Oxidative Damage to DNA of Ovarian Surface Epithelial Cells Affected by Ovulation: Carcinogenic Implication and Chemoprevention
- 1 June 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Frontiers Media SA in Experimental Biology and Medicine
- Vol. 229 (6) , 546-552
- https://doi.org/10.1177/153537020422900613
Abstract
The majority of cancers of the ovary are thought to originate from a surface epithelial cell perturbed by ovulation. Outgrowth of a follicle destined to ovulate brings it into apposition with the ovarian epithelium. Ovarian surface cells are consequently exposed, within a limited diffusion radius, to inflammatory agents and reactive oxidants generated during periovulatory processes. Cells that overlie the formative site of follicular rupture suffer irreparable damages and undergo apoptosis. Potentially mutagenic 8-oxoguanine modifications were detected in (surviving) cells circumjacent to postovulatory ovine and human follicles. It is conceivable that clonal expansion of a cell with unrepaired DNA, but not committed to death, could be an initiating factor in the etiology of malignancy, insofar as proliferative ovulatory wound-repair responses may propagate mutations. Since the prognosis for ovarian cancer patients with invasive disease is so poor, and early detection has proven elusive, it is imperative that prospective methods of chemoprevention be explored. Ovulation-induced oxidative base damages to the ovarian epithelium of ewes were prevented by vitamin E. Oxoguanine adducts persisted and CA-125 (a phenotype of metaplastic transformation) was expressed in cultures of cells that were distressed by ovulation in which p53 synthesis was inhibited. Vitamin E negated this reaction. Ovarian cyclicity and fertility were not altered in vitamin-treated ewes. A prophylactic benefit of a supplemental antioxidant is suggested in “ovulating” individuals designated at risk (e.g., due to a tumor suppressor malfunction) for the development of ovarian cancer.Keywords
This publication has 58 references indexed in Scilit:
- Roles of the ovarian surface epithelium in ovulation and carcinogenesisReproduction, 2002
- Non‐antioxidant molecular functions of α‐tocopherol (vitamin E)FEBS Letters, 2002
- Proteolytic and Cellular Death Mechanisms in Ovulatory Ovarian RuptureNeurosignals, 2000
- Hormonal Control of Urokinase Plasminogen Activator Secretion by Sheep Ovarian Surface Epithelial Cells1Biology of Reproduction, 1999
- Ovarian cancerPostgraduate Medicine, 1997
- Programmed Cell Death in Preovulatory Ovine FolliclesBiology of Reproduction, 1995
- Ovarian surface epithelium during ovulatory and anovulatory ovine estrous cyclesThe Anatomical Record, 1994
- Ovarian cancer, Part I: BiologyCurrent Problems in Cancer, 1992
- Morphological Studies of the Microcirculatory System of Periovulatory Ovine Follicles1Biology of Reproduction, 1988
- Ovulation and the role of the ovarian surface epitheliumCellular and Molecular Life Sciences, 1975