A Comparison of UVB-carcinogenesis between Nude Mice and Nude Beige Mice.
Author(s) -
Yasuhito Ishigaki,
Kazuhiro Yasuda,
Noriyoshi Hashimoto,
Jun-ichiro Hayakawa,
Hiroshi Hiai,
Osamu Nikaido
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
journal of radiation research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.643
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 1349-9157
pISSN - 0449-3060
DOI - 10.1269/jrr.39.119
Subject(s) - carcinogenesis , ratón , carcinogen , cancer research , biology , immunology , chemistry , medicine , cancer , biochemistry
To gain an insight into the relationship between UVB-carcinogenesis and natural killer activity, we examined ultraviolet light-induced carcinogenesis in mice with high natural killer, activity (KSN) and mice with natural killer deficiency (KSN-bg). We exposed mice six times a week to three levels of daily ultraviolet B (UVB) doses; 320, 160 and 0 J/m2/day. During the latency period of skin tumor development in KSN mice, we detected no suppression of the natural killer activity at both 320 and 160 J/m2/day. Even at 1340 J/m2/day, we could not detect any significant suppression of NK activity in KSN mice. When we irradiated spleen cells in vitro, we observed NK activity suppression. Next, we compared the carcinogenic effects of UVB-irradiation on KSN and KSN-bg mice. At 320 J/m2/day, we detected no significant differences between them. In contrast, at 160 J/m2/day, KSN-bg mice showed a significantly higher rate of skin tumor induction than KSN mice (p < 0.05). Most UVB-induced tumors were squamous cell carcinoma, the rest were spindle cell carcinoma, papilloma and mixed type. Our results suggest that NK activity plays a protective role against UVB-carcinogenesis from low daily-doses of UVB-irradiation.
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