Histochemical studies on the early proliferative lesion induced in the rat liver by aflatoxin

Abstract
Male inbred Fischer rats were fed a diet containing 5 p.p.m. aflatoxin for 1, 3, 4½ and 6 weeks at which times groups were killed for histological and histochemical study. Aflatoxin produced a scattered individual cell necrosis of parenchymal cells by 1 week. At 3 weeks small basophilic proliferative foci were seen which increased in size and abundance to 6 weeks. These foci showed starvation‐resistant glycogen, variable depletion of glucose‐6‐phosphatase, succinic dehydrogenase, aniline hydrogenase, membrane ATPase and acid phosphatase. At 6 weeks the foci showed the presence of gamma glutamyl transpeptidase and glucose‐6‐phosphate dehydrogenase. The basophilic foci were not preceded by other focal histological and histochemical change. The basophilic proliferative lesions are observed when an irreversible change has been induced in the liver. The role of such lesions in the histogenesis of hepatocellular carcinoma is discussed.

This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit: