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[CANCER RESEARCH 38. 1479-1496, June 1978] 0008-5472/78/0038-0000$02.00. Some Current Perspectives on Chemical Carcinogenesis Experimental Animals: Presidential Address1 Elizabeth McArdle in Humans and C. Miller Laboratory lor Cancer Research, University of Wisconsin Medical Center, Madison, Wisconsin 53706 Knowledge in chemical carcinogenesis now spans many disciplines and is so large a subject that many areas can be considered here only briefly or not at all. Similarly, in many cases references to reviews have been substituted for references to the original literature in order to keep the bibliography within manageable limits. Environmental I am very honored to have the opportunity to discuss some aspects of chemical carcinogenesis with you tonight. Those of you who know my husband, James A. Miller, and me could not have been surprised at my choice of this subject, for we have spent an exciting 35 years together in trying to ferret out some of the properties of chemical carcinogens and the changes that they cause in their target tissues. When we started our work together in 1942, chem ical carcinogenesis was a rather limited field that had attracted only a small number of investigators. During the intervening years interest in chemical carcinogenesis has grown markedly and, like the scientific disciplines of or ganic chemistry, biochemistry, and molecular biology, on which it depends, has grown greatly in its sophistication. 1 Presented on May 18, 1977. at the 68th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research, Denver, Colo. Chemical Carcinogens for the Human The great interest in chemical carcinogenesis among both scientific and lay persons is based in part on the conclusion of epidemiologists, starting with Higginson (78) in 1969, that 60 to 90% of human cancers have important environmental factors in their etiologies. This deduction is based primarily on the large differences in incidences of specific cancers, usually measured by mortality figures, from country to country and even within countries (see also Refs. 41 and 42). As shown by Haenszel and his collabora tors (65, 66) and others, these differences in geographic incidences are not primarily genetically determined. Thus, the cancer patterns for migrants from one country to another, and especially those of their children, generally change from those characteristic for inhabitants of the mother country toward those characteristic of the inhabit ants of their new country. Other than skin cancer, for which solar UV is an important causative factor (44, 212), emphasis has been placed on environmental chemicals as major factors in the causation of human cancer. This emphasis has resulted from the lack of definitive data on the roles of infectious viruses in the causation of human cancers (70),2 the indication that ioniz ing radiations play only a relatively minor role in the overall cancer incidences (88), the fact that over a dozen specific chemicals have been identified as causes of some human cancers (Table 1), and the conclusion that a high proportion of all human lung cancers is associated with cigarette smoking (191). In addition to the chemicals generally rec ognized as carcinogens in humans as a result of industrial, medical, and societal exposures, a number of other chemi cals in the environment, such as aflatoxin B, and certain Nnitrosamines and N-nitrosamides, are strongly suspected of causing cancers in humans (13, 84, 119, 216, 231). It appears very likely that additional chemical carcinogens of both natural and synthetic origin will be identified as causes of human cancer. 2 There is no unanimity of opinion on the possible roles of viruses in the causation of human cancer. While most investigators today appear to find the available data unconvincing as evidence for an important role of infectious viruses, Gross (60) believes that viruses may be key factors in the etiology of human cancer. JUNE 1978 1479 Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on August 11, 2017. © 1978 American Association for Cancer Research. E. C. Miller Table 1 Chemicals generally recognized as carcinogens in the human ChemicalIndustrial formationUrinary of tumor exposures2 /3)-NaphthylamineBenzidine (or (4,4'-diaminobiphenyl)4-Aminobiphenyl 4-nitrobiphenylBis(chloromethyl) and etherBis(2-chloroethyl) sulfideVinyl chlorideCertain oilsChromium soots, tars, compoundsNickel compoundsAsbestosAsbestos bladderUrinary bladderUrinary bladderLungsRespiratory tractLiver mesenchymeSkin, lungsLungsLungs, 484, Vol. 184,Vol. and84, Vols. 1 484, Vol. 984, Vol. 784, Vol. 10384, Vol. 3; Vol.284, and84, Vols. 2 and84, Vols. 2 and84, Vols. 2 sinusesPleura, nasal peritoneumLungs, smokingMedical plus cigarette pleura, perito neumUrinary exposuresA/,/V-Bis(2-chloroethyl)-2-naphthylamine(Chlornapthazine)DiethylstilbestrolSocietalCigarette Vol.484, bladderVaginaLungs, 61911514111414 Vol. smokeBetel nut and tobacco quidsSites urinary tract, pan creasBuccal mucosaRef.84, Early Studies The beginnings of our knowledge on chemical carcinogenesis can be traced to two observations in London, England. The first was that of the astute physician John Hill (172) in 1761 on the development of nasal cancer as a consequence of excessive use of tobacco snuff, and the second was that of the perceptive surgeon Percival Pott (164) on the unusually high incidence of cancer of the skin of the scrotum among young men who were chimney sweeps in their childhood. Pott's observation was appar ently the basis of the first preventive measures against chemically induced cancers in humans, since, according to Clemmesen (33), 3 years later the Danish chimney swee per's guild urged its members to take daily baths. About 100 years later Butlin (27), another English physician, con cluded that the low incidence of scrotal cancer among the chimney sweeps in northern Europe as compared to the high incidence among English chimney sweeps was related to the better personal hygiene and protective clothing of the former group. The development of skin cancer in certain workers was shown by von Volkmann in Germany in 1875 and by Bell in Scotland in 1876 to be associated with contact of the skin with tar and paraffin oils that, as we now know, contained polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (reviewed in Ref. 64). The latter observations led in 1907 to the inclusion of such skin cancers in the third schedule of the British Workmen's Compensation Act (75). These observations were followed in the latter part of the 19th century by Rehn's acute observations (173) on the development of cancer of the urinary bladder in three workers in a so-called "aniline" dye factory in Germany and by the subsequent observations in many countries on the association between human bladder cancer and occupations that resulted in relatively gross exposures to 2 (or /3)-naphthylamine, benzidine (4,4'-diaminobiphenyl), or 4-aminobiphenyl (Ref. 29, pp. 40-45). These observations on higher incidences of specific can cers in individuals with particular chemical exposures 1480 stimulated attempts to induce tumors in experimental ani mals by application of the implicated chemicals and related substances. Fischer (52) met with some success in 1906, when he found that the application of the azo dye scarlet red (1-[4-(o-tolylazo)-o-tolylazo]-2-naphthol) induced a proliferative lesion of the skin in rabbits. However, these lesions did not progress to frank neoplasia and regressed after the applications of scarlet red were stopped. A number of investigators sought to demonstrate the carcinogenic activity of soots and tars in experimental animals. Success was achieved in 1915 by Yamagiwa and Ichikawa in Japan who induced carcinomas on the ears of rabbits by repeated topical applications of coal tar for long periods (see Ref. 64). Tsutsui in 1918 then showed that tars are also carcino genic for mouse skin, and in 1922 Passey induced cancer in mouse skin by application of ether extracts of tars (64). The induction of skin cancer with tars and extracts thereof led to searches for the active agents. Chemical studies by Bloch and Dreifuss and their collaborators in Germany suggested that polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons were the active materials (64). More conclusive evidence was available when Kennaway (96) in 1925 produced carci nogenic tars by pyrolysis in a hydrogen atmosphere of several organic materials, including acetylene. Hieger's work (77) revealed that the fluorescence spectra of products from the tars and of synthetic benz(a)anthracene derivatives were similar. This observation led to the demonstration by Kennaway and Hieger (97) in 1930 of 1,2,5,6-dibenzanthracene3 or, as it is now known, dibenz(a,h)anthracene, as the first synthetic carcinogen (Chart 1). Soon thereafter, a carcinogenic hydrocarbon isolated from coal tar was iden tified by Cook, Hewett, and Hieger (35) as 3,4-benzpyrene, now called benzo(a)pyrene. Extensive studies, especially by Kennaway and his associates in England and by Shear, Fieser, and their associates in this country, soon led to a 3The hydrocarbon was designated as 1,2,7,8-dibenzanthracene in the original paper (97). According to Hartwell (Ref. 69, p. 238) it should have been called 1,2,5,6-dibenzanthracene. CANCER RESEARCH Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on August 11, 2017. © 1978 American Association for Cancer Research. VOL. 38 Current Perspectives on Chemical Carcinogenesis rororc? «W DIBENZIo.hlANTHRACENE CARBON TETRACHLORlOe 2-ACETYLAMINOFLUORENE (N-2-FLUORENYLACETAMIDE) BENZOfolPYRENE B>O BERYLLIUM ETHYL 3-METHYLCHOLANTHRENE 7,12-DIMETHYLBENZIolANTHRACENE ,CHj 2',3-OIMETHYL-4-AMINOAZOBENZENE OXIDE CARBAMATE N.N-DIMETHYL-4-AMINOAZOBENZENE CH3-N CHo-CHo-CI ' 1CH2-CH2-O N-METHYL-BIS(ß-CHLOROETHYD- CHj CHj' N-NO DIMETHYLNITROSAMINE AMINE CHj-Q^-S-CHj-CHj- CH- COOH NH2 Chart 2. The structures of some chemical carcinogens identified between 1940 and 1960. Chart 1. The structures of the principal chemical carcinogens discovered prior to 1940. large literature on the chemical features required for the carcinogenicity of the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (reviewed in Ref. 29, pp. 137-164; Ref. 40). Of the carcino genic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons studied during this early period, benzo(a)pyrene, 3-methylcholanthrene, dibenz(a,tì)anthracene, and 7,12-dimethylbenz(a)anthracene have been most widely used in subsequent experimental studies. Following the early work of Fischer, Yoshida (235) showed in 1933 that p.o. administration of a derivative of scarlet red, o-aminoazotoluene or 2',3-dimethyl-4-aminoazobenzene, induced liver tumors in rats and mice. Three years later Kinosita (102) demonstrated the strong carcino genicity of an isomer, /N/,/V-dimethyl-4-aminoazobenzene. In 1938 Hueper, Wiley, and Wolfe (82) succeeded in the induction of cancer of the urinary bladder in dogs fed 2naphthylamine. Thus, by 1940 the epidemiological data on the carcinogenicity of an aromatic amine and of coal tars and soots for man had been complemented by definitive data on the carcinogenicity of pure chemicals contained in these mixtures for laboratory animals. Furthermore, in 1932 Lacassagne (109) made the first observations on the devel opment of mammary cancer in male mice treated with estrone and thus opened the large field of hormone-in duced tumors for experimental study. This limited list of known carcinogenic chemicals ex panded markedly in the 1940's (Chart 2). The carcinogenic ity of 2-acetylaminofluorene was first observed by Wilson, DeEds, and Cox (228) in 1941. Subsequent studies showed the versatility of its carcinogenic activity for various tissues and species (223), and a number of related amides were found to have similar activity (138, 139, 143). Also in 1941 Edwards (43) reported the induction of hepatomas in mice by carbon tetrachloride; a number of halogenated hydro carbons have since shown similar activity. Urethan (ethyl carbamate) was found by Nettleship and Henshaw (153) to induce adenomas of the lung in mice, and subsequent studies demonstrated the versatility of this carcinogen (146). The induction in 1946 of osteosarcoma in rabbits by zinc beryllium silicate and beryllium oxide by Gardner and Heslington (57) was the first experimental demonstration of the carcinogenicity of certain inorganic chemicals (Ref. 29, pp. 113-134). Similarly, the carcinogenicities of thiourea, thioacetamide, and the nitrogen mustards were first ob served in this decade (20, 53, 168). Data reported in the 1950's revealed the carcinogenic activities of new classes of chemicals: the wide range of alkylating agents (112); the dialkylnitrosamines (119); ethionine (48); and the pyrrolizidine alkaloids (34, 183). The carcinogenicity of the pyrrolizidine alkaloids, like that of estrone, made it evident that chemical carcinogens are not solely the products of chemists or of high-temperature combustions. A number of metabolites of plants and micro organisms are now known to be carcinogenic for experi mental animals (Chart 3) (142), and it is probable that many more naturally occurring carcinogens exist among the vast number of uncharacterized nonnutrient metabolites of liv ing cells. Some of these can be expected to contact human tissues, usually in low doses, through food or as products of the intestinal flora. The large number and great variety of organic chemical carcinogens now known belong to over a dozen different classes. A much smaller number of inorganic chemical carcinogens have been identified, and many classes of inorganic chemicals remain to be tested for their carcino genic potentials (69, 84, 91, 185, 208). An achievement of great importance was the develop ment of techniques for the malignant transformation of cells in culture by chemicals. The first reproducible system for malignant transformation was reported in 1963 by Berwald and Sachs (12), who used hamster embryo cells. The maintenance and transformation of rodent fibroblast cul tures have since been examined in considerable detail. Systems for the transformation of epithelial cells have been more difficult to develop. This important area of research, which has provided valuable techniques for elucidation of the molecular events that occur during chemical carcinogenesis, has been critically reviewed by Heidelberger (73). Tumor Induction as a Multistage Phenomenon Skin. The classical methods for the induction of tumors by chemicals have usually involved the administration of a single agent, most often in a repetitive manner, with the 1481 JUNE 1978 Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on August 11, 2017. © 1978 American Association for Cancer Research. E. C. Miller HOHjC OH CYCASIN (CYCAD TREE FERNS) R'-O CH0-0-C-R b' 0-CH3 AFLATOXIN (ASPERGILLUS B, PYRROLIZIDINE ALKALOIDS (SENECIO,CROTOLARIA AND HELIOTROPIUM GENERA) FLAVUS) OCHj CI MITOMYCIN (STREPTOMYCES C CAESPITOSUS) CH3 GRISEOFULVIN (PENICILLIUM GRISEOFULVUM) Chart 3. The structures of some chemical carcinogens that are products of plants and microorganisms. end point being the development of benign or malignant tumors or both. However, it has been evident for many years that the induction of skin tumors in the mouse and rabbit is a multistage process. At first shown by Rous and his associates (55, 179), Mottram (150), and Berenblum (9) and further developed by Berenblum and Shubik, Boutwell, and Van Duuren and their associates, the administration of a limited dose of a chemical carcinogen to mouse or rabbit skin causes changes in some cells that are imperceptible in the absence of further treatment and do not by themselves result in tu mors (reviewed in Refs. 16, 17, and 213). This initiation can be effected by a single dose of the carcinogen, such as an alkylating agent, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon, or ethyl carbamate. Initiation is generally considered to be com pleted rapidly and to be essentially irreversible. The sec ond stage, promotion, occurs over a period of weeks and months and is, at least in its early phases, largely reversible. The classical promoting agent for mouse skin is croton oil from the seeds of Croton tiglium; it was first used by Berenblum as a cocarcinogen (9). Structural characteriza tion of the active ingredients of the croton oil as 12,13diesters of the diterpene alcohol phorbol (Chart 4) was accomplished through independent studies in several lab oratories, especially those of Hecker and of Van Duuren (see Refs. 71 and 213). Of these diesters tetradecanoylphorbol acetate is by far the most active; anthralin (1,8-dihydroxy-9-anthrone), which is much less active as a promoter than the latter ester, is the most active of the nonphorbol derivatives studied (213). Chart 5 illustrates some essential features of the mouse skin tumor initiation-promotion system. Administration of only a single small dose of an initiator such as 7,12-dimethylbenz(a)anthracene or of only repetitive doses of the pro moter tetradecanoylphorbol acetate does not lead to gross tumors (16, 213). However, sequential administration of the hydrocarbon and then repeated doses of the phorbol ester give rise to a large number of papillomas within 3 to 4 months and carcinomas in about 1 year. Similar results are obtained even if several months elapse between the appli cation of the initiator and the first dose of promoter (11, 215). Important facts are that the sequence of application 1482 Chart 4. The structure of 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate or phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate, a very potent promoter for tumorigenesis in mouse skin. This promoting agent is found in the seeds of Croton tiglium. 0 -TIME I = INITIATOR P- .single dose) PROMOTER i many doses) Chart 5. Diagrammatic representation of the two-stage induction of tu mors in the skin of the mouse. Typical initiators are the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, ethyl carbamate, and certain alkylating agents. The most potent promoting agent is 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (Chart 4) Papillomas develop within about 12 to 20 weeks, and carcinomas develop at about 1 year. of the initiator and promoter cannot be reversed and that promotion requires repeated doses of the promoter. Liver. About 20 years ago Weiler (219) observed islands of morphologically normal hepatic cells in livers from rats given N,W-dimethyl-4-aminoazobenzene and then main tained on a dye-free diet for relatively long periods. As further elucidated by Hughes (83), these cells could be distinguished from the majority of the hepatic cells by their decreased ability to adsorb fluorescein-conjugated globu lins, but they were often not recognized as different from other liver cells on staining with hematoxylin and eosin. The studies on such altered, possibly premalignant cells, have been greatly extended by the groups working with Farber, Becker, Friedrich-Freksa, Rabes, and Emmelot (see Refs. 49, 50, 181, and 182). Farber, Becker, and their colleagues have designed protocols for the development of gross nodules of apparently nonneoplastic hepatic cells. In rats subsequently maintained in the absence of the carcin ogen, the cells of many of these hyperplastic nodules ceased to proliferate and were reincorporated into more or less normal hepatic structures (reviewed in Ref. 50). A two-stage system of hepatic tumor formation was intro duced in 1971 by Peraino and his associates (158, 159), who used a limited period of administration of 2-acetylaminofluorene and subsequent long-term dosing with pheno- CANCER RESEARCH Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on August 11, 2017. © 1978 American Association for Cancer Research. VOL. 38 Current Perspectives on Chemical Carcinogenesis barbital. The result of the combined treatment was a high incidence of relatively highly differentiated hepatocellular carcinomas, while the limited treatment with 2-acetylaminofluorene alone induced far fewer hepatic tumors. Longterm administration of phénobarbital to rats induced no tumors (158, 159) or a low incidence after a long latent period (178). Modifications of these systems are now being examined by many investigators. In preliminary studies Pitot (162) obtained hepatocellular carcinomas 1 year after administra tion of a single dose of diethylnitrosamine, 5 mg/kg, to partially hepatectomized rats that were, after 2 months, fed phénobarbital continuously in the diet. The livers of these rats also contained large numbers of "foci" of hepatic parenchymal cells that were distinguishable from normal cells by histochemical, but not morphological, techniques at the light microscope level. These groups of cells, which contained as few as 500 cells, were recognized by their deficiencies in histochemically detectable glucose-6-phosphatase or canalicular ATPase or by increases in y-glutamyltranspeptidase. The cells in these foci differed from normal parenchymal cells in 1, 2, or all 3 of these enzymatic activities (Chart 6), and the individuality of such cells will probably become even more evident as further markers are studied. Far fewer of these groups of altered cells were observed in livers from rats given only the low dose of diethylnitrosamine, and they were rarely seen in livers from rats given only the phénobarbital. The broad diversity of phenotype from the earliest recognizable altered cells to the primary tumors and the elucidation of the precursorproduct relationships, if any, between these two classes of cells will be exciting areas of research in the new few years. Other Tissues. Although the models have been much less well developed than for mouse skin tumors or rat liver tumors, evidence has also been presented for multistage induction of tumors of the mammary gland (4), thyroid (67), lung (3), urinary bladder (25, 76), and certain other tissues. Some of the problems in the interpretation of these data have been discussed by Berenblum (10). The two stages of initiation and promotion have also been demonstrated in mouse fibroblast cultures. Thus, as shown by Lasne and his associates (110) and by Mondai ef al. (148), a single short treatment with less than 1 ^g of a polycyclic hydrocarbon did not give rise to clones of trans formed cells. However, the subsequent exposure of the cells to 12-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate gave rise to large numbers of clones of transformed cells. The number of transformed cells was dependent both on the amount and structure of the initiating agent and on the structure of the promoting agent. Electrophilicity ogens as a Common Property of Ultimate Carcin Several observations early suggested that the metabolism of chemical carcinogens might be a key factor in their carcinogenic activities. Thus, as the number and variety of chemical carcinogens increased, it became more and more evident that these chemicals lacked a common structural feature (Charts 1 to 3). Furthermore, some carcinogens, especially the aromatic amine derivatives, produced tumors at distant sites such as the liver and urinary bladder regard less of the route of administration. An early clue to the possible metabolic activation of a carcinogen was our finding in 1947 of the covalent binding of a metabolite of /V,/V-dimethyl-4-aminoazobenzene to the hepatic proteins of rats fed this dye (131). Similar observations on the formation in target tissues of protein-bound derivatives of the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and 2-acetylaminofluorene soon followed in our laboratory and those of Heidelberger and the Weisburgers (reviewed in Refs. 72, 74, 132, 133, and 223). Other studies, especially in the laboratories of Heidelber ger (74, 206), Ketterer (98), and Sorof (192) and their associates, showed marked specificities of certain proteins of the target tissues for binding to these carcinogens. The reasons for these specificities and the roles of these pro tein-bound carcinogen derivatives in carcinogenesis have not been elucidated, but Mainigi and Sorof (121) have recently reported data consistent with their suggestion that the principal hepatic azo protein is a vehicle for the intracellular transport of an ultimate carcinogenic derivative of 3'-methyl-/V,/\/-dimethyl-4-aminoazobenzene. The recognition of the central roles of DNA's as store houses of genetic information and of RNA's in the transla tion of the genetic information for the synthesis of cellular proteins provided new perspectives on the possible roles of nucleic acid-carcinogen adducts in carcinogenesis and provided an impetus to search for such derivatives. Wheeler and Skipper (226) reported in 1957 that 14Cfrom [methyl14C]bis(2-chloroethyl)methylamine was incorporated into the purine fractions from the RNA and DMA of certain mouse tissues. Subsequent studies by Farber and Magee and their colleagues (51, 118, 123), by Brookes and Lawley (24), by Heidelberger (72), and by Stekol ef al. (195) soon demonstrated the incorporation of 14C from 14C-labeled ethionine, 2-acetylaminofluorene, dimethylnitrosamine, and polycyclic hydrocarbons into the DNA and RNA of the target tissues. Since that time the administration of all carcinogens that have been adequately studied has yielded DNA-, RNA-, and protein-bound derivatives in the target tissues (74, 133). Correlations between the levels of these nucleic acid- and protein-bound derivatives and the likeli hood of tumor development were obtained in many, but not all, cases. Taken as a whole, the data indicated that macromolecular-bound forms of the carcinogens were a neces sary, but not sufficient, correlate for the induction of tu mors by chemical carcinogens. Gradually, these and other studies led to the generaliza tion that the great majority of chemical carcinogens were active only after metabolism to ultimate carcinogens (;'.e., the derivatives that actually initiate the neoplastic event). The known exceptions are the carcinogens that are alkylating or acylating agents per se. Further, the data then available suggested to us that the ultimate forms of chemi cal carcinogens might all be strong electrophilic reactants (Chart 7) (141). This conclusion still appears to be valid, although a few carcinogens, such as Adriamycin (122), may be active through tight noncovalent binding rather than as a result of covalent reaction with a macromolecule. Thus, the known ultimate carcinogens contain relatively electrondeficient atoms that seek to react with nucleophilic sites, 1483 JUNE 1978 Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on August 11, 2017. © 1978 American Association for Cancer Research. E. C. Miller identification of the specific role of each adduct in the carcinogenic process. Since carcinogenic chemicals are promoters as well as initiators, it is possible that carcinogen-macromolecule interactions are of fundamental importance in both phases of the overall process. Furthermore, since there are initia tors with little or no promoting activity (e.g., ethyl carbamate in mouse skin) (180, 213) and promoters with little or no initiating activity (e.g., phorbol esters) (71,150, 213), the ultimate initiating and ultimate promoting agents from a given precarcinogen may be either identical or different. Furthermore, carcinogenesis by a chemical that has both initiating and promoting activities may require interaction with more than one kind of macromolecule, e.g., with both DNA and specific proteins. Examples of the Metabolic Chemical Carcinogens Activation and Reactivity of Potential Donors of Simple Alkyl Groups. This group includes especially the dialkylnitrosamines, dialkylhydrazines, aryldialkyltriazenes, and alkylnitrosamides. The first three classes of these versatile carcinogens are metabolically dealkylated by the mixed-function oxidases in the endoplasmic reticulum, and these monoalkyl derivatives spontaneously decompose to the corresponding monoalkyldiazonium ions (112, 119) (Chart 9). The W-nitrosimides and A/-nitrosamides do not require enzymatic activation, since their reaction with water and other cellular nucleo philes results in the formation of the same alkylating interChart 6. Biochemical phenotypes of foci of altered parenchymal cells in a section of liver from a rat given 1 p.o. dose (5 mg/kg) of diethylnitrosamine 24 hr after a partial hepatectomy and, starting 2 months later, 0.05% phénobarbitalin the diet for 6 months. The enzyme activities were deter mined on serial sections. O, glucose-6-phosphatase-deficient areas, , canalicular ATPase-deficient areas; •y-glutamyltranspeptidase-positive areas. (This chart was kindly provided by Dr. H. C. Pitot of the McArdle Laboratory.) H H CELLULAR la+--- NUCLEOPHILE —ti DISPLACED ELECTROPHILE ^ ELECTROPHILIC REACTANT (x+---y") >bx ELECTROPHILIC ATOM MET-SH CYS* LEAVING NUCLEOPHILE CI"2 PCû 1^N~,-0" fromstrained (HIS1N-I.N-3)/ GIN-3.N-7.N2)'^AtN-l NONEORH*:S N-7)jC(N-3)YH N-3 ringsR-COj TYRIC-3) G ' (C-B)*C-OH TYR6<°''l3=-OH , HS04 DMA-C*>R-SCÕ.R-CO¿,HSO¿H :NU = 9 _ , R-S R-O-tf-0 O R' Chart 7. Examples of strong electrophihc reactants (positive ions or uncharged molecules with electron-deficient atoms) and their reactions with nucleophiles (:NU) through sharing of electron pairs of electron-rich atoms. i.e., atoms that have easily shared electrons. These nucleo philic sites are relatively abundant in DNA's, RNA's, and proteins and include certain oxygen and nitrogen atoms in the nucleic acids and nitrogen, sulfur, and oxygen atoms in proteins (Chart 8). Because some, and probably many, precarcinogens are metabolized to more than one ultimate carcinogen and because there are multiple nucleophilic sites in each macromolecule, multiple DNA-, RNA-, and protein-bound derivatives of each carcinogen are possible and are frequently observed. Accordingly, basic problems of great importance today are the elucidation for each carcinogen of those informational macromolecule-bound products that are important in carcinogenesis and the 1484 Chart 8. In vivo macromolecular nucleophilic targets of chemical carcin ogens that have been identified up to the present. DIMETHYLNITROSAMINE N-METHYL-N-NITROSOUREA N-NO ,c0 H2N itHop, non-enzymatic rCH3|N=NfOH *; -i J, DNA, RNA, PROTEIN CHj-ONA, CHj-RNA WITH cf-CHj-G, 7-CH3-G, 3-CHj-A, ETC. CH3-PROTEIN WITH I- and î-CHj-HISTIDINE.S-CHj-CYSTEINE, ETC. Chart 9. The in vivo conversion of dimethylnitrosamine and of N-methylN-nitrosourea to a reactive electrophile and its reaction with cellular macromolecules. CANCER RESEARCH Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on August 11, 2017. © 1978 American Association for Cancer Research. VOL. 38 Current Perspectives on Chemical Carcinogenesis mediates. Administration of these carcinogens results in the alkylation, to various degrees, of a wide variety of nucleophilic sites in the target cells. 2-Acetylaminofluorene. 2-Acetylaminofluorene is a more complex carcinogen for which the metabolic activation has been worked out in some detail for one target tissue (the liver) (Chart 10). Studies with Cramer in our laboratory in 1960 showed that rats fed 2-acetylaminofluorene converted it to a new metabolite, A/-hydroxy-2-acetylaminofluorene, which is a stronger carcinogen than is the parent com pound and which is also active in a wider range of tissues and species (36, 136, 137, 140). Although administration of both 2-acetylaminofluorene and its /V-hydroxy derivative yielded nucleic acid- and protein-bound derivatives, espe cially in the rat liver (107, 133, 223), these carcinogens are not reactive in vitro and further metabolism seemed neces sary. Studies by King and Phillips (101) and by DeBaun in our laboratory (37) showed the presence of soluble sulfotransferase activity for N-hydroxy-2-acetylaminofluorene in rat liver; the product of this reaction, /V-sulfonoxy-2-acetylaminofluorene, appears to be a major ultimate carcinogenic metabolite in rat liver. Thus, hepatic sulfotransferase activ ity under various conditions correlates with susceptibility to hepatic tumor formation, the sulfuric acid ester is a very strong electrophile, and the hepatotoxicity and hepatocarcinogenicity of W-hydroxy-2-acetylaminofluorene were de creased on reduction of the amount of available active sulfate or 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate in vivo (37, 38, 224). The biological activity of the sulfuric acid ester was also evident from its high mutagenic activity in a DMA-transforming system (120). In spite of the apparent major importance of the sulfuric acid ester for liver tumor formation in the rat, it should be noted that three other enzymatic pathways for conversion of /V-hydroxy-2-acetylaminofluorene to electrophilic reactants have also been observed in rat liver (Chart 11). As shown by Bartsch and Hecker (7), W-hydroxy-2-acetylaminofluorene undergoes a peroxidase-catalyzed one-electron oxidation to yield a free nitroxide radical, and two of these radicals can dismutate to yield the electrophiles /V-acetoxy2-acetylaminofluorene and 2-nitrosofluorene. An electron spin resonance signal that is consistent with the formation of this free radical has been observed by Stier ef a/. (196) on incubation of 2-aminofluorene with rabbit liver microsomes. Further, Bartsch in our laboratory (6) showed that rat liver COCH, rot liver /COCHj |XOH E.R.., + NADPH+ OZ 2-ACETYLAMINOFLUORENE (AAF) N-HYDROXY-AAF rot liver cy totol + PAPS AAF- RESIDUES COVALENTLY BOUND TO HEPATIC INFORMATIONAL MACROMOLECULES PAPS •3-photphoadtnotlne ,COCH3 rot liver DNA, RNA, protein So-so, AAF-N-SULFATE -5- photphoiulfati ("active «ulfot«") Chart 10. The major pathway for the metabolic activation of 2-acetylami nofluorene for carcinogenesis in rat liver. E.R., endoplasmic reticulum. -C-CH DISMUTATION* N-ACETOXY-AAF PEROXIDASE 2-NITROSOFLUORENE H2 N-ACETOXY-AF GLUCURONYL TRANSFERASE + UDPGA 0-GLUCURONIDE Chart 11. Pathways, in addition to the formation of the sulfuric acid ester, for the metabolism of/V-hydroxy-2-acetylaminofluorene to electrophilic reactants in rat liver. N-ACETOXY-AAF, N-acetoxy-2-acetylaminofluorene; NACETOXY-AF, N-acetoxy-2-aminofluorene; UDPGA, uridine diphosphoglucuronic acid. cytosol forms the very potent electrophile /V-acetoxy-2-aminofluorene by enzymatic transfer of the acetyl group from the nitrogen atom of /V-hydroxy-2-acetylaminofluorene to the oxygen atom of the hydroxylamine. Finally, N-hydroxy2-acetylaminofluorene is converted by hepatic microsomes to the weakly electrophilic O-glucuronide (86, 130). These enzymatic reactions are also candidate systems for the formation of ultimate carcinogenic metabolites in extrahepatic target tissues where sulfotransferase activity for Nhydroxy-2-acetylaminofluorene has not been detected (37, 87, 100). The acetyltransferase may be of special impor tance in view of the wide range of tissues in which this activity occurs and the very high reactivity of the product, W-acetoxy-2-aminofluorene (6, 99, 100). Both acetylated and nonacetylated aminofluorene adducts have been isolated from the livers of rats treated with /V-hydroxy-2-acetylaminofluorene (5, 37, 107, 225) (Chart 12). On the basis of the products formed in in vitro reac tions, the acetylated adducts must be formed primarily from esters of /V-hydroxy-2-acetylaminofluorene, while the non acetylated adducts are presumably derived either from esters of A/-hydroxy-2-aminofluorene or from reaction of the glucuronide of /V-hydroxy-2-acetylaminofluorene, which yields a mixture of acetylated and nonacetylated adducts (130). While the methionine adducts (as evidenced by the amounts of o-methylmercapto-2-acetylaminofluorene and o-methylmercapto-2-aminofluorene isolated after degrada tion of the liver proteins) comprise only about 10% of the protein-bound fluorene derivatives (5, 37), the guanine adducts that have been identified appear to account for the major share of the nucleic acid adducts formed in rat liver in vivo. The major adducts are those in which the substitu tion occurs at C-8 of guanine (107), and the latter adducts are much more readily removed in vivo from the DMA of rat liver than is the minor adduci in which the substitution occurs on the 2-amino group of guanine (106, 225). JUNE 1978 1485 Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on August 11, 2017. © 1978 American Association for Cancer Research. E. C. Miller NUCLEIC ions formed on protonation of N-hydroxy-2-naphthylamine and N-hydroxy-4-aminobiphenyl may be ultimate carcino gens for the induction of urinary bladder tumors in the dog and human (Chart 13). Thus, Kadlubar in our laboratory (94) showed that these hydroxylamines are N-glucuronidated by ACID ADOUCIS the hepatic endoplasmic reticulum from these species, and Radomski ef al. (170) have recently characterized the Nglucuronide of /V-hydroxy-4-aminobiphenyl as a urinary metabolite of 4-aminobiphenyl in the dog. Furthermore, the PROTEIN ADDUCTS PROTEIN urines of many dogs and humans are sufficiently acidic to hydrolyze the /V-glucuronides and to protonate the resulting hydroxylamines for reaction with DNA (94). These conclu sions are consistent with the earlier report by Radomski and Brill (169) on the quantitative correlation between the carcinogenicities of 1- and 2-naphthylamine and 4-amino biphenyl in the dog urinary bladder with the level of excre tion of the corresponding A/-hydroxylamines (plus the nitro- Chart 12. Nucleic acid- and protein-bound adducts that have been identi fied in the livers of rats treated with 2-acetylaminofluorene or N-hydroxy-2acetylaminofluorene. An important substitution of carcinogenesis the molecules. question to be answered in considering the macromolecules by chemicals in relation to is how the alterations affect the activities of Fuchs ef al. (56) and Weinstein and Grun- berger (220) have both considered this problem for DNA substituted with 2-acetylaminofluorene residues at C-8 of guanine, and they have interpreted their structural findings with similar models in which the guanine of the adduci is rotated out of the double helix and the fluorene moiety is inserted into the helix. These models are consistent with base-pair substitution, frame shift, and deletion mutations, all of which have been observed with derivatives of 2acetylaminofluorene (46, 120, 127). In addition, this substi tution causes premature termination of transcription (144) and interferes with codon recognition of tRNA's (220). Other Aromatic Amines and Nitro Compounds. The ac tivities of all carcinogenic aromatic amines, amides, and nitro compounds appear to depend on their conversion to N-hydroxy derivatives in vivo (30, 140, 141). The ultimate carcinogenic metabolites have not been elucidated in most cases, and the activation reactions may differ with the aryl substituents, tissues, and species. For instance, /V-methyl4-aminoazobenzene is activated similarly to 2-acetylamino fluorene by /V-hydroxylation and sulfonation of the /V-hydroxy derivative, and the major nucleic acid adducts involve substitution of C-8 of guanine residues by the nitrogen atom of /V-methyl-4-aminoazobenzene (92, 93, 114). How ever, while the oxidation of 2-acetylaminofluorene is cata lyzed by a cytochrome P-450 system, the /V-oxidation of the dye is catalyzed by a flavoprotein that does not require cytochrome P-450, and the data indicate that different hepatic sulfotransferases may act on the two substrates. The carcinogen 4-nitroquinoline 1-oxide is reduced to 4hydroxyaminoquinoline 1-oxide, and Tada and Tada (204) have shown that this hydroxylamine can be esterified by seryl-tRNA, The resulting seryl ester, which has been sug gested as an ultimate carcinogenic metabolite, reacts pri marily with guanine and, to a lesser extent, with adenine residues. Recent studies have provided evidence that the nitrenium 1486 scarenes). Furthermore, bladder carcinomas were induced in dogs by the instillation of N-hydroxy-2-naphthylamine but not 2-naphthylamine. Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons. Studies on the me tabolism of the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons were first reported in the late 1930's, and by 1950 Berenblum, Schoental, Weigert, Mottram, Dobriner, and their associ ates had observed phenolic and quinone derivatives of several polycyclic hydrocarbons in tissue preparations or excreta of animals treated with these compounds (reviewed in Ref. 29, Chap. 7). The knowledge of the sites and extents of this metabolism was greatly extended during the next two decades, especially by reports from the laboratories of Boyland and Sims and of Heidelberger (reviewed in Refs. 40, 74, and 187). * NADPH endoplasmic + 02 reticulum V endoplasmic reticulumAr A M--OH , H LIVERti/H OH VN^ArH ,UDPGA |1 OHTRANSPORTH/—\ 1,. N'°HHoTTHArÕTÕH PH<7Ar V0" <¡ N,H URINEVH Ar-IS1A pH>7\^¿ ' ^H-O VH¿ /• X^. >H *H®,-H,01 Ar M® URINARYl H BLADDER EPITHELIUMCOVALENT ¡ 1' ¡METABOLIC 1 ACTIVATION VREACTIVE ELECTROPHILES (ESTERS') ( FREE RADICALS > ~>)COW BINDING TO NUCLEOPHILIC SITES IN CRITICAL MACROMOLECULES TUMOR FORMATION Chart 13. Formation and transport of possible proximate and ultimate carcinogenic metabolites of arylamines for the induction of urinary bladder cancer. , possible transport or reaction. Ar, aryl substituent; UDPGA, uridine diphosphoglucuronic acid (from Ref. 94). CANCER RESEARCH Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on August 11, 2017. © 1978 American Association for Cancer Research. VOL. 38 Current Perspectives on Chemical Carcinogenesis As early as 1950 Boyland (19) suggested that the series of metabolic phenols and dihydrodiols might be secondary products of metabolically formed epoxides and that these epoxides might be intermediates in tumor induction. At that time the K-regions of the hydrocarbons (i.e., the phenanthrene-like double bonds) had been singled out by the Pullmans (166) from calculations of electron densities as likely critical sites for the interactions of the hydrocarbons with tissue constituents, and the K-region epoxides were therefore the first epoxides to be examined for carcinogenic activity. The low carcinogenicities of the K-region epoxides of benz(a)anthracene or related hydrocarbons on s.c. injec tion or topical application to rats or mice in our laboratory and those of Boyland, Sims, and Van Duuren were disap pointing (21, 134, 186, 214). However, studies in Heidelberger's laboratory in 1971 and 1972 showed that usually, but not always, the K-region epoxides were more active than were the parent hydrocarbons for the transformation of mouse fibroblasts in culture (62, 80). In 1971 Selkirk ef al. (184) and Grover ef al. (61) showed the formation by liver microsomes of unidentified epoxides from benz(a)anthracene and dibenz(a,/?)anthracene. Work from these laboratories also showed the electrophilic reac tivity of the K-region epoxides (108). Knowledge of the mechanisms of metabolic activation of the polycyclic hydrocarbons and of the possible roles of the metabolic products in carcinogenesis has since developed rapidly, especially in the laboratories of Brookes, Conney, Gelboin, Harvey, Jerina, Sims and Grover, and Weinstein. In 1974 Sims and his colleagues (188) expanded on an observation of Borgen ef al. (14) that indicated that the critical metabo lism of the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons might occur at sites other than the K-regions; much evidence for this concept has been presented since. In the past few years particular attention has been fo cused on the nature of the ultimate carcinogenic metabo lites of benzo(a)pyrene and on the identities of its nucleic acid-bound derivatives (Chart 14). Elegant studies from the above laboratories now implicate 7/3,8a-dihydroxy-9a,10aepoxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydrobenzo(a)pyrene as a major ulti mate electrophilic, mutagenic, and carcinogenic metabolite of benzo(a)pyrene (81, 90, 95, 113, 221). As reported from 10 DNA ULTIMATE CARCINOGEN Chart 14. The major route for the metabolic activation of benzo(a)pyrene and the major adduci formed on reaction of the diol-epoxide with nucleic acids. E.R., endoplasmic reticulum. three laboratories, the major reaction products of this diolepoxide and its 9/3, 10/3 isomer with polyguanylic acid or nucleic acids involve the 2-amino group of guanine resi dues and C-10 of the epoxide (105, 156, 221). The synthetic adducts are chromatographically identical with products obtained on degradation of the nucleic acids from bronchial expiants that had been incubated with [3H]benzo(a)pyrene (221). The diol-epoxide also reacts in vitro, but to a much smaller extent, with the cytosine and adenine residues of polynucleotides (129, 222). The analogous diol-epoxide derivative of benz(a)anthracene was suggested as an ultimate carcinogenic metabolite of that hydrocarbon by Swaisland ef al. (199). However, data from the laboratories of Conney and Jerina now strongly indicate that the bay region or 1,2-position of the angular ring of benz(a)anthracene may be analogous to the 9,10-position of benzo(a)pyrene in the formation of an ultimate carcinogenic diol-epoxide. Thus, the 3,4-dihydrodiol of benz(a)anthracene is considerably more carcino genic for mouse skin than is benz(a)anthracene or any of the other vicinal dihydrodiols (234), and the 1,2-epoxide formed from the 3,4-dihydrodiol of benz(a(anthracene is a much more potent mutagen without tissue activation than are the two isomerie diol-epoxides with the substituents in the 8, 9, 10, and 11 positions (233). The angular ring has also been implicated as a critical site for the metabolic activation of 7-methylbenz(a(anthracene (207) and of 7,12dimethylbenz(a)anthracene (149). Unfortunately, it is impossible to give adequate recogni tion in this brief review to all of the extensive work on the mechanisms by which the polycyclic aromatic hydrocar bons exert their carcinogenic activities. These studies have given important new insights into hydrocarbon carcinogen esis as well as further demonstrating the complexities of the metabolic activations. Nevertheless, the knowledge in this area is far from complete. Just as studies on the alkylation of DNA by simple alkylating agents have shown that the major adducts are not necessarily the ones that are the most important in carcinogenesis (112, 189, 190), the hydrocarbon-nucleic acid derivatives that have been identi fied to date may or may not be those adducts most critical for the initiation of carcinogenesis. Furthermore, since the polycyclic hydrocarbons are promoting agents as well as initiators, attention should also be given to the possible promoting activities of the metabolites. Some of the meta bolic phenols may be candidates for this role in view of the promoting activities of a number of phenols (213). Aflatoxin B,. Several observations led to the suggestion that aflatoxin B, 2,3-oxide was the most likely ultimate carcinogenic and reactive metabolite of aflatoxin B,. These included the requirement of the 2,3-double bond for strong carcinogenic activity (232) and the conversion by a mixedfunction oxidase system of aflatoxin B, (but not its 2,3dihydro derivative) to a toxic, mutagenic, and nucleic acidbinding derivative (58, 127). More conclusive was the release by acid hydrolysis of 2,3-dihydro-2,3-dihydroxyaflatoxin B, from nucleic acids isolated from the livers of aflatoxin B,-treated rats or from incubations of aflatoxin B, and nucleic acids with fortified liver microsomes (201, 202). Finally, the strong electrophile aflatoxin B, 2,3-dichloride, synthesized as an analog of the 2,3-oxide which has thus JUNE 1978 1487 Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on August 11, 2017. © 1978 American Association for Cancer Research. E. C. Miller far eluded isolation from chemical or metabolic reactions, was a strong carcinogen at sites of application (e.g., mouse skin and rat s.c. tissue) and a powerful mutagen (203). In the past year an acid degradation product of the major adducts formed on reaction of the epoxide with nucleic acids in microsomal systems in vitro has been independ ently characterized as 2,3-dihydro-2-(guan-7-yl)-3-hydroxyaflatoxin B, in our laboratory (115), by Essigmann ef al. (45), and by Martin and Garner (124) (Chart 15). In addition, our data (115) and those of Essigmann ef al. (45) have identified the same adduci as a major degradation product of the nucleic acids from the livers of rats treated with aflatoxin B,. While the overall yield of nucleic acid-bound aflatoxin derivatives appears to correlate with the likelihood of tumor formation (200), there are as yet no data that specifically associate the aflatoxin B,-guan-7-yl nucleic acid adducts with carcinogenesis. Possible Molecular Mechanisms esis of Chemical Carcinogen The above examples, while far from exhausting the liter ature on metabolic activation, are sufficient to emphasize that metabolic activation is an essential step in the induc tion of neoplasia by most chemical carcinogens. The electrophilic ultimate carcinogens can react, probably more or less indiscriminately, with a number of nucleophilic sites in DNA's, RNA's, and proteins. Thus, the strong electrophilic nature of ultimate carcinogens is consistent with both genetic and epigenetic mechanisms of carcinogenesis or with mechanisms that include both genetic and epigenetic o rot liver b. liver microsomes + NADPH»02 AFLATOXIN B, AFB,-2,3-OXÅ’ ft\DECOMR \PROOUCTS |OFI [ ]= presumptive structures Chart 15. The metabolic epoxidation of aflatoxin B, (AFB¡),the major reaction product of the epoxide with nucleic acids, and the degradation of the nucleic acid adducts to yield the major product 2-(guan-7-yl)-3-hydroxyaflatoxin B, (///). The routes of formation of several other intermediates, especially 2,3-dihydro-2,3-dihydroxyaflatoxin B, (//), on degradation of the nucleic acid adducts are also shown. DECOMP., decomposition (from Ref. 115). 1488 events. These mechanisms may or may not involve the expression of oncogenic viral information (see, e.g., Refs. 154, 165, 171, and 175). Epigenetic Mechanisms. A fundamental basis for pro posed epigenetic origins of cancer is the development of complex organisms from single fertilized ova. During early life each multicellular organism has many kinds of commit ted cells that divide repeatedly to give rise to additional cells with the same commitments. If, as is generally ac cepted, these normal differentiations are the consequence of epigenetic phenomena, similar epigenetic modifications of cellular transcription or translation or both may also be involved in the conversion of apparently normal cells to tumor cells with relatively stable phenotypes (63). Further, the now classic studies of Jacob and Monod (89) on the circuits by which genetic expression in bacteria can be more or less permanently altered, as well as the exquisite controls for the expression or repression of information in bacterial genomes (176), provide models for the induction of tumors by chemicals through proliferation of cell lines with altered transcriptional controls (163). Data from a variety of experiments indicate that malignant cells and nonmalignant cells may possess the same ge nomes, although detailed analyses at the molecular level have not yet been feasible. Gurdon (63) and McKinnell ef al. (128) transplanted nuclei from frog renal carcinomas into enucleated fertilized frog eggs with the subsequent devel opment of apparently normal swimming tadpoles. These studies appeared to show that the nuclei from the tumors retained in expressible form at least the major share of the information that was present in the fertilized ova. The potential for the differentiation of malignant cells to nonmalignant cells was demonstrated by Pierce and his asso ciates (161) for several types of tumors, including cloned teratocarcinoma cells and stem cells from a transplantable squamous cell carcinoma. Braun (22) has reported similar differentiation of plant teratomas. Thus, cultures of teratomas could be grafted onto a plant where, under some conditions, the progeny of the teratoma cells gave rise to morphologically normal stems, leaves, and flowers, al though the inherent neoplastic potential of the cells was again evident on growth in culture (23). On the other hand meiosis apparently caused the loss of the plasmid that is essential for the malignant phenotype, and cells that devel oped from the seeds grew as normal cells in culture (211). Illmensee and Mintz (85, 145) have recently obtained chimeric mice by implantation of single cells from embryoid bodies of mouse teratocarcinoma cells into mouse blástu las. These chimeric mice contained a wide variety of appar ently normal somatic tissues that developed from progeny of the teratocarcinoma cells; in at least one case the genotype of the teratocarcinoma cell was transferred to the second generation through the sperm. Further studies on the significance of these results in relation to the mecha nisms involved in carcinogenesis are awaited with great interest. Genetic Mechanisms. In contrast to the epigenetic hy potheses, which have as their fundamental premise that the genomic information of tumor cells need not be altered from that of normal cells of the same organism, the genetic mechanisms assume that the change from normal to tumor CANCER RESEARCH Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on August 11, 2017. © 1978 American Association for Cancer Research. VOL. 38 Current Perspectives cell is dependent on genomic alterations. This latter point of view receives primary support from the fact that the potential of a cell is determined by the information coded in the genome and from the abilities of all three types of carcinogenic agents, viruses, radiations, and chemicals, to alter cellular genomic content. Such genomic changes in cells would be expected to occur most frequently as a result of direct modification of DMA by the carcinogen. However, modification of an RNA that was transcribed and integrated into DMA or changes in the structure of a DMA polymerase that resulted in a more error-prone enzyme could also lead to altered cellular DNA's. Auerbach, Demerec, and others were attracted in the 1940's to the idea that carcinogenesis might involve mutagenie events and sought to correlate the carcinogenic and mutagenic activities of chemicals. Their data showed no evident relationship (reviewed in Ref. 26). However, the situation changed markedly as the metabolism of chemical carcinogens and the chemical nature of their active forms became better understood. As we noted when we reviewed this subject in 1971 (135), a qualitative correlation between mutagenicity and carcinogenicity was apparent when ulti mate carcinogenic forms were assayed in a nonmetabolizing system (transforming DNA) or when nonultimate forms were assayed in certain cellular systems (e.g., yeast, Drosophila) that possessed capacity for metabolism of foreign chemicals. This correlation has become better with the supplementation of bacterial mutagenicity systems with liver microsomes for the metabolic activation of carcino gens (126, 127, 167, 197, 198). This correlation between mutagenic and carcinogenic activities is a formal one and is based on two facts: (a) that the ultimate forms of most, if not all, chemical carcinogens are strong electrophilic reactants; and (b) that, with the exception of the numerically minor groups of the base analog mutagens and the simple frame-shift mutagens that do not bind covalently, the ulti mate forms of mutagenic chemicals are also strong electro philic reactants. However, since these strong electrophilic reactants also attack RNA's and proteins, this correlation cannot be used alone to show that carcinogenesis involves mutagenic events. Quite compelling evidence that tumor development may depend on an alteration of genomic information is available for UV-induced carcinogenesis. Thus, xeroderma pigmentosum patients are very susceptible to the development of skin cancer as a consequence of exposure to sunlight. As shown by Cleaver, Bootsma, and others, the cells from these patients have a greatly impaired capacity for the error-free repair of DNA that contains UV-induced or certain chemically induced lesions (reviewed in Ref. 32). Similarly, as reported by Hart and Setlow (68), exposure of cells from Poecilia formosa to UV/n vitro and subsequent inoculation of the cells into new hosts gave rise to a high incidence of thyroid tumors. The cells of this species contain a photoreactivating enzyme that cleaves pyrimidine dimers, and the exposure of the irradiated cells to visible light after the UV radiation largely prevented the development of tumors on implantation of the cells. Support for genetic mechanisms of transformation in cell culture is provided by the formation of stable, but revertible, temperature-sensitive malignant transformants of BHK cells on Chemical Carcinogenesis by treatment with /V-nitrosomethylurea or 4-nitroquinoline 1-oxide (15). Furthermore, recent studies by Marquardt ef al. (122) suggest that Adriamycin, an intercalating drug and frame-shift mutagen, may induce malignant transformation in cell culture in the absence of detectable covalent inter action with cell constituents. Modern chromosome banding procedures provide some evidence for associations of specific chromosomal altera tions with certain human cancers (152). Likewise, genetic predispositions for the development of some human can cers can be interpreted as pointing to the involvement of specific genetic components (2, 104). However, the inter pretation of the latter data in a mechanistic sense is fraught with problems, since genetic information also determines the metabolism of chemical carcinogens, the synthesis and metabolism of hormones, and a variety of other factors that may affect tumor incidence without being directly involved in the initiation of cancer cells. Overall, alteration of cellular DNA is currently viewed by many and probably most investigators as the most attractive mechanism for the initiation of carcinogenic processes by chemicals. Working on this premise an important question is the nature of the DNA alterations that may be involved. Some years ago Loveless (116) showed that the extent of O6-methylation or ethylation of guanine residues in DNA, reactions that lead to base substitution mutations, corre lated much better with the mutagenic activity of an alkylating agent than did the quantitatively more prominent N-7 alkylation of guanine residues. Studies by Lawley and others (112, 157) suggested a similar correlation of O6methylation and ethylation of guanine residues in DNA with the likelihood of tumor initiation by a series of methylating and ethylating agents, but exceptions were evident. This approach was refined in 1974 by Goth and Rajewsky (59), who found that the persistence of the O6-ethyl guanine residues in DNA, in addition to the amount originally formed, appeared to be a critical factor for the induction of tumors of the nervous system in rats. Further support for the role of persistent O6-methyl or -ethyl guanine residues in DNA have been obtained with other carcinogenesis systems, although some apparent exceptions have also been reported (157). Furthermore, as emphasized recently by Singer (190), it is too early to conclude that O6-alkylations of guanine are the most critical reactions, even for the induction of mutations, since alkylations at this site may be indicators of more critical alkylations at other sites, such as the oxygen atoms of the pyrimidine bases in the DNA. To the extent that chemical carcinogenesis results from at tacks on DNA, the great strides that have been made in recent years in determining the mechanisms by which specific types of damage to DNA result in mutations (32, 210, 230) will be of key importance in elucidation of the mechanisms of carcinogenesis by chemicals. Promotion of Initiated Cells. New observations are also providing insight into the possible molecular bases of promotion. The phorbol esters, which have remarkable activity in eliciting the development of gross epidermal tumors after application of a small initiating dose of a chemical carcinogen to mouse skin, cause a progression of changes. Application of these promoters results in in creased synthesis of phospholipids, RNA, protein, and DNA JUNE 1978 1489 Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on August 11, 2017. © 1978 American Association for Cancer Research. E. C. Miller and an increased mitotic rate (17), but the earliest changes appear to be increases in protease activity (209) and marked increases in ornithine decarboxylase activity (18). The inhi bition of the promotion stage of epidermal carcinogenesis by protease inhibitors suggests that specific proteases may be of critical importance in promotion (125, 209); increased levels of one protease, plasminogen activator, frequently accompany oncogenic transformation in cell culture (174). Similarly, an impressive series of experiments show a close correlation between the levels of induced ornithine decar boxylase activity and promoting activity in mouse epider mis. The latter correlation was obtained by comparison of the effects of various doses and structures of promoters (155) as well as by comparisons of the extent of inhibition of tumor promotion and of ornithine decarboxylase induc tion by a series of retinoid derivatives (217). The inductions of both protease activity and ornithine decarboxylase activ ity may have a common focus through their effects on the levels or intracellular localizations of polyamines or pro teins that modulate the expression of the DMA genome. The epigenetic concept of promotion is in accord with its relatively slow and reversible nature. Extrapolation of Basic Knowledge of Chemical genesis to the Prevention of Human Cancer Carcino Prevention of Initiation. Our still incomplete knowledge of chemical carcinogenesis is already being applied to the problem of reducing the future incidences of human can cers. Thus, the generalization that strong electrophilic reactivity is a basic requirement for ultimate chemical carcinogens and detailed knowledge of enzyme systems involved in the metabolic activation and deactivation of many chemicals are providing useful tools for the recogni tion of chemicals to be suspected of being potential carcin ogens. Reasonable predictions can often be made of the electrophilic reactivity of a chemical or its possible metab olites from an inspection of its structure. Furthermore, mutation systems, frequently fortified with metabolic acti vation systems, are being used to screen for compounds with potential electrophilic reactivity. The most common of these mutation systems utilizes the Salmonella typhimurium tester strains devised by Ames and his associates (1), but a wide variety of other bacteria, fungi, plants, insects, and mammalian cells are also being used (46, 79,167,197). The mutagenic activities of chemicals in the mammalian tissuemediated bacterial systems have shown relatively good qualitative correspondence with their carcinogenic activi ties for experimental animals and, where known, for hu mans (126,127,135,167,197,198). These assays, however, give some false-positive and some false-negative results; i.e., they have failed to show mutagenic activity for about 10% of established carcinogens, especially some of the weaker ones, and they have shown mutagenic activity for some chemicals that have thus far not induced tumors in animal tests. Assays have also been developed in which the end point is the malignant transformation of mammalian cells in culture, and approaches to the fortification of these assay systems with metabolic activation systems are being stud ied. The transformation assays are currently being evalu 1490 ated for their abilities to predict the carcinogenic potentials of chemicals, and preliminary results are encouraging (39, 54, 160, 177). However, up to the present, and for the foreseeable future, none of these mutagenicity or transfor mation prescreens appears tojpe reliable enough to replace whole animal carcinogenicity assays for the evaluation of carcinogenic activity. Other approaches to the reduction of contact with ulti mate carcinogens involve alteration of carcinogen metabo lism so that less is converted to ultimate forms or enhance ment of the intracellular levels of nucleophilic acceptors that can react in noncritical ways with the electrophilic ultimate carcinogens. Experimental data have been col lected for both of these approaches, and, as examined especially by Wattenberg (218), marked protection has been achieved in a number of model systems in experimental animals. At present, it is difficult to explore these ap proaches in the human in view of the uncertainties of the ramifications of such manipulations. Possible untoward effects include an increased metabolic activation of some carcinogens or increases in other toxic reactions (229). Further, some chemicals, such as phénobarbital,that have inhibited tumor induction when administered simultane ously with a carcinogen, have shown promoting activity when applied subsequent to an initiating dose (158, 159). Reduction of human hazard also requires knowledge of where, how, and to what extent carcinogens are present in particular places. We are surprised all too often by our lack of foresight. Thus, in 1950, many years after the carcino genicity of 2-naphthylamine for the human bladder and its hazard in industrial situations was generally recognized, Case and Hosker (28) traced a cluster of cancers of the urinary bladder among rubber workers to 2-naphthylamine which was present as an impurity in the antioxidant then used for curing rubber. Study of the large group of carcinogenic W-nitroso com pounds has provided similar evidence of the need for acuity in looking for potential exposures (147). An early concern was the likelihood of formation of nitrosamines or nitrosamides in the stomach after ingestion of amines or amides in the diet or as drugs together with nitrite (13,119). However, Tannenbaum, Preussmann, and their associates (193, 205) have now shown that the main source of stomach nitrite is dietary nitrate which is a normal constituent of many foods, especially certain vegetables. After absorption the nitrate is excreted in the saliva and reduced by the bacteria in the mouth; the nitrite thus formed reaches the stomach through the normal swallowing of saliva. A/-Nitroso compounds have also been found as pollut ants, fortunately usually at relatively low levels, in urban air, water, soil, and a variety of commercial products (13). For instance, Fan and his associates (47) have recently reported concentrations of 0.02 to 3% of A/-nitrosodiethanolamine, which induces liver tumors in the rat, in synthetic cutting oils that contain triethanolamine and were placed in metal cans treated with nitrite to prevent corrosion. These syn thetic cutting oils were introduced some years ago as a replacement for the mineral oil-based products that had posed a risk of skin cancer to workmen. While the impact of these exposures on human cancer incidences is diffi cult to evaluate, it is apparent that we need much better CANCER RESEARCH Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on August 11, 2017. © 1978 American Association for Cancer Research. VOL. 38 Current Perspectives communication between those who formulate products and their packaging, those who have good knowledge of the adverse biological effects of chemicals, and those who can predict the reactions that can be anticipated in given mixtures of chemicals under a variety of conditions. Fur thermore, astute clinical observations and careful epidemiological studies will continue to be important approaches for assessing the success of our predictive and preventive approaches and for recognizing those situations that re quire further study. Prevention of Promotion of Initiated Cells. Little work has been directed toward the detection of promoting agents that may cause initiated cells to develop into gross tumors, although such chemicals must also occur in the human environment. A very important approach to the modification of promotion and reduction of cancer incidences appears to be available through administration of certain retinoids. Vitamin A deficiency has long been known to result in hyperplasia and keratinization of epithelia, and Lasnitzski (111) some 20 years ago noted that high levels of vitamin A prevented and even reversed the hyperplastic effects in duced by 3-methylcholanthrene in organ cultures of mouse prostates. Building on these and other results, Sporn, Bollag, and others (see Ref. 194) envisioned the synthesis of retinoids that can maintain differentiated epithelia in the face of carcinogenic insults, that lack the toxicity of high levels of naturally occurring vitamin A, and that are retained by extrahepatic tissues. The developments of the past few years are very promising. Reductions of the incidences of cancers of the skin, lungs, urinary bladder, and breast in experimental animals have been obtained even when the administration of the retinoid was not begun until after the treatment with the chemical carcinogen had been com pleted (194). Thus, through maintaining the differentiation of the epithelia previously exposed to the initiating activity of a chemical carcinogen, the retinoids are apparently able to prevent some promoting influence associated with the hyperplastic state. The application of the synthetic retinoid« to the inhibition of carcinogenesis in high-risk groups, such as those known to have been exposed to urinary bladder carcinogens, is receiving serious consideration. Concluding Remarks It is apparent that there is need for much further research to unlock the doors to a complete understanding of the processes involved in the induction of cancer. Neverthe less, a comparison of our state of knowledge today com pared with that of 35, 25, or even 10 years ago encourages me in the belief that further study will eventually bring a detailed insight into the reactions involved in the initiation, promotion, and progression of cells in the neoplastic proc ess. This detailed knowledge will surely give us the best foundation for the prevention and possibly the treatment of human cancers. In the meantime, it is clear that the tremendous effort that has gone into the study of experimental chemical carcino genesis and into the epidemiology of human cancer over the past 20 to 30 years has given us much information relevant to the prevention of cancer. Thus, these studies have pinpointed certain industrial carcinogens, have clearly on Chemical Carcinogenesis indicated that each individual can markedly reduce his likelihood of developing cancer by reducing his exposure to sunlight and cigarette smoke, and have given us methods for detecting potential human carcinogens. Much data have clearly established that chemical carcinogenesis is a strongly dose-dependent phenomenon, although the shapes of the dose-response curves are rarely determined over wide ranges and probably cannot be established for the low exposures of interest to human populations. The strong dose dependence is too often slighted in public discussions of possible human hazards from mutagenic and/or carcinogenic chemicals. While specific chemicals are known to pose risks to certain human populations at relatively high levels of exposure and others are suspected of posing such risks, wide-spread prohibition of the use of such chemicals at much lower levels may or may not be desirable. Likewise, the extrapolations of carcinogenicity data for experimental animals and of mutagenicity data to evaluations of possible hazards for human populations are very difficult problems. The single fact that, at very high doses, a chemical causes some cancers in experimental animals or some mutations may not be an adequate reason for removing it from uses beneficial to the public." The questions to be asked must include how much risk a given low-level use may entail and how much benefit would be lost to society from restriction on the use of that chemical for that purpose. 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VOL. 38 Some Current Perspectives on Chemical Carcinogenesis in Humans and Experimental Animals: Presidential Address Elizabeth C. Miller Cancer Res 1978;38:1479-1496. Updated version E-mail alerts Reprints and Subscriptions Permissions Access the most recent version of this article at: http://cancerres.aacrjournals.org/content/38/6/1479.citation Sign up to receive free email-alerts related to this article or journal. To order reprints of this article or to subscribe to the journal, contact the AACR Publications Department at [email protected]. To request permission to re-use all or part of this article, contact the AACR Publications Department at [email protected]. Downloaded from cancerres.aacrjournals.org on August 11, 2017. © 1978 American Association for Cancer Research.