Several organoselenium compounds have been shown to have powerful anticarcinogenic activity. In view of certain similarities between selenium and sulfur biochemistry, we have evaluated the chemopreventive efficacy of three pairs of analogs using the 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA)-induced mammary tumor model in rats. The compounds tested were selenocystamine/cysteamine, Semethylselenocysteine/S-methylcysteine, selenobetaine/sulfobetaine. In the first study, each agent was added to the basal AIN-76A diet and was given before and continued after DMBA treatment until the end. All three selenium compounds were active; a 50% inhibition was achieved at approximately 25 x 10(-6) mol/kg with Se-methylselenocysteine and selenobetaine and at approximately 40 x 10(-6) mol/kg with selenocystamine. In the sulfur series, only cysteamine and S-methylcysteine produced anticancer activity, and the levels required for comparable responses were 500- to 750-fold higher compared to the corresponding selenium analogs. Sulfobetaine was inactive even when present at near maximally tolerated levels. In the second study, Se-methylselenocysteine and S-methylcysteine were chosen for further examination during the initiation and post-initiation phases of mammary carcinogenesis. Se-Methylselenocysteine was effective when it was given either before or after DMBA administration. In contrast, S-methylcysteine was effective only after DMBA treatment. Thus, compared to the sulfur structural analogs, selenium compounds are much more active in cancer protection and may have a multi-modal mechanism in preventing cellular transformation as well as in delaying or inhibiting the expression of malignancy after carcinogen exposure.
Adult male and female Sprague-Dawley rats were trained on a horizontal treadmill for 0, 1, 3, 5, or 7 days/wk for 10 wk. Speed and duration were progressively increased over 5 wk to a maximum of 20 m/min for 1 h. Between weeks 9 and 10 of training, animals were placed on the nonmoving treadmill, and blood (500 microliters) was sampled via chronic venous cannulas 30 min before, 0, 10, 20, 30, 45, and 60 min during exercise, and 15, 30, 60, 90, and 120 min after exercise. In another study, resting animals in the various groups were injected with thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH; 2 micrograms/kg for males and 0.4 microgram/kg for females) to determine pituitary prolactin responsiveness. In males, exercise induced a significant increase in plasma prolactin levels, with the greatest increase observed in the least trained and the smallest increase in the most highly trained animals. Female rats displayed the opposite trend with the greatest increase in prolactin secretion observed in the highest trained and the smallest increase observed in the least trained animals. TRH induced similar increases in plasma prolactin in all male groups, whereas TRH-induced prolactin release was greatest in the highest trained and smallest in the least trained females. The reduced prolactin response in highly trained males may reflect their acclimation to repetitive exercise stress, whereas the enhanced response in the highly trained female rats appears to result from increased pituitary sensitivity to prolactin-releasing factors.
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