Abstract

Dimethylarsinic acid (DMA(V)), the major excreted metabolite of inorganic arsenic, is carcinogenic to the rat urinary bladder. Oxidative stress has been proposed as one possible mechanism of DMA(V)-induced carcinogenesis. The authors determined whether the antioxidant N-acetylcysteine (NAC) modifies DMA(V)-induced urinary bladder injury in rats. The treatment solutions--DMA(V) at 10 mg/kg, NAC at 90 or 1.6 mg/kg (high or low dose, respectively), and their combination--were intravesically instilled into female F344 rats over two hours under pentobarbital anesthesia. The treatment was conducted twice with an interval of three days. All animals were euthanized one day after the second treatment. NAC (low dose) alone did not induce histopathological changes or increase 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU) labeling index in urothelial cells. Both DMA(V) and NAC (high dose) induced a weak neutrophil infiltration and an increase in the BrdU labeling index; these pathological changes were enhanced by the combined treatment of DMA(V) and NAC (high or low dose). Increased oxidative stress and urothelial cell hyperplasia with evidence of activated p44/42 MAPK (ERK1/2) and cyclin D1 were found in the DMA(V) and NAC (high dose) cotreated group. These results suggest that cotreatment with NAC enhanced DMA(V)-induced urinary bladder injury and that the effects may be mediated by excess oxidative stress and ERK signaling.

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