Aims/hypothesis Exendin-4 is a 39 amino acid agonist of the glucagon-like peptide receptor and has been approved for treatment of type 2 diabetes. Many reports describe an increased incidence of acute pancreatitis in humans treated with exendin-4 (exenatide). Previous studies have evaluated the effect of exendin-4 on beta cells and beta cell function. We evaluated the histological and biochemical effects of exendin-4 on the pancreas in rats. Methods We studied 20 Sprague-Dawley male rats, ten of which were treated with exendin-4 and ten of which were used as controls. The study period was 75 days. Serum and pancreatic tissue were removed for biochemical and histological study. Blood glucose, amylase, lipase, insulin and adipocytokines were compared between the two groups. Results Animals treated with exendin-4 had more pancreatic acinar inflammation, more pyknotic nuclei and weighed significantly less than control rats. They also had higher serum lipase than control animals. Exendin-4 treatment was associated with lower insulin and leptin levels as well as lower HOMA values than in the untreated control group. Conclusions/interpretation Although the use of exendin-4 in rats is associated with decreased weight gain, lower insulin resistance and lower leptin levels than in control animals, extended use of exendin-4 in rats leads to pancreatic acinar inflammation and pyknosis. This raises important concerns about the likelihood of inducing acute pancreatitis in humans receiving incretin mimetic therapy.
Scope Anthocyanins, the natural pigments in plant foods, have been associated with cancer prevention. However, the content of anthocyanins in staple foods is typically low and the mechanisms by which they exert anti-cancer activity is not yet fully defined. Methods and results We selected an anthocyanin-enriched purple-fleshed sweet potato clone, P40, and investigated its potential anti-cancer effect in both in vitro cell culture and in vivo animal model. In addition to a high level of total phenolics and antioxidant capacity, P40 possesses a high content of anthocyanins at 7.5 mg/g dry matter. Treatment of human colonic SW480 cancer cells with P40 anthocyanin extracts at 0–40 μM of peonidin-3-glucoside equivalent resulted in a dose-dependent decrease in cell number due to cytostatic arrest of cell cycle at G1 phase but not cytotoxicity. Furthermore, dietary P40 at 10–30% significantly suppressed azoxymethane-induced formation of aberrant crypt foci in the colons of CF-1 mice in conjunction with, at least in part, a lesser proliferative PCNA and a greater apoptotic caspase-3 expression in the colon mucosal epithelial cells. Conclusion These observations, coupled with both in vitro and in vivo studies reported here, suggest anthocyanin-enriched sweet potato P40 may protect against colorectal cancer by inducing cell cycle arrest, anti-proliferative and apoptotic mechanisms.
Weight control by exercise and dietary calorie restriction (DCR) has been associated with reduced cancer risk, but the underlying mechanisms are not well understood. This study was designed to compare the effects of weight loss by increasing physical activity or decreasing calorie intake on tumor promoter-induced Ras-MAPK and PI3K-Akt pathways. SENCAR mice were randomly assigned to one of the following five groups: ad libitum-fed sedentary control, ad libitum-fed exercise (AL؉Exe), exercise but pair-fed at the amount as controls (PF؉Exe), 20% DCR, and 20% DCR plus exercise (DCR؉Exe). After 10 weeks, body weight and body fat significantly decreased in the groups of DCR, DCR؉Exe, and PF؉Exe when compared with the controls. AL؉Exe did not induce weight loss due to, at least in part, increased food intake. Plasma IGF-1 levels reduced significantly in DCR and DCR؉Exe but not PF؉Exe. The protein H-Ras and activated Ras-GTP significantly decreased in TPA-induced skin tissues of DCR-fed mice but not exercised mice. PI3K protein, phosphoserine Akt, and p42/p44-MAPK were reduced, however, in both DCR and PF؉Exe groups. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated that the significantly reduced H-Ras occurred in subcutaneous fat cells, while the reduced PI3K and PCNA took place only in the epidermis. Plasma leptin decreased in PF؉Exe, DCR, and DCR؉Exe, while the caspase-3 activity increased in DCR؉Exe only. Genomic microarray analysis further indicated that the expression of 34 genes relevant to PI3K and 31 genes to the MAPK pathway were significantly regulated by either DCR or PF؉Exe treatments. The reduced PI3K in PF؉Exe mice was partially reversed by IGF-1 treatment. The overall results of this study demonstrated that DCR abrogated both Ras and PI3K signaling, which might inhibit TPA-induced proliferation and anti-apoptosis. Selective inhibition of PI3K by PF؉Exe but not AL؉Exe seems more attributable to the magnitude of the caloric deficit and/or body fat loss than diet versus exercise comparison.The National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey indicates growing rates of obesity in American adults and overweight children over the past 20 years (1). Numerous prospective and case-control studies associated with weight control and physical activity estimate that excess body weight and sedentary life style account for about 39% endometrial, 25% kidney, 11% colon, 9% postmenopausal breast cancer, and 5% total cancer incidence (2-3). It has been suggested that those 25% over normal weight have a 33% greater cancer risk than those who maintain ideal body weight (4). Therefore, for many individuals, it would be advisable to maintain weight within the normal range to reduce their risk of cancer.Overweight/obesity is recognized as a reflection of a positive energy state that results from either over-consumption of energy or low energy expenditure. There is ample evidence that weight control via decreasing calorie intake and/or increasing physical activity reduces cancer risk in animal models. For almost a century, dietary calorie restr...
Progressive, irreversible fibrosis is one of the most clinically significant consequences of ionizing radiation on normal tissue. When applied to lungs, it leads to a complication described as idiopathic pneumonia syndrome (IPS) and eventually to organ fibrosis. For its high mortality, the condition precludes treatment with high doses of radiation. There is widespread interest to understand the pathogenetic mechanisms of IPS and to find drugs effective in the prevention of its development. This report summarizes our experience with the protective effects of L 158,809, an angiotensin II (ANG II) receptor blocker, and two angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors in the development of IPS and the role of transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) and of alpha-actomyosin (alpha SMA) in pathogenesis of radiation induced pulmonary fibrosis in an experimental model of bone marrow transplant (BMT). Male WAG/Riji/MCV rats received total body irradiation and a regimen of cyclophosphamide (CTX) in preparation for bone marrow transplant. While one group of animals remained untreated, the remainders were subdivided into three groups, each of them receiving either the ANG II receptor blocker or one of the two ACE inhibitors (Captopril or Enalapril). Each of the three drugs was administered orally from 11 days before the transplant up to 56 days post transplant. At sacrifice time the irradiated rats receiving only CTX showed a chronic pneumonitis with septal fibrosis and vasculitis affecting, in particular, small caliber pulmonary arteries and arterioles. Their lung content of hydroxyproline was also markedly elevated in association with the lung concentrations of thromboxane (TXA2) and prostaglandin (PGI(2)), (two markers of pulmonary endothelial damage). A significant increase of alpha actomyosin staining was observed in vessels, septa and macrophages of the same animals which also overexpressed TGF-beta. When L 158,809, Captopril and Enalapril were added to the radiation and cytoxan treatment, a significant amelioration of the histological damage as well as the overexpression of alpha SMA was observed. Lung concentrations of hydroxyproline, PGI(2), TXA2 and TGF-beta were also observed in these animals so that the values of these compounds were closer to those measured in untreated control rats than to their irradiated and cytoxan treated counterparts. Angiotensin II plays an important role in the regulation of TGF-beta and alpha SMA, two proteins involved in the pathogenesis of pulmonary fibrosis. The finding that ACE inhibitors or ANG II receptor blockers protect the lungs from radiation induced pneumonitis and fibrosis reaffirms the role that ANG II plays in this inflammatory process and suggests an additional indication of treatment of this condition, thus opening a new potential pharmacologic use of these drugs.
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