TY - JOUR
T1 - Prevention of inflammation-mediated acquisition of metastatic properties of benign mouse fibrosarcoma cells by administration of an orally available superoxide dismutase
AU - Okada, F.
AU - Shionoya, H.
AU - Kobayashi, M.
AU - Kobayashi, T.
AU - Tazawa, H.
AU - Onuma, K.
AU - Iuchi, Y.
AU - Matsubara, N.
AU - Ijichi, T.
AU - Dugas, B.
AU - Hosokawa, M.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Dr Junichi Fujii for his invaluable advice and Ms Masako Yanome for her help in English revision of this manuscript. This work was supported in part by a Grant-in Aid from Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (17016007); Grant-in-Aid from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (15390367 and 17590334 to FO) and Grant-in-Aid for Cancer Research (14-11, 16-1 to FO) from the Japanese Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare.
PY - 2006/3/27
Y1 - 2006/3/27
N2 - Weakly tumorigenic and nonmetastatic QR-32 cells derived from a fibrosarcoma in C57BL6 mouse are converted to malignant cells once they have grown after being coimplanted with a gelatine sponge which induces inflammation. We administered a newly developed peroral superoxide dismutase (SOD), oxykine, and as control vehicle, gliadin and saline, starting 2 days before the coimplantation and continued daily throughout the experiment. In the oxykine group, tumour incidence was lower (41%) than in the gliadin or saline group (83 and 79%, respectively). The inhibitory effect of oxykine was lost when an individual component of oxykine was administered, that is, SOD alone and gliadin alone. The effect was also abolished when administered by intraperitoneal route. When perfused in situ with nitroblue tetrazolium, an indicator of superoxide formation, the tumour masses from gliadin and saline groups displayed intense formazan deposition, whereas, those from oxykine group had less deposition. Enzymatic activity of SOD was also increased in oxykine group. Arising tumour cells in gliadin and saline groups acquired metastatic phenotype, but those in oxykine group showed reduced metastatic ability. These results suggested that the orally active SOD derivative prevented tumour progression promoted by inflammation, which is thought to be through scavenging inflammatory cell-derived superoxide anion.
AB - Weakly tumorigenic and nonmetastatic QR-32 cells derived from a fibrosarcoma in C57BL6 mouse are converted to malignant cells once they have grown after being coimplanted with a gelatine sponge which induces inflammation. We administered a newly developed peroral superoxide dismutase (SOD), oxykine, and as control vehicle, gliadin and saline, starting 2 days before the coimplantation and continued daily throughout the experiment. In the oxykine group, tumour incidence was lower (41%) than in the gliadin or saline group (83 and 79%, respectively). The inhibitory effect of oxykine was lost when an individual component of oxykine was administered, that is, SOD alone and gliadin alone. The effect was also abolished when administered by intraperitoneal route. When perfused in situ with nitroblue tetrazolium, an indicator of superoxide formation, the tumour masses from gliadin and saline groups displayed intense formazan deposition, whereas, those from oxykine group had less deposition. Enzymatic activity of SOD was also increased in oxykine group. Arising tumour cells in gliadin and saline groups acquired metastatic phenotype, but those in oxykine group showed reduced metastatic ability. These results suggested that the orally active SOD derivative prevented tumour progression promoted by inflammation, which is thought to be through scavenging inflammatory cell-derived superoxide anion.
KW - Fibrosarcoma cells
KW - Inflammation-mediated tumour progression
KW - Metastasis
KW - Orally available superoxide dismutase
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U2 - 10.1038/sj.bjc.6603016
DO - 10.1038/sj.bjc.6603016
M3 - Article
C2 - 16508635
AN - SCOPUS:33645297933
SN - 0007-0920
VL - 94
SP - 854
EP - 862
JO - British Journal of Cancer
JF - British Journal of Cancer
IS - 6
ER -