Abstract

Transplantation of the Dunning R-3327 prostate tumor cell line is a common model of prostate cancer, though the rat strain (Copenhagen) from which the cell line was derived is resistant to spontaneous and chemically induced prostate cancer. To determine if susceptibility to chemically induced prostate carcinogenesis can be transferred from the susceptible Lobund-Wistar (LW) rat strain to the resistant Copenhagen (COP) strain, male COP rats and LW x COP hybrids were administered an intravenous dose (30 mg/kg) of methylnitrosourea (MNU) and implanted three times with silastic capsules containing testosterone propionate (25 mg each) at a 2-month interval. Serum was sampled at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months of age and assayed for testosterone. Serum testosterone was significantly but transiently elevated following implantation of capsules with testosterone propionate, but then decreased by 12 months of age to a level which was significantly less (P < or = 0.001) than in LW rats but not significantly different from COP rats. Prostate cancer did not develop in COP rats, but 36% of LW x COP hybrids developed prostate-seminal vesicle tumors which expanded into the dorsolateral lobes within 10 months of MNU administration; this compares to 90% of LW rats which develop such tumors following this same induction protocol. COP rats lack inherent susceptibility to development of prostate cancer; susceptibility may be transferred from LW rats, or resistance from COP rats, to LW x COP hybrids and is present in the haploid state, consistent with the two-mutation event hypothesis of Knudson which holds that two mutations are required at a genetic locus for development of some cancers.

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