Abstract

Increasing emphasis is being placed on mode of action for chemical carcinogens as an important consideration for risk assessment. Many rodent carcinogens appear to act through nongenotoxic mechanisms, such as induced cell proliferation. Information on cell proliferation rates based on species, age, gender, tissue, and choice of marker will provide a foundation for incorporating such measurements into rodent toxicity studies. Cell proliferation was evaluated in liver, kidney, skin, and forestomach of control male and female B6C3F1 mice and F344 rats at 7, 10, 13, and 20 weeks of age. Proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), an endogenous cell proliferation marker, and bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) administered by ip injection 2 hr before euthanization were compared as markers of cell proliferation. Only in liver were BrdU and PCNA labeling indices (LIs; S phase only) statistically similar. As expected, the PCNA proliferating index (PI; G1 + S + G2 + M phases) was consistently greater than the S phase LI in all tissues examined. Age-related differences in LI were evident in liver and kidney, whereas LIs in the forestomach and skin were not agedependent. In all tissues examined, gender-and species-related differences in cell proliferation were detected. Although BrdU and PCNA LIs were often statistically different, they both provided a useful indication of cell proliferation rates in the tissues examined. These results provide potentially useful information for designing rodent toxicity studies and biological models of carcinogenesis.

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