Selenoprotein deficiency accelerates prostate carcinogenesis in a transgenic model
- 23 May 2006
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 103 (21) , 8179-8184
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0508218103
Abstract
Considerable animal and human data have indicated that selenium is effective in reducing the incidence of several different types of cancer, including that of the prostate. However, the mechanism by which selenium inhibits carcinogenesis remains unknown. One possibility is that dietary selenium influences the levels of selenium-containing proteins, or selenoproteins. Selenoproteins contain selenium in the form of selenocysteine and perform a variety of cellular functions, including antioxidant defense. To determine whether the levels of selenoproteins can influence carcinogenesis independent of selenium intake, a unique mouse model was developed by breeding two transgenic animals: mice with reduced selenoprotein levels because of the expression of an altered selenocysteine-tRNA (i6A-) and mice that develop prostate cancer because of the targeted expression of the SV40 large T and small t oncogenes to that organ [C3(1)/Tag]. The resulting bigenic animals (i6A-/Tag) and control WT/Tag mice were assessed for the presence, degree, and progression of prostatic epithelial hyperplasia and nuclear atypia. The selenoprotein-deficient mice exhibited accelerated development of lesions associated with prostate cancer progression, implicating selenoproteins in cancer risk and development and raising the possibility that selenium prevents cancer by modulating the levels of these selenoproteins.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- Selenium and Colorectal Adenoma: Results of a Pooled AnalysisJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 2004
- GPx-1 modulates Akt and P70S6K phosphorylation and Gadd45 levels in MCF-7 cellsFree Radical Biology & Medicine, 2004
- Bacteria-Induced Intestinal Cancer in Mice with DisruptedGpx1andGpx2GenesCancer Research, 2004
- Characterization of Mammalian SelenoproteomesScience, 2003
- Selenium supplementation, baseline plasma selenium status and incidence of prostate cancer: an analysis of the complete treatment period of the Nutritional Prevention of Cancer TrialBJU International, 2003
- Association between the GCG polymorphism of the selenium dependent GPX1 gene and the risk of young onset prostate cancerProstate Cancer and Prostatic Diseases, 2002
- Structure-Expression Relationships of the 15-kDa Selenoprotein GeneJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2000
- The C3(1)/SV40 T Antigen Transgenic Mouse Model of Prostate and Mammary CancerToxicologic Pathology, 1998
- Loss of heterozygosity of the human cytosolic glutathione peroxidase I gene in lung cancerCarcinogenesis: Integrative Cancer Research, 1994
- Recognition of UGA as a selenocysteine codon in Type I deiodinase requires sequences in the 3′ untranslated regionNature, 1991