• 1 January 1981
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 66  (5) , 907-912
Abstract
The induction of adenocarinomas in distal colons of noninbred female Swiss Webster white mice by 1,2-dimethylhydrazine (DMH) is preceded by the development of hyperplasia of mucosal glands, which includes absolute increases in the total number of cells and labeled cells per crypt. This experiment was designed to determine if these changes are reversible. Groups of noninbred female Swiss Webster white mice were given weekly injections of DMH, 20 mg/kg body wt, for 1-20 wk and killed 1-52 wk after treatment. Animals were pulsed with tritiated thymidine ([3H]dThd) for 1 h and autoradiographs were made of sections of distal colon. The total number of cells per crypt and number of [3H]dThd-labeled cells per crypt were significantly elevated in animals killed 1 wk after termination of treatment. With increasingly longer periods of recovery, baseline values were reached rapidly in animals given 1 or 2 treatments; reduction in cells was slower and less complete in animals given 8 or more treatments. The latency before tumors developed was inversely related to the number of treatments. Animals that received 20 treatments developed more tumors per tumor-bearing animal than did animals given fewer treatments but allowed to survive for long periods. Once induced changes in the mucosa progress to a threshold level, mucosal glands are apparently irreversibly enlarged and the development of tumors is irrevocable.