Abstract

The alkaline and acid DNase and RNase activity was histochemically investigated in biopsies from the human digestive tube. Activity of these enzymes in the mucosal epithelium in different segments of the digestive tube was compared to the statistical incidence of malignant tumors deriving from this tissue (carcinomas). It was found that the alkaline and acid nucleases activity was very intense in small intestine precisely in this segment where the incidence of carcinomas was low, whereas the low activity of these enzymes in the stomach and large intestine corresponded to the high incidence of carcinomas. This observation confirmed our previously elaborated hypothesis, according to which the low activity of nucleases in normal tissues appeared to be a predisposing factor for malignant transformation. It could be also supposed that the nucleases constitute some kind of double barrier mechanism protecting the genetical stability of the cell against foreign nucleic acid incorporation or production; alkaline nucleases being an extracellular and acid nucleases an intracellular barrier.

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