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The inverse relationship between bladder and liver in 4-aminobiphenyl-induced DNA damage

Bladder cancer risk is significantly higher in men than in women. 4-Aminobiphenyl (ABP) is a major human bladder carcinogen from tobacco smoke and other sources. In mice, male bladder is more susceptible to ABP-induced carcinogenesis than female bladder, but ABP is more carcinogenic in the livers of...

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Autores principales: Bhattacharya, Arup, Klaene, Joshua J., Li, Yun, Paonessa, Joseph D., Stablewski, Aimee B., Vouros, Paul, Zhang, Yuesheng
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4359259/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25596734
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author Bhattacharya, Arup
Klaene, Joshua J.
Li, Yun
Paonessa, Joseph D.
Stablewski, Aimee B.
Vouros, Paul
Zhang, Yuesheng
author_facet Bhattacharya, Arup
Klaene, Joshua J.
Li, Yun
Paonessa, Joseph D.
Stablewski, Aimee B.
Vouros, Paul
Zhang, Yuesheng
author_sort Bhattacharya, Arup
collection PubMed
description Bladder cancer risk is significantly higher in men than in women. 4-Aminobiphenyl (ABP) is a major human bladder carcinogen from tobacco smoke and other sources. In mice, male bladder is more susceptible to ABP-induced carcinogenesis than female bladder, but ABP is more carcinogenic in the livers of female mice than of male mice. Here, we show that castration causes male mice to acquire female phenotype regarding susceptibility of bladder and liver to ABP. However, spaying has little impact on organ susceptibility to ABP. Liver UDP-glucuronosyltransferases (UGTs) are believed to protect liver against but sensitize bladder to ABP, as glucuronidation of ABP and its metabolites generally reduces their toxicity and promotes their elimination via urine, but the metabolites are labile in urine, delivering carcinogenic species to the bladder. Indeed, liver expression of ABP-metabolizing human UGT1A3 transgene in mice increases bladder susceptibility to ABP. However, ABP-specific liver UGT activity is significantly higher in wild-type female mice than in their male counterparts, and castration also significantly increases ABP-specific UGT activity in the liver. Taken together, our data suggest that androgen increases bladder susceptibility to ABP via liver, likely by modulating an ABP-metabolizing liver enzyme, but exclude UGT as an important mediator.
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spelling pubmed-43592592015-03-27 The inverse relationship between bladder and liver in 4-aminobiphenyl-induced DNA damage Bhattacharya, Arup Klaene, Joshua J. Li, Yun Paonessa, Joseph D. Stablewski, Aimee B. Vouros, Paul Zhang, Yuesheng Oncotarget Research Paper Bladder cancer risk is significantly higher in men than in women. 4-Aminobiphenyl (ABP) is a major human bladder carcinogen from tobacco smoke and other sources. In mice, male bladder is more susceptible to ABP-induced carcinogenesis than female bladder, but ABP is more carcinogenic in the livers of female mice than of male mice. Here, we show that castration causes male mice to acquire female phenotype regarding susceptibility of bladder and liver to ABP. However, spaying has little impact on organ susceptibility to ABP. Liver UDP-glucuronosyltransferases (UGTs) are believed to protect liver against but sensitize bladder to ABP, as glucuronidation of ABP and its metabolites generally reduces their toxicity and promotes their elimination via urine, but the metabolites are labile in urine, delivering carcinogenic species to the bladder. Indeed, liver expression of ABP-metabolizing human UGT1A3 transgene in mice increases bladder susceptibility to ABP. However, ABP-specific liver UGT activity is significantly higher in wild-type female mice than in their male counterparts, and castration also significantly increases ABP-specific UGT activity in the liver. Taken together, our data suggest that androgen increases bladder susceptibility to ABP via liver, likely by modulating an ABP-metabolizing liver enzyme, but exclude UGT as an important mediator. Impact Journals LLC 2014-12-17 /pmc/articles/PMC4359259/ /pubmed/25596734 Text en Copyright: © 2015 Bhattacharya et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Bhattacharya, Arup
Klaene, Joshua J.
Li, Yun
Paonessa, Joseph D.
Stablewski, Aimee B.
Vouros, Paul
Zhang, Yuesheng
The inverse relationship between bladder and liver in 4-aminobiphenyl-induced DNA damage
title The inverse relationship between bladder and liver in 4-aminobiphenyl-induced DNA damage
title_full The inverse relationship between bladder and liver in 4-aminobiphenyl-induced DNA damage
title_fullStr The inverse relationship between bladder and liver in 4-aminobiphenyl-induced DNA damage
title_full_unstemmed The inverse relationship between bladder and liver in 4-aminobiphenyl-induced DNA damage
title_short The inverse relationship between bladder and liver in 4-aminobiphenyl-induced DNA damage
title_sort inverse relationship between bladder and liver in 4-aminobiphenyl-induced dna damage
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4359259/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25596734
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