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Diethylstilbestrol (DES): Carcinogenic Potential in Xpa–/–, Xpa–/–/p53+/–, and Wild-Type Mice During 9 Months Dietary ExposureSCANTOX (LAB Research International), Ejby, DK-4623 Lille Skensved, Denmark Correspondence: Address correspondence to: Dr. Peter A McAnulty, Ferring Pharmaceuticals A/S, Kay Fiskers Plads 11, DK-2300 Copenhagen S, Denmark; e-mail:peter.mcanulty{at}ferring.com
DES carcinogenicity has been investigated in 2 mouse knockout models, the Xpa homozygous knockout, and the combined Xpa homozygous and p53 heterozygous knockout. Wild-type (WT) mice were also included. Xpa mice received diets containing DES at concentrations of 0, 100, 300, and 1500 ppb for 39 weeks; Xpa/p53 and WT mice received diets containing 0 or 1500 ppb. There were 15 of each sex per group. Both Xpa and WT mice had a similar incidence of tumors at the high dosage of 1500 ppb, including pituitary adenomas in 4 WT mice and 7 Xpa mice, and single incidences of osteosarcoma (Xpa), T-cell lymphoma (WT and Xpa), and testicular interstitial cell adenoma (WT and Xpa). The incidence of tumors was higher in the Xpa/p53 mice at 1500 ppb, mainly attributable to 5 osteosarcomas in males and 2 in females, but also 4 pituitary adenomas, testicular interstitial cell adenomas in 4 males, and single incidences of cerebral glioma, phaeochromocytoma, and cervical fibrosarcoma. The incidence of osteosarcomas was related to the severity of fibro-osseous lesions in the bone marrow. It was concluded that for carcinogenicity screening, Xpa mice were no more sensitive than wild-type mice for compounds like DES, but the Xpa/p53 model showed an increased sensitivity.
Key Words: Diethylstilbestrol carcinogenicity Xpa mice Xpa/p53 mice osteosarcoma fibro-osseous lesions Abbreviations: ACT, Alternatives to Carcinogenicity Testing ALP, alkaline phosphatase ALT, alanine aminotransferase AST, aspartate aminotransferase B[a]P, benzo[a]pyrene DES, diethylstilbestrol DNA, deoxyribonucleic acid FOL, fibro-osseous lesion IARC, International Agency for Research on Cancer ILSI, International Life Sciences Institute LDH, lactate dehydrogenase MTD, maximum tolerated dose NER, nucelotide excision repair ppb, parts per billion RITA, Registry of Industrial Toxicology Animal-Data RIVM, Rijksinstituut voor Volksgezondheid en Milieu (National Institute of Public Health and the Environment, The Netherlands)
DES was used extensively for the treatment of possible miscarriage during the 1950s and 1960s. However in 1971 it was identified as a transplacental carcinogen, causing unusual clear-cell carcinomas of the cervix of adolescent girls who had been exposed prenatally (Herbst and Scully, 1970; Herbst et al., 1971). A large amount of research has been performed to define the nature of the carcinogenic potential of DES, and this has been summarized in various reviews (IARC, 1979, 1987; Herbst and Bern, 1981). Pharmacology and toxicology have also been performed and reviewed (IARC, 1979; Marselos and Tomatis, 1993). The effects that have been revealed can largely be ascribed to DES acting through estrogen receptors, despite the fact that DES is nonsteroidal. DES and its metabolites are nonmutagenic in Ames tests (Glatt et al., 1979; Marselos and Tomatis, 1993), but it does cause clastogenicity in human lymphocytes and Chinese hamster fibroblasts (Bishun et al., 1977; Ishidate and Odashima, 1977). DES has also been demonstrated to cause aneuploidy in the bone marrow of mice and in primary rat fibroblasts, and it is also capable of disrupting microtubules resulting in abnormal or arrested mitotic spindles (Chrisman, 1974; Chrisman and Hinkle, 1974; Tucker and Barrett, 1986; Sakakibara et al., 1991; de Stoppelaar et al., 1997). A large number of carcinogenicity studies have been performed in rats, mice, and hamsters. In mice and hamsters, similar transplacental carcinogenicity occurs to that in man (Rustia, 1979; McLachlan et al., 1980; Newbold and McLachlan, 1982), but in rats, prenatal exposure to DES results in mammary and pituitary tumors (Boylan and Calhoon, 1979). Postnatal dietary exposure results in mammary carcinomas, ovarian tubular adenomas, and pituitary adenomas in mice, and mammary fibroadenomas and pituitary adenomas in rats (Gass et al., 1964; Gibson et al., 1967; Highman et al., 1977, 1980; Phelps and Hymer, 1983; Greenman et al., 1984). The recent availability of various transgenic and knockout models has provided an opportunity to investigate further the carcinogenicity of known human carcinogens such as DES. For this reason, DES has been included in the International Life Sciences Institute (ILSI) program for the evaluation of these alternative models, as an example of a nonmutagenic carcinogen acting through a "hormonal" mechanism. The study described below was part of the ILSI program, and evaluated the effects of DES in 2 models, the Xpa–/–knockout mouse (Xpa), and a double knockout model, the Xpa–/–/p53+/– mouse (Xpa/p53). The characteristics of the Xpa knockout mouse have been described in detail (de Vries et al., 1995; van Kreijl et al., 2001; van Steeg et al., 2001). Briefly, the model has a knockout of both alleles of the Xpa gene, and the protein coded by this gene is currently thought to be responsible for verification of NER-related DNA damage. Mice with this knockout have no residual NER-activity. Similarly, much has been published about the p53 knockout mouse (Storer et al., 2001), and the use of this model as part of a double Xpa/p53 knockout model has been described by van Kreijl et al. (2001). The assumption is that by combining a model with no NER activity with one that has deficient tumor suppressor function, a very sensitive model to carcinogens has been created. A study duration of 9 months was used. This duration was decided by the Xpa Assay Working Group after initial studies with positive controls indicated that 6 months was probably insufficient to obtain a robust tumor response (van Kreijl et al., 2001). A preliminary version of these data was presented as a poster at the ILSI Alternatives to Carcinogenicity Testing (ACT) Workshop in Leesburg, VA, USA, November 1–3, 2000 (McAnulty and Skydsgaard, 2001).
This study was run in 2 parts. The first part was a 4-week dose–range-finding study with Xpa mice to determine suitable dietary concentrations for the second part of the investigation, the main 9-month study.
Animals
Husbandry
Test Articles
Methods (Dose-Range-Finding Study)
DES was dissolved in acetone and used to prepare a series of premixes in lactose by Scantox, followed by evaporation of the acetone. The DES premixes in lactose were mixed in Altromin 1314 diet at the concentrations shown above by Altromin, Germany, and stored at 4°C until used. The animals were fed continuously with the various diets for 28 days; dietary concentrations were not adjusted with respect to body weight change. The animals were examined daily for any clinical signs or deaths. Body weights were recorded at the start of treatment, and then twice-weekly up until termination, when a final weight before necropsy was recorded. Food intake was recorded daily during the first week of treatment, and twice-weekly thereafter. After 28 days treatment, blood samples were taken for analysis of various hematology and clinical chemistry parameters. All animals underwent a full necropsy. The weights of the brain, heart, kidneys, liver, spleen, testes, and thymus were recorded where possible. A full list of organs and tissues were retained in fixative, as well as any abnormal tissues. These were histologically processed and slides prepared using conventional hematoxylin and eosin staining; all slides from groups 1 and 5 were examined microscopically, as well as gross lesions from all animals.
Methods (Main Study)
The selection of the high dose of DES was based on the histopathological results in the dose–range-finding study. The rationale for dose selection is presented in the Results section. DES premixes were prepared in the same way as in the dose–range-finding study, and these were mixed in Altromin 1321N diet at the concentrations shown above; all these procedures were performed by Scantox. The DES diets were fed continuously to the DES-treated groups for 39 weeks. The 3 control groups (group Nos. 1, 6, and 8) received untreated Altromin 1321N diet. The positive control group received B[a]P in corn oil by oral gavage at a dose volume of 10 ml/kg on 3 days each week (Monday, Wednesday, Friday) for up to 39 weeks. The animals were examined daily for any clinical signs or deaths. Body weights were recorded at the start of treatment, weekly up until week 13, and then every 2 weeks until termination, when a final weight before necropsy was recorded. Food intake was recorded weekly, and this information was used to calculate achieved dosage levels in the DES-treated groups. In the week before scheduled termination, blood samples from surviving animals were taken for analysis of various hematology and clinical chemistry parameters (numbers of erythrocytes, leukocytes, lymphocytes, and platelets, and the activities in plasma of alanine aminotransferase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alkaline phosphatase (ALP), and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH)). For ALP, an isoenzyme analysis was performed to determine the origin of the enzyme in plasma. There were no survivors in the DES-treated wild-type group and only 1 female survivor in the B[a]P-treated Xpa group, and therefore no clinical pathology data were available for these groups. All animals that died, were sacrificed in extremis, or reached scheduled termination, underwent a full necropsy. The weights of the brain, heart, kidneys, liver, pituitary, spleen, thymus, and testes were recorded if possible. A full list of organs and tissues were retained in fixative, as well as any abnormal tissues and tissue masses. Tissue trimming was performed according to RITA guidelines (Bahnemann et al., 1995). The tissues were histologically processed and slides prepared using conventional hematoxylin and eosin staining, and all slides were examined microscopically.
Statistical Analysis The positive control animal data was not included in the statistical analysis of the DES-treated groups. In the statistical analysis in the main study, groups 3, 4, and 5 were compared with group 1, group 2 was compared with group 1, group 6 was compared with groups 1 and 8, group 7 was compared with groups 5 and 6, and group 9 was compared with groups 5 and 8.
Dose–Range-Finding Study There were no clinical signs in the Xpa mice receiving up to 2000 ppb DES in the diet for 28 days, and no deaths occurred. There were body weight losses in both males and females at 1000 and 2000 ppb, and compared with controls, the deficit in weight after 28 days treatment was approximately 5–6% at 1000 ppb, and 7.5–9% at 2000 ppb. Food consumption was unaffected in the males, but was lower than controls in females (ca. 25%) at 500 ppb and above. At all concentrations of DES there was a reduction in the number of circulating leukocytes. All classes of leukocytes were affected to some extent, but at 500 ppb and above the reduction was attributable primarily to lower numbers of lymphocytes. There was also a tendency to reduced numbers of platelets, but this was only statistically significant in males at 500 ppb and above, and females at 2000 ppb. Erythrocyte parameters were unaffected. The most pronounced clinical chemistry change was an increase in the activity of plasma alkaline phosphatase. This occurred in both sexes in all DES-treated groups, and was dietary concentration-related. At the highest concentration of 2000 ppb, the increase compared with controls was 3- to 5-fold. Plasma bilirubin concentration tended to increase with increasing dietary concentration, while urea concentration tended to decrease. At necropsy there were very few macroscopic findings. The seminal vesicles of 4 of the 5 males that received DES at 2000 ppb were diminished in size. Of the organs that were weighed, there were statistically significant reductions in the absolute and body weight-relative organ weights of the kidneys at 1000 and 2000 ppb in males, and also in the absolute weight in females at 2000 ppb. The absolute and relative weights of the thymus were reduced in both males and females at 500 ppb and above.
Dose–Range-Finding Study Histopathology
Female Reproductive System
Thymus
Spleen
Adrenals
Bone
Liver
Dose Selection for the Main 9-Month Study
Main 9-Month Study The Xpa/p53 mice that received 1500 ppb DES (group 9) showed a similar profile of clinical signs to the Xpa mice at the same dietary concentration, with 5 males showing testicular enlargement, and 11 females with distended abdomens. In addition, 2 males and 2 females showed hindlimb gait abnormalities. The viability of the male double knockouts treated with DES was similar to that of the Xpa males, but viability of the female double knockouts was considerably lower, with only 2 animals surviving until the end of the study. Two male and 2 female Xpa/p53 mice died without showing any previous signs, and the rest were sacrificed in extremis because of testicular enlargement, distended abdomens, or gait abnormalities. The wild-type animals treated with 1500 ppb DES (group 7) showed the same spectrum of clinical signs, and at a similar incidence, as the 2 knockout strains. However, viability of the treated animals was lower than in the knockout animals, and all were dead before the end of the study. The majority of animals were sacrificed in extremis for the same reasons as the other genotypes. The Xpa mice treated with the positive control agent B[a]P (group 2) showed no clinical signs, other than becoming subdued with a rapid decline in condition immediately before death. There was an isolated death of a female in week 3 of treatment, but otherwise deaths did not start until week 20 onwards. Deaths occurred rapidly from about week 31 onwards, and all but 1 female died before the end of the study.
Body Weight and Food Consumption
During the remainder of the study, there was a clear sex difference in body weight response to DES exposure. In all 3 genotypes, males treated with 1500 ppb had lower weight gains than controls, while females had higher weight gains than controls (Table 1). Weight gain of Xpa females that received 300 ppb (group 4) was also slightly greater than that of controls. There were no apparent effects of DES treatment on food consumption. Body weight change of the Xpa mice that were administered the positive control B[a]P (group 2) was similar to that of controls up until deaths started to occur. Thereafter, the animals lost weight in the period immediately preceding death, and this was accompanied by a reduction in food consumption.
Hematology
Unlike the 28-day study, there was also a reduction in erythrocyte numbers in both Xpa and Xpa/p53 males at 1500 ppb DES (groups 5 and 9), and at all dietary concentrations of DES in the females (Table 2). This was accompanied by reduced hemoglobin concentrations, and an increase in mean corpuscular volume.
Clinical Chemistry
There were also sex differences in many of the other clinical chemistry parameters (Table 3). The activities of alanine and aspartate aminotransferases, and lactate dehydrogenase tended to be increased in Xpa and Xpa/p53 males (groups 5 and 9), but were reduced in females. The concentration of bilirubin was increased in males, but lower in females. The only consistent change between the sexes was a tendency to lower urea concentrations. These differences were at variance with the results obtained in the 28-day study, where the changes in these parameters showed no sex difference.
Necropsy and Organ Weights In one Xpa male and 2 Xpa/p53 females there was a marked increase in the size of the thymus, and this was accompanied by enlargement of lymph nodes in the male and 1 of the females. However, in the majority of DES-treated animals thymus size was reduced (Table 4), and at 1500 ppb in all genotypes (groups 5, 7, and 9) several animals had atrophy of the thymus. Conversely, in all treated groups, the size of the spleen was increased (Table 4).
Enlargement of the pars distalis of the pituitary was apparent macroscopically in a large number of animals of both sexes and all genotypes at 1500 ppb DES (Groups 5, 7, and 9), and also in 1 Xpa female that received 300 ppb (group 4). This was confirmed in these groups by marked increases in pituitary weight (Table 4). Both enlarged and small testes were observed in males that had received 1500 ppb DES (groups 5, 7, and 9). In the Xpa mice the overall effect was a lower testicular weight (Table 4), but in the Xpa/p53 mice the mean weight tended to be slightly greater than that of controls. Several of the females from all genotypes that received 1500 ppb (groups 5, 7, and 9) had an enlarged cervix, and this was also seen in a few Xpa females that received 300 ppb (group 4). Unilateral or bilateral cystic dilation of the pelvis of the kidneys, associated with marked distension of the urinary bladder, was observed in both sexes and all genotypes receiving 1500 ppb DES (groups 5, 7, and 9). This was the cause of the distended abdomens mentioned earlier in the Clinical Signs section. The livers of both Xpa and Xpa/p53 mice that received 1500 ppb DES (groups 5 and 9) were increased in weight compared with their respective controls, and this also occurred in Xpa females that received 100 and 300 ppb (groups 3 and 4). There were relatively few macroscopic signs at necropsy of the B[a]P positive control group of Xpa mice (group 2). Two males and 4 females had enlarged spleens, and a few animals had enlarged lymph nodes. One female also had an enlarged nodular thymus. Also in a few animals there were black/brown foci in the nonglandular stomach, and raised areas in the small intestine.
Main 9-Month Study Histopathology
The incidence of tumors was highest in the Xpa/p53 group that had received 1500 ppb DES (group 9; Table 5). Osteosarcomas were found in 5 males and 2 females. In 4 of the males the osteosarcoma was found in either the femur or tibia with invasion to the surrounding tissues; in 3 of the males metastases were found in the liver (Figure 1B), and in 1 of these there were also metastases in the spleen. In 1 male no evidence of metastasis was found. In the fifth male, metastases from an osteosarcoma were found in the liver, but the primary tumor was not found. In 1 of the affected females there were osteosarcomas in the sternum, nasal cavity, and femur, with invasion to the surrounding tissues. In the second female, an osteosarcoma was found on the inner side of the cranium, with metastases in the spleen. Two of the double knockout females that had received 1500 ppb had T-cell lymphomas that had metastasized to several organs. Another male from this group had a rare glioma in the cerebrum, and 1 female had a cervical fibrosarcoma with invasion of the rectum and vagina. There was also 1 Xpa/p53 female from the control group (Group 8) that had a mammary adenocarcinoma. In the wild-type animals exposed to 1500 ppb DES (group 7), there was only 1 malignant tumor found, a T-cell lymphoma in a male (Table 5).
Benign Neoplastic Lesions
Proliferative Lesions Minimal to marked hyperplasia of the pars distalis was observed in the majority of animals of all genotypes that received 1500 ppb DES (groups 5, 7, and 9; Table 7). Minimal to slight hyperplasia of the pars distalis was also seen in the Xpa females that had received 300 ppb (group 4). Minimal hyperplasia of the pars intermedia was found in about half of the animals that received 1500 ppb DES (groups 5, 7, and 9), and about half the Xpa females that received 300 ppb (group 4).
Hyperostosis occurred in nearly all animals that received 1500 ppb DES (groups 5, 7, and 9; Table 7). There was also a high incidence in both sexes of the Xpa mice at 300 ppb (group 4), and also a low incidence in female Xpa mice at 100 ppb (group 3). In all mice treated at 1500 ppb (groups 5, 7, and 9), minimal to moderate fibro-osseous lesions (FOLs) were present in both of the bones examined (sternum and femur) (Figure 1C). Although hyperostosis can be included in the description of FOLs, it was possible in this study to diagnose hyperostosis as an isolated lesion, and FOLs could be distinguished by the presence of a more dominant fibrovascular component (Long and Leininger, 1999). FOLs were more severe in the Xpa and Xpa/p53 mice (groups 5 and 9) than in the wild-type mice (group 7). Minimal focal glandular hyperplasia was seen in the mammary glands of about two-thirds of the females that received DES at 1500 ppb, regardless of genotype (groups 5, 7, and 9). In approximately two-thirds of the males of all genotypes receiving 1500 ppb DES (groups 5, 7 and 9), minimal-to-moderate interstitial cell hyperplasia was observed in the testes. Moderate hyperplasia was also found in 2 males that had received 300 ppb (group 4). Slight subcapsular hyperplasia of Type A (spindle) cells and Type B (polygonal) cells was observed in the adrenals as a treatment-related change in males of all genotypes (groups 1, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8 and 9), whereas in females this change was present to a minimal to moderate degree in both control and treated animals, with no variation attributable to treatment.
Other Lesions
Minimal-to-moderate hypertrophy and vacuolation of the cortical cells of the adrenals was observed in the majority of animals at 1500 ppb (groups 5, 7, and 9; Table 8), although the severity was slightly more pronounced in the knockout strains than the wild-type mice There also tended to be an increase in the incidence of ceroid pigment accumulation at the corticomedullary junction in all DES-treated groups (groups 3, 4, 5, 7, and 9). Minimal-to-moderate aortic arteritis and periarteritis were observed in several animals at 1500 ppb (groups 5, 7, and 9; Table 8), particularly in wild-type females (group 7). This was considered to be the cause of death in a number of the animals. However, other than in a single male, this observation was not recorded in the treated Xpa/p53 mice (group 9). DES in all treated groups had anticipated effects on the reproductive system (groups 3, 4, 5, 7, and 9; Table 8). In males there was testicular tubular atrophy, oligospermia in the epididymides, squamous metaplasia in the coagulating gland, and diminished contents of the seminal vesicles. In females there was atrophy of the ovaries, endometrial gland hyperplasia, deposition of hyaline material in the endometrium, and stromal mucoid changes in the cervix.
B[a]P-Treated Positive Control Xpa Mice (group 2) Adenomas were observed in the caecum of 1 male, in the jejunum of 3 females, and also in the ileum of 1 of these females. Papillomas were present in the nonglandular stomach of 2 males and 2 females. Nonproliferative changes in the B[a]P group were limited to marked atrophy of the thymus, extramedullary hematopoiesis in the spleen, focal hepatic necrosis, accumulation of ceroid pigment in the cells of the adrenal corticomedullary junction, epididymal oligospermia, and atrophy of the ovaries and uterus.
This study has demonstrated that the Xpa and Xpa/p53 mouse knockout models are sensitive to the carcinogenic potential of DES. However, the degree of sensitivity of the Xpa model was no greater than that of wild-type mice, treated over the same period of 39 weeks. The Xpa/p53 model, on the other hand, showed a greater sensitivity than wild-type mice in terms of the number and range of tumors that occurred; the Xpa/p53 model also had the advantage over wild-type animals of a better survival rate, and a lower incidence of nonproliferative lesions. While not so sensitive, the Xpa mice had the best survival of the 3 genotypes. As the Xpa and Xpa/p53 models have a knockout of both alleles of the Xpa gene (de Vries et al., 1995; van Kreijl et al., 2001), it could be speculated that the difference in sensitivity of the Xpa/p53 model is attributable to the loss of 1 allele of the p53 gene. The most significant tumor response in this study was the incidence of osteosarcomas in the Xpa/p53 mice, and it may be significant that in p53 hemizygous mice, osteosarcomas are among the most common spontaneous tumor types (Mahler et al., 1998). However, in all of the p53 studies in the ILSI database, the incidence of osteosarcomas in controls was only 0.5% in males and 0.7% in females (Storer et al., 2001). In the current study there were no osteosarcomas in the control Xpa/p53 mice, despite the longer study period of 39 weeks compared with 26 weeks in the p53 studies, and the incidence of osteosarcomas in the DES-treated group was 33% in males and 13% in females. Further, in the 26-week p53 ILSI study with DES, there was no occurrence of osteosarcomas (Storer et al., 2001). It therefore seems unlikely that the high incidence of osteosarcomas in DES-treated Xpa/p53 mice can be attributed to the deficiency of the p53 gene alone. It may be associated with a synergism between the 2 genotypes, or some other factor such as the genotoxic potential of DES, reduced immunosurveillance, or effects on steroid or bone metabolism. DES is sometimes referred to as a "nongenotoxic carcinogen," but this is inaccurate. Using Ames tests, DES and 11 of its metabolites have been shown to be nonmutagenic (Glatt et al., 1979; Marselos and Tomatis, 1993); however, in a wide range of tests, DES has been shown to be clastogenic, including induction of chromosome aberrations in vitro in Chinese hamster fibroblasts and human lymphocytes (Bishun et al., 1977; Ishidate and Odashima, 1977), sister chromatid exchanges in human fibroblasts and mouse cervical epithelium cells (Rudiger et al., 1979; Hillbertz-Nilsson and Forsberg, 1989), formation of abnormal or arrested mitotic spindles in embryonic hamster cells (Tucker and Barrett, 1986; Sakakibara et al., 1991), and the latter accounting for increased aneuploidy in vivo in mouse bone marrow and embryonic cells, and in rat primary fibroblasts (Chrisman, 1974; Chrisman and Hinkle, 1974; de Stoppelar, 1997). In addition, DES has been demonstrated to cause unscheduled DNA synthesis in vitro (Martin et al., 1978), and has also been shown to form DNA adducts in various tissues in vivo (Gladek and Liehr, 1989, 1991). The clastogenic and other genotoxic properties of DES may be responsible for some of the cellular effects, both proliferative and non-proliferative, seen in the current study. However, clastogen tests in vitro, are associated with many false positives in predicting carcinogenicity, although it has been stressed elsewhere that the effects of DES cannot be attributed to its estrogenic properties alone (IARC, 1987), an observation applying to both reproductive and nonreproductive tissues. The loss of the Xpa gene alone does not increase the carcinogenic potential of any genotoxic influence of DES, but it may be that a synergistic relationship with a p53 deficiency does increase susceptibility, as seen in the Xpa/p53 mice. Cell populations affected by DES include those involved in production of circulating blood cells, i.e., the hematopoietic and lymphoblastic systems. In the current study a reduction in leukocytes was observed in both the 4- and 39-week studies, with circulating lymphocytes particularly affected, although in the 4-week study there were also significant effects in the other cell types. Further, in the 39-week study, there was a reduction in circulating erythrocytes. The effect on hematopoiesis and lower peripheral blood cell counts has been known for many years (Lavenda and Wong, 1954), and in the current study we have demonstrated there are compensatory increases of extramedullary hematopoiesis in the spleen and liver. Also in the current study there was a marked thymic atrophy, affecting the cortex in particular, and contributing to the reduced numbers of circulating lymphocytes. This has been reported previously, and in particular T-cell numbers and function are affected, with a wide range of immunological sequelae in both animals and humans (Marselos and Tomatis, 1993; Burke et al., 2001; Karpuzoglu-Sahin et al., 2001). The effects on T-cell function might have an influence on immunosurveillance for precancerous or cancerous cells, but it is considered unlikely that immunodeficiency is directly related to the carcinogenic potential of DES. In the preliminary 4-week study, an increase in trabecular bone was observed in the DES-treated animals. In the main study, hyperostosis was observed in the sternum and femur of all animals that received the high dose of DES, and also occurred in the majority of Xpa mice that received 300 ppb DES, and some of the Xpa females at 100 ppb. This response is well-documented for compounds with estrogenic activity (Woodard et al., 2002). However, it was also possible to clearly identify fibro-osseous lesions (FOLs) that were distinct from the hyperostosis. The term FOL was introduced in 1980 (Sass and Montali, 1980) to describe fibro-osseous changes seen in the bone marrow of B6C3F1 female mice. The lesion is characterized by accelerated osteoclastic bone resorption with concurrent fibroplasia (Long and Leininger, 1999). The overall appearance is one of accelerated bone turnover, with resorption encroaching on the center of the medullary cavity, followed by bone formation. The occurrence of FOLs in B6C3F1 female mice is thought to be attributable to excessive estrogen production by ovarian cysts (Sass and Montali, 1980; Albassam et al., 1991), but the same lesion is not seen in CF1 mice, despite the presence of the same cysts (Albassam et al., 1991). However, administration of estrogens to C57BL and C3H female mice also results in FOLs (Silberberg and Silberberg, 1970; Highman et al., 1981), but administration of DES to CF1 female mice again fails to cause FOLs (Johnson, 1987). The mice used in the current study were all derived from the C57BL/6 strain, and the occurrence of FOLs in all 3 genotypes, including the wild-type animals, indicates that both females and males of this strain are susceptible to this lesion. It has been suggested that osteosarcomas in mice arise from these areas of osteofibrosis and bony trabecular proliferation in the medullary cavity (Highman et al., 1981). The results from the current study are consistent with this suggestion, and it may be that FOLs could be considered a preneoplastic lesion in mice. In this context it would be of interest to investigate if DES can induce sarcomas in CF1 mice, the strain that did not develop FOLs. Why the Xpa/p53 mice should be more sensitive than the other 2 genotypes is unclear, but maybe the combined deficiency of the Xpa and p53 genes makes the cells of the bone marrow more sensitive to the genotoxic effects of DES, and also inhibits the possibility for nucleotide excision repair and cell-cycle control in damaged cells. Another aspect of the development of hyperostosis and FOLs is that the 2 lesions may have also affected hematopoiesis in the bone marrow, and contributed to the effects on circulating blood cell numbers discussed earlier. A further aspect of the development of FOLs is the possible link with an increase in plasma alkaline phosphatase activity that has been conjectured to originate from the skeleton (Albassam et al., 1991). In the current study a marked increase in alkaline phosphatase activity was observed, but surprisingly isoenzyme analysis revealed that this, in fact, originated from the liver. In conclusion, this investigation of the effects of DES in Xpa mice over a 39-week treatment period has demonstrated that the model is sensitive to the proliferative and carcinogenic potential of DES, but that the sensitivity is no greater than the same treatment in wild-type mice. The Xpa/p53 double-knockout model was found to have a greater sensitivity to DES, and gave a very robust carcinogenic response. A similar result, although less robust, has been described for another estrogenic compound, estradiol-17β (Steenhof et al., 2001). Several mutagenic compounds have also been demonstrated to be positive in Xpa/p53 mice, including B[a]P, p-cresidine, 2-acetamidofluorene, and cyclosporin A (Beems et al., 2001; van Kreijl et al., 2001; van Steeg et al., 2001). The only mutagenic carcinogen not to have given a positive response in the Xpa/p53 model is phenacetin (van Kreijl et al., 2001), although there was extensive karyomegaly in the kidneys. It may be that the double knockout is a good potential candidate for general carcinogenicity screening of both mutagenic and clastogenic compounds. However, an important caution in the interpretation of these results is that the carcinogenicity induced in the mice used in this study does not predict the human carcinogenic response. Human carcinogenicity of DES is associated with preterm exposure, and the target tissues are within the reproductive tract. In this study in genetically modified mice, treatment was postnatal and the tumor response was in the skeleton. It may therefore be the case that the coincidence of carcinogenicity occurring in both mice and humans is fortuitous.
We would like to acknowledge the considerable contribution of Scantox in providing resources and financial support for conducting this study. We are also indebted to Dr. Peter Brinck (now of Novo Nordisk, Målev, Denmark) for managing the early phases of the study. We received considerable support in the assessment and interpretation of the results of this study from the members of the Xpa Assay Working Group, in particular the Working Group Chairman, Dr. Coen van Kreijl (RIVM, Bilthoven, The Netherlands), the Pathologist Contact, Dr. Rudolf Beems (also RIVM), and for data interpretation, Dr. Ronny Fransson-Steen (AstraZeneca, Södertälje, Sweden). We are also indebted to Dr. Maurice Cary (Cary Consulting Services, Basel, Switzerland) for his valuable comments on the draft manuscript.
Toxicologic Pathology, Vol. 33, No. 5,
609-620 (2005) This article has been cited by other articles:
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GT, gamma-glutamyl transferase µkat, microkatal


