Biogenic silica fibre promotes carcinogenesis in mouse skin
- 1 October 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in International Journal of Cancer
- Vol. 34 (4) , 519-528
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.2910340415
Abstract
Silica fibres derived from plants are common contaminants of human diet in certain regions of the world where oesophageal cancer reaches extremely high incidences. We show here that one of these types of fibre (derived from Phalaris, canariensis L) promotes the occurrence of tumours in the skin of mice initiated with a polycyclic carcinogen. Three experiments are described. In the first, the grain which bears these fibres was added to the diet. This did not result in any abnormality in any part of the gastrointestinal tract, but there was a significant induction of tumours in the skin around the mouth and nose; these were the areas of the body surface which most frequently came into contact with the grain. In the second experiment, the mice were separated from the grain by an intervening wire gauze barrier; a similar number of tumours appeared on initiated mice treated in this way. In this case, contact now occurred most frequently on the dorsal surface, which was rubbed against the gauze barrier, and it was on this surface that the tumours appeared. No tumours appeared if the grain was removed. In the third experiment, pure fibres were isolated from the surface of the grain and boiled in strong nitric acid so as to remove any organic material. When these acid‐cleaned fibres were applied to the initiated skin with light pressure, they promoted carcinogenesis in the same way as croton oil. In each experiment the majority of tumours produced were benign neoplasms, together with at least one squamous carcinoma. It seems possible that the size and shape of these fibres are the critical properties determining their promoting activity. Their mean diameter is 15 μm, their modal length close to 200 μm, and they are sharply pointed with a tip diameter of 0.5 μm.This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Silica-released macrophage factor that stimulates protein synthesis in fibroblastsBiochemical Society Transactions, 1984
- Grass leaf silicification: Natural selection for an inducible defense against herbivoresProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1983
- The characterisation of the nature of silica in biological systemsJournal of the Chemical Society, Chemical Communications, 1983
- Silicon Deposition in the Inflorescence Bristles and Macrohairs of Setaria italica (L.) Beauv.Annals of Botany, 1982
- The Ultrastructure and Analytical Microscopy of Silicon Deposition in the Aleurone Layer of the Caryopsis of Setaria italica (L.) Beauv.Annals of Botany, 1982
- The carcinogenicity of 15,16-dihydro-11-methyl-cyclopenta[a]phenanthren-17-oneBritish Journal of Cancer, 1979
- The epidemiology of cancer of the oesophagusNutrition and Cancer, 1978
- Growth of fibroblasts on linear and planar anchorages of limiting dimensionsExperimental Cell Research, 1973
- FIBROBLAST ANCHORAGE IN CARCINOGENESIS BY FIBRESThe Lancet, 1973
- The Function and Mechanism of Promoters of CarcinogenesisCRC Critical Reviews in Toxicology, 1973