Abstract

Epidemiologic studies show an increase in the use of smokeless tobacco but few in vitro studies have directly assessed the potential for smokeless tobacco-induced oral carcinogenesis. Oral keratinocytes were grown to 90% confluence from explants of human labial and gingival mucosa at 34° C, 5% CO 2 in defined media. Epithelial monolayers were subsequently subcultured and then treated for 1 hour with aqueous extracts of moist or leaf smokeless tobacco, or with 0.25 to 1.0 ng/ml of three common smokeless tobacco carcinogens: 4-(N-methyl-N-nitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridinyl)-1-butanone; N-nitrosonornicotine; and benzo(a)pyrene. Even though the controls and most treatment groups terminally differentiated, cells exposed to 4-(N-methyl-N-nitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridinyl)-1-butanone, N-nitrosonornicotine, and moist and dry extract continued to divide, maintained a differentiated phenotype for 8 1 2 to 10 weeks in culture, and displayed focal growth and morphologic changes suggestive of early stages in cell transformation.

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