Abstract

Effects of oxidative stress induced by redox-enzyme modulation on the progression stage of hepatocarcinogenesis were examined by monitoring both hepatocyte injury and hepatocellular carcinoma development in F344 rats bearing preneoplastic liver nodules induced by the Cayama-Farber procedure. Redox-enzyme modulation, which included increased cytochrome P450 reductase activity induced by phenobarbital-Na (100 mg/kg, i.p. for 3 days), inhibition of DT-diaphorase by dicumarol (25 mg/kg, i.p.), depletion of glutathione by phorone (200 mg/kg, i.p.), supplementation with the Fe(III) sodium salt of EDTA (50 mg/kg, i.p.) and redox-cycling activation by menadione (50 mg/kg, i.g.), exerted no prominent hepatocyte injury within nodules but did cause slight injury in the surrounding hepatocytes in nodule-bearing rats. The same treatments induced severe hepatocyte injury in non-treated normal rats. Redox-enzyme modulation performed every other week for 33 weeks significantly reduced the number of hepatocellular carcinomas developing in nodule-bearing rats. These results indicate that preneoplastic nodules are resistant to the oxidative stress induction caused by redox-enzyme modulation treatment and that, despite toxic effects in surrounding hepatocytes, no progression pressure is exerted. Indeed, the treatment rather demonstrates an inhibitory effect of the evolution of the nodules into hepatocellular carcinomas.

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