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Discrimination of Carcinogens by Hepatic Transcript Profiling in Rats Following 28-day Administration

This study aimed at discriminating carcinogens on the basis of hepatic transcript profiling in the rats administrated with a variety of carcinogens and non-carcinogens. We conducted 28-day toxicity tests in male F344 rats with 47 carcinogens and 26 non-carcinogens, and then investigated periodically...

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Autores principales: Matsumoto, Hiroshi, Yakabe, Yoshikuni, Saito, Koichi, Sumida, Kayo, Sekijima, Masaru, Nakayama, Koji, Miyaura, Hideki, Saito, Fumiyo, Otsuka, Masanori, Shirai, Tomoyuki
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Libertas Academica 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2791490/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20011461
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author Matsumoto, Hiroshi
Yakabe, Yoshikuni
Saito, Koichi
Sumida, Kayo
Sekijima, Masaru
Nakayama, Koji
Miyaura, Hideki
Saito, Fumiyo
Otsuka, Masanori
Shirai, Tomoyuki
author_facet Matsumoto, Hiroshi
Yakabe, Yoshikuni
Saito, Koichi
Sumida, Kayo
Sekijima, Masaru
Nakayama, Koji
Miyaura, Hideki
Saito, Fumiyo
Otsuka, Masanori
Shirai, Tomoyuki
author_sort Matsumoto, Hiroshi
collection PubMed
description This study aimed at discriminating carcinogens on the basis of hepatic transcript profiling in the rats administrated with a variety of carcinogens and non-carcinogens. We conducted 28-day toxicity tests in male F344 rats with 47 carcinogens and 26 non-carcinogens, and then investigated periodically the hepatic gene expression profiles using custom microarrays. By hierarchical cluster analysis based on significantly altered genes, carcinogens were clustered into three major groups (Group 1 to 3). The formation of these groups was not affected by the gene sets used as well as the administration period, indicating that the grouping of carcinogens was universal independent of the conditions of both statistical analysis and toxicity testing. Seventeen carcinogens belonging to Group 1 were composed of mainly rat hepatocarcinogens, most of them being mutagenic ones. Group 2 was formed by three subgroups, which were composed of 23 carcinogens exhibiting distinct properties in terms of genotoxicity and target tissues, namely nonmutagenic hepatocarcinogens, and mutagenic and nonmutagenic carcinogens both of which are targeted to other tissues. Group 3 contained 6 carcinogens including 4 estrogenic substances, implying the group of estrogenic carcinogens. Gene network analyses revealed that the significantly altered genes in Group 1 included Bax, Tnfrsf6, Btg2, Mgmt and Abcb1b, suggesting that p53-mediated signaling pathway involved in early pathologic alterations associated with preceding mutagenic carcinogenesis. Thus, the common transcriptional signatures for each group might reflect the early molecular events of carcinogenesis and hence would enable us to identify the biomarker genes, and then to develop a new assay for carcinogenesis prediction.
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spelling pubmed-27914902009-12-11 Discrimination of Carcinogens by Hepatic Transcript Profiling in Rats Following 28-day Administration Matsumoto, Hiroshi Yakabe, Yoshikuni Saito, Koichi Sumida, Kayo Sekijima, Masaru Nakayama, Koji Miyaura, Hideki Saito, Fumiyo Otsuka, Masanori Shirai, Tomoyuki Cancer Inform Original Research This study aimed at discriminating carcinogens on the basis of hepatic transcript profiling in the rats administrated with a variety of carcinogens and non-carcinogens. We conducted 28-day toxicity tests in male F344 rats with 47 carcinogens and 26 non-carcinogens, and then investigated periodically the hepatic gene expression profiles using custom microarrays. By hierarchical cluster analysis based on significantly altered genes, carcinogens were clustered into three major groups (Group 1 to 3). The formation of these groups was not affected by the gene sets used as well as the administration period, indicating that the grouping of carcinogens was universal independent of the conditions of both statistical analysis and toxicity testing. Seventeen carcinogens belonging to Group 1 were composed of mainly rat hepatocarcinogens, most of them being mutagenic ones. Group 2 was formed by three subgroups, which were composed of 23 carcinogens exhibiting distinct properties in terms of genotoxicity and target tissues, namely nonmutagenic hepatocarcinogens, and mutagenic and nonmutagenic carcinogens both of which are targeted to other tissues. Group 3 contained 6 carcinogens including 4 estrogenic substances, implying the group of estrogenic carcinogens. Gene network analyses revealed that the significantly altered genes in Group 1 included Bax, Tnfrsf6, Btg2, Mgmt and Abcb1b, suggesting that p53-mediated signaling pathway involved in early pathologic alterations associated with preceding mutagenic carcinogenesis. Thus, the common transcriptional signatures for each group might reflect the early molecular events of carcinogenesis and hence would enable us to identify the biomarker genes, and then to develop a new assay for carcinogenesis prediction. Libertas Academica 2009-11-13 /pmc/articles/PMC2791490/ /pubmed/20011461 Text en © 2009 The authors. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This article is an open-access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/).
spellingShingle Original Research
Matsumoto, Hiroshi
Yakabe, Yoshikuni
Saito, Koichi
Sumida, Kayo
Sekijima, Masaru
Nakayama, Koji
Miyaura, Hideki
Saito, Fumiyo
Otsuka, Masanori
Shirai, Tomoyuki
Discrimination of Carcinogens by Hepatic Transcript Profiling in Rats Following 28-day Administration
title Discrimination of Carcinogens by Hepatic Transcript Profiling in Rats Following 28-day Administration
title_full Discrimination of Carcinogens by Hepatic Transcript Profiling in Rats Following 28-day Administration
title_fullStr Discrimination of Carcinogens by Hepatic Transcript Profiling in Rats Following 28-day Administration
title_full_unstemmed Discrimination of Carcinogens by Hepatic Transcript Profiling in Rats Following 28-day Administration
title_short Discrimination of Carcinogens by Hepatic Transcript Profiling in Rats Following 28-day Administration
title_sort discrimination of carcinogens by hepatic transcript profiling in rats following 28-day administration
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2791490/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20011461
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