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Upregulation of apoptosis with dietary restriction: implications for carcinogenesis and aging.

The maintenance of cell number homeostasis in normal tissues reflects a highly regulated balance between the rates of cell proliferation and cell death. Under pathologic conditions such as exposure to cytotoxic, genotoxic, or nongenotoxic agents, an imbalance in these rates may indicate subsequent r...

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Autores principales: James, S J, Muskhelishvili, L, Gaylor, D W, Turturro, A, Hart, R
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1998
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1533286/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9539024
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author James, S J
Muskhelishvili, L
Gaylor, D W
Turturro, A
Hart, R
author_facet James, S J
Muskhelishvili, L
Gaylor, D W
Turturro, A
Hart, R
author_sort James, S J
collection PubMed
description The maintenance of cell number homeostasis in normal tissues reflects a highly regulated balance between the rates of cell proliferation and cell death. Under pathologic conditions such as exposure to cytotoxic, genotoxic, or nongenotoxic agents, an imbalance in these rates may indicate subsequent risk of carcinogenesis. Apoptotic cell death, as opposed to necrotic cell death, provides a protective mechanism by selective elimination of senescent, preneoplastic, or superfluous cells that could negatively affect normal function and/or promote cell transformation. The relative efficiency or dysfunction of the cell death program could therefore have a direct impact on the risk of degenerative or neoplastic disease. Dietary restriction of rodents is a noninvasive intervention that has been reproducibly shown to retard tumor development and most physiologic indices of aging relative to ad libitum-fed animals. As such, it provides a powerful model in which to study common mechanistic processes associated with both aging and cancer. In a recent study we established that chronic dietary restriction (DR) induces an increase in spontaneous apoptotic rate and a decrease in cell proliferation rate in hepatocytes of 12-month-old B6C3F1 DR mice relative to ad libitum (AL)-fed mice. This diet-induced shift in cell death/proliferation rates was associated with a marked reduction in subsequent development of spontaneous hepatoma and a marked increase in disease-free life span in DR relative to AL-fed mice. These results suggest that total caloric intake may modulate the rates of cell death and proliferation in a direction consistent with a cancer-protective effect in DR mice and a cancer-promoting effect in AL mice. To determine whether the increase in spontaneous apoptotic rate was maintained over the life span of DR mice, apoptotic rates were quantified in 12-, 18-, 24- and 30-month-old DR and AL mice. The rate of apoptosis was elevated with age in both diet groups; however, the rate of apoptosis was significantly and consistently higher in DR mice regardless of age. In double-labeling experiments, an age-associated increase in the glutathione S-transferase-II expression in putative preneoplastic hepatocytes in AL mice was rapidly reduced by apoptosis upon initiation of DR. Thus, intervention that promote a low-level increase in apoptotic cell death may be expected to protect genotypic and phenotypic stability with age. If during tumor promotion an adaptive increase in apoptosis effectively balances the dysregulated increase proliferation, the risk of permanent genetic error and carcinogenesis would be minimized.
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spelling pubmed-15332862006-08-08 Upregulation of apoptosis with dietary restriction: implications for carcinogenesis and aging. James, S J Muskhelishvili, L Gaylor, D W Turturro, A Hart, R Environ Health Perspect Research Article The maintenance of cell number homeostasis in normal tissues reflects a highly regulated balance between the rates of cell proliferation and cell death. Under pathologic conditions such as exposure to cytotoxic, genotoxic, or nongenotoxic agents, an imbalance in these rates may indicate subsequent risk of carcinogenesis. Apoptotic cell death, as opposed to necrotic cell death, provides a protective mechanism by selective elimination of senescent, preneoplastic, or superfluous cells that could negatively affect normal function and/or promote cell transformation. The relative efficiency or dysfunction of the cell death program could therefore have a direct impact on the risk of degenerative or neoplastic disease. Dietary restriction of rodents is a noninvasive intervention that has been reproducibly shown to retard tumor development and most physiologic indices of aging relative to ad libitum-fed animals. As such, it provides a powerful model in which to study common mechanistic processes associated with both aging and cancer. In a recent study we established that chronic dietary restriction (DR) induces an increase in spontaneous apoptotic rate and a decrease in cell proliferation rate in hepatocytes of 12-month-old B6C3F1 DR mice relative to ad libitum (AL)-fed mice. This diet-induced shift in cell death/proliferation rates was associated with a marked reduction in subsequent development of spontaneous hepatoma and a marked increase in disease-free life span in DR relative to AL-fed mice. These results suggest that total caloric intake may modulate the rates of cell death and proliferation in a direction consistent with a cancer-protective effect in DR mice and a cancer-promoting effect in AL mice. To determine whether the increase in spontaneous apoptotic rate was maintained over the life span of DR mice, apoptotic rates were quantified in 12-, 18-, 24- and 30-month-old DR and AL mice. The rate of apoptosis was elevated with age in both diet groups; however, the rate of apoptosis was significantly and consistently higher in DR mice regardless of age. In double-labeling experiments, an age-associated increase in the glutathione S-transferase-II expression in putative preneoplastic hepatocytes in AL mice was rapidly reduced by apoptosis upon initiation of DR. Thus, intervention that promote a low-level increase in apoptotic cell death may be expected to protect genotypic and phenotypic stability with age. If during tumor promotion an adaptive increase in apoptosis effectively balances the dysregulated increase proliferation, the risk of permanent genetic error and carcinogenesis would be minimized. 1998-02 /pmc/articles/PMC1533286/ /pubmed/9539024 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
James, S J
Muskhelishvili, L
Gaylor, D W
Turturro, A
Hart, R
Upregulation of apoptosis with dietary restriction: implications for carcinogenesis and aging.
title Upregulation of apoptosis with dietary restriction: implications for carcinogenesis and aging.
title_full Upregulation of apoptosis with dietary restriction: implications for carcinogenesis and aging.
title_fullStr Upregulation of apoptosis with dietary restriction: implications for carcinogenesis and aging.
title_full_unstemmed Upregulation of apoptosis with dietary restriction: implications for carcinogenesis and aging.
title_short Upregulation of apoptosis with dietary restriction: implications for carcinogenesis and aging.
title_sort upregulation of apoptosis with dietary restriction: implications for carcinogenesis and aging.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1533286/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9539024
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