Promotion of murine hepatocarcinogenesis by testosterone is androgen receptor-dependent but not cell autonomous.
Open Access
- 1 October 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 86 (19) , 7505-7509
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.86.19.7505
Abstract
Tfm (testicular feminization) mutant mice lack functional androgen receptors. By studing liver tumor development in Tfm mice, we have shown that the greater susceptibility of male mice relative to female mice for liver tumor induction by N,N-diethylnitrosamine is androgen receptor-dependent. C57BL/6J normal and Tfm mutant mice were injected at 12 days of age with N,N-diethylnitrosamine (0.2 .mu.mol/g, i.p.), and liver tumors were enumerated in 50-week-old animals. Normal males averaged 20 liver tumors per animal; Tfm males, 0.7; normal females, 0.6; and Tfm/+ heterozygous females, 1.5. The androgen receptor gene and the Tfm mutation are X chromosome linked. Because of random X chromosome inactivation, hepatocytes from Tfm/+ heterozygous female mice are mosaic with respect to the expression of mutant or wild-type receptors. To determine if testosterone acts directly as a liver tumor promoter, through the androgen receptor in preneoplastic hepatocytes, or by an indirect mechanim, we chronically treated these mosaic female mice with testosterone and measured the androgen receptor content of the resulting tumors. B6C3F1Tfm/+ mosaic and +/+ wild-type female mice were injected i.p. at 12 days of age with N,N-diethylnitrosamine (0.1 .mu.mol/g) and ovariectomized at 8 weeks of age. Half of the mice of each group subsequently received biweekly s.c. injections of testosterone (0.15 mg per mouse) for 30 weeks. Tumor multiplicity was the same for wild-type and Tfm/+ mosaic females treated with testosterone (31-32 tumors per animal at 38 weeks of age) and was increased relative to females not treated with testosterone (13-17 tumors per animal at 50 weeks of age). Testosterone treatment did not significantly increase the percentage of androgen receptor-positive tumors in Tfm/+ mosaic females: 58% of the tumors from Tfm/+ mosaic females treated with testosterone were receptor positive compared to 48% in Tfm/+ females not treated with testosterone and 92% in wild-type females treated with testosterone. Finally, the number of androgen receptors in the majority of liver tumors examined was greatly decreased relative to the surrounding normal liver tissue. We conclude that liver tumor promotion by testosterone requires a functional androgen receptor in the intact animal. However, this promotion is not cell autonomous; that is, the response of the preneoplastic hepatocyte is not dependent on the expression of functional receptor in the target cell.This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Characterization of the inhibitory effect of glucocorticoids on the DNA replication of adult rat hepatocytes growing at various cell densitiesJournal of Cellular Physiology, 1989
- Cloning of Human Androgen Receptor Complementary DNA and Localization to the X ChromosomeScience, 1988
- Inhibitory effect of transforming growth factor-β on DNA synthesis of adult rat hepatocytes in primary cultureBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1985
- Characterisation of high affinity binding sites of androgens in primary hepatocellular carcinomaClinica Chimica Acta; International Journal of Clinical Chemistry, 1985
- Effect of neonatal castration on liver tumor induction by N-2-fluorenylacetamide in suckling BALB/c miceCarcinogenesis: Integrative Cancer Research, 1981
- Direct and mediated effects of testosterone: The development of intersexes in sex reversed mosaic mice, heterozygous for testicular feminizationBrain Structure and Function, 1975
- Cytosol androgen receptor from kidney of normal and testicular feminized (Tfm) miceCell, 1974
- Studies on the pathogenesis of the pseudohermaphroditism in the mouse with testicular feminizationJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1972
- Changes in Hepatic Nuclear DNA-dependent RNA Polymerase caused by Growth Hormone and TriiodothyronineNature, 1971
- X-linked Gene for Testicular Feminization in the MouseNature, 1970