Abstract

The effect of a low dose of preadministered diethylnitrosamine (DEN) on the induction of enzyme-altered foci in the livers of male full-grown Fischer 344 rats was studied. As a pretreatment, DEN at a dose of 10 mg/kg body wt was injected i.p. At various times after DEN pretreatment a complete initiation, consisting of administration of the same dose of DEN by the same route in rats subjected to partial hepatectomy (PH), was performed, followed by application of selection pressure. Enzyme-altered foci stained with gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (gamma-GTP) and glutathione S-transferase placental form (GST-P) were then assayed. Decreases in the numbers and areas of foci in the rats which received saline + PH 14 or 28 days after DEN pretreatment were observed in comparison with rats which received saline + PH immediately after DEN. On the other hand, the numbers and areas of foci were not decreased in rats which received the complete initiation, consisting of DEN + PH, at various times after DEN pretreatment when compared with rats which received these at the same time as the DEN pretreatment. This persistent effect of DEN pretreatment on the complete initiation lasted up to 182 days after the time of DEN pretreatment. In this experiment, GST-P was found to be a more sensitive marker for the detection of putative preneoplastic liver-cell foci than gamma-GTP.

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