the outlines of the sections and of GS-altered tumor transections were traced with a cursor and stored in a computer memory (Schwarz et al., 1989
). The data were used to calculate the number of GS-positive and GS-negative tumors per square centimeter of liver tissue, the area fraction of liver tissue occupied by liver tumors, as well as the two-dimensional size class distribution of liver tumors of the two phenotypes.
Mutation analyses.
Serial liver sections were prepared and stained for the marker enzyme GS as described above. Thereafter, tissue samples were punched out with sharpened cannulas from GS-positive and GS-negative tumor transections, and the DNA regions containing the hotspot sites for mutations in the Ha-ras (codon 61), B-raf (codon 624), and Catnb gene (several codons in exon 3) were amplified by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using standard protocols (for PCR primers see Table 1). PCR products of the Ha-ras and B-raf gene were screened for mutations by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP). The known hotspot mutations at Ha-ras codon 61 either generate new or delete available restriction enzyme recognition sites (for details, see Jaworski et al., 2005
) which can be detected by the following enzymes (mutated codon 61 sequences in parentheses): Hpy188III (AAA), TaqI (CGA), XbaI (CTA), BspHI (CAT). Mutations at the hotspot site in codon 624 of the B-raf gene (mutated sequence GAG) lead to loss of a TspRI recognition site. PCR products were digested with the respective restriction enzymes (New England Biolabs, Frankfurt, Germany, or Fermentas, St Leon-Roth, Germany) and separated on 10% polyacrylamide gels. Each mutation detected was verified by classical dideoxynucleotide sequencing of the PCR products (custom sequencing by SeqLab, Goettingen, Germany). Mutations in the Catnb gene, which are located at various positions in exon 3, were analyzed by dideoxynucleotide sequencing of the PCR products (SeqLab), and the presence of mutations was confirmed by at least one independent PCR sequencing analysis. In all cases, PCR primers were used for the sequencing reactions.
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Statistical analyses.
Data on quantification of GS-altered liver tumors were analyzed by the nonparametric Mann-Whitney test, and intergroup differences in mutation prevalences were analyzed by Fisher exact test using GraphPad InStat (V3.06) (GraphPad Software, Inc., San Diego, CA).
| RESULTS |
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To analyze the tumor-promoting effect of PCB 153, liver sections from DEN-initiated mice that were subsequently treated with either PCB 153 or corn oil (control) were stained for the marker enzyme GS, and the total tumor response (GS-positive and GS-negative tumors, see Fig. 1A) was quantified by the use of a computer-assisted analysis system. As shown in Figure 1B, the area fraction occupied by GS-altered liver tumors was significantly higher in PCB 153treated animals than in controls, and the number of tumor transections per square centimeter of liver tissue was also increased by PCB 153 treatment. Stratification of tumor transections into different diameter size classes revealed that PCB 153 treatment caused a marked shift toward higher size classes when compared to corn oil controls (Fig. 1C), demonstrating a strong tumor-promoting activity of PCB 153 in the present study.
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We have previously shown that the liver tumor promoter PB strongly selects for Catnb-mutated, GS-positive liver lesions but not for Ha-rasmutated liver cell populations (Aydinlik et al., 2001
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Since tissue samples for mutation analysis were taken from GS-stained liver sections, we were able to directly correlate mutations with the GS-phenotype of tumors. In accordance with previous observations (Cadoret et al., 2002
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| DISCUSSION |
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PCB 153 is a non-dioxinlike PCB congener which is known to act as a tumor promoter in rodent liver and causes enzyme induction patterns similar to the prototypical tumor promoter PB (Buchmann et al., 1986
Many of the effects of non-dioxinlike PCBs, such as PCB 153, are assumed to be mediated via activation of the nuclear receptor CAR (Sanders et al., 2005
; Waxman, 1999
). It has recently been shown in a study with CAR null mice that this receptor is required for the tumor-promoting action of PB (Yamamoto et al., 2004
), and CAR-mediated pleiotropic transcriptional responses may drive the processes underlying selection for Catnb-mutated, GS-positive liver tumors by PB (Stahl et al., 2005
). Interestingly, CAR is expressed in Catnb-mutated liver tumors (Hailfinger et al., 2006
) but downregulated in Ha-rasmutated liver tumors which are refractory to promotion by PB (Stahl et al., 2005
). In analogy to PB, CAR activation may also be causally involved in tumor promotion by PCB 153 and other non-dioxinlike congeners. Dioxin-like PCBs, by contrast, act primarily via binding to the AhR, similar to dioxins and furans, and thereby activate a different set of cellular responses. It is therefore reasonable to assume that tumor promotion by this class of PCBs relies on other cellular targets which drive selection for other types of initiated cell populations. This assumption is supported by recent observations showing that TCDD, the most potent AhR agonist, selects primarily for liver tumors containing Ha-ras mutations (Watson et al., 1995
) but not for Catnb-mutated liver tumors (Devereux et al., 1999
), which is in striking contrast to our present observations with regard to PCB 153.
The question of whether dioxin-like and non-dioxinlike PCBs act on the same or different target cell population is important for our understanding of interactive biological effects of PCBs and other organohalogen compounds present in complex mixtures (Schwarz and Appel, 2005
). Recent studies have indicated that mixtures of PCBs may produce additive, synergistic, or even antagonistic tumor-promoting effects when compared to the individual compounds alone. For example, additive or synergistic effects have been shown for combinations of PCB 77 and PCB 52 (Sargent et al., 1991
), PCB 153 and PCB 126 (Bager et al., 1995
), PCB 105 and PCB 153 (Haag-Gronlund et al., 1998
), or PCB 153 and mixtures containing PCB 126 and TCCD (Van der Plas et al., 1999
). Other studies, however, have described antagonistic effects for combinations of PCB 153 and PCB 126 (Dean et al., 2002
; Haag-Gronlund et al., 1998
), PCB 105 and PCB 126 (Haag-Gronlund et al., 1998
), or PCB 77 and PCB 153 (Berberian et al., 1995
; Tharappel et al., 2002
). Although there may be several different explanations for such interactive effects, an attractive hypothesis is that different congeners act on distinct subpopulations of initiated target cells, e.g., carrying either Catnb or Ha-ras mutations. Based on theoretical considerations one would expect that PCBs stimulating different populations of initiated cells produce additive effects when coadministered since they activate independent pathways in parallel. When acting on one and the same target cell population, however, mixtures of PCBs collectively feed into the same pathway, which would cause an increase in the effective total dose. In this case, synergistic effects might occur since liver tumor promoters often show nonlinear dose relationships with overproportional effects at higher doses of exposure (for review, see Schwarz, 1995
, and references therein). On the other hand, non-dioxinlike PCBs may inhibit proliferation of the target cell population of dioxin-type compounds (e.g., see discussion in Schwarz and Appel, 2005
), which would result in less than additive effects after coexposure. Such considerations are not only relevant for our understanding of basic mechanisms but may also have important implications for risk assessment of PCB mixtures present in the human environment. Studies addressing this issue are currently under way in our laboratory.
In summary, we have identified Catnb-mutated, GS-positive liver tumors as the primary target for the promoting action of PCB 153 in mice. The types of gene mutations selected for by dioxin-like PCBs are not yet known but may be similar to those observed in liver tumors from TCDD-treated mice which largely harbor Ha-ras mutations (Watson et al., 1995
). Therefore, further analyses are required with regard to selection processes by dioxin-like PCBs to create a firm scientific basis for elaboration of possible interactive effects of complex mixtures of PCBs and other liver tumorpromoting agents.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We acknowledge the excellent technical assistance of Elke Zabinsky. This work was financially supported by the Federal Institute for Risk Assessment, Berlin, Germany, the National Institutes of Health (ES 07380, ES 013661), the Department of Defense (DAMD 17-02-1-0241), and the Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station. The financial support of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation is also gratefully acknowledged.
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A transversion at the first base of codon 61 leads to loss of an Hpy188III recognition site (*). (B) Catnb mutations within exon 3 were analyzed by direct sequencing of PCR products. Two examples containing a codon 33 or codon 41 mutation are shown. (C) RLFP (left) and sequence analysis (right) of B-raf codon 624 mutations. The hotspot mutation at codon 624 leads to loss of a TspRI recognition site (*). Note that mutations in all genes were heterozygous in nature. M, size marker; mut., mutated sample; wt., wild-type sample; (-), undigested control.
