Abstract

A series of experiments was performed to investigate the effect of different types of cell proliferation on the development of enzyme-altered preneoplastic hepatic foci in male Wistar rats. Animals were given a single dose of diethylnitrosamine (100 mg/kg body weight). After a 2-week recovery period liver cell proliferation was repeatedly induced by four or eight necrogenic doses of carbon tetrachloride (compensatory cell proliferation), or by four or eight treatments with three different liver mitogens, namely lead nitrate, ethylene dibromide and nafenopin (direct hyperplasia). The carcinogen altered hepatocytes were monitored as gamma-glutamyltransferase positive or adenosine triphosphatase negative foci. The results indicate that compensatory cell proliferation induced by both four and eight carbon tetrachloride treatments enhanced the growth of diethylnitrosamine-initiated hepatocytes to enzyme-altered foci. On the contrary, repeated waves of cell proliferation induced by liver mitogens did not result in any significant number of enzyme-altered foci.

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