Summary
Chronic exposure to tobacco smoke, which contains over 60 tumor-initiating carcinogens, is the major risk factor for development of lung cancer, accounting for a large portion of cancer-related deaths worldwide. It is well established that tobacco smoke is a tumor initiator, but we asked whether it also acts as a tumor promoter once malignant initiation, such as caused by K-ras activation, has taken place. Here we demonstrate that repetitive exposure to tobacco smoke promotes tumor development both in carcinogen-treated mice and in transgenic mice undergoing sporadic K-ras activation in lung epithelial cells. Tumor promotion is due to induction of inflammation that results in enhanced pneumocyte proliferation and is abrogated by IKKβ ablation in myeloid cells or inactivation of JNK1.
Ultraviolet radiation within three different wavelength ranges, UVA (340-400 nm), UVB (290-320 nm) or UVC (200-290 nm), was shown to induce apoptosis in OCP13 cells, derived from the medaka fish. Morphological changes such as cell shrinkage and a decrease in the number of nucleoli appeared 4 h after UVA, UVB or UVC irradiation, although with different relative efficiencies. Doses required to induce apoptosis with similar efficiencies were about 2500-fold higher for UVA and 10-fold higher for UVB than for UVC. The following phenomena occurred after UVA irradiation but not after UVB or UVC irradiation. (1) Ultraviolet-A-induced cell detachment occurred with or without cycloheximide pretreatment. (2) Cells attached to plastic showed morphological changes such as rounding up of nuclei without a change in the cell distribution. (3) Morphological changes after UVA irradiation could not be evaded by photorepair treatment. (4) Morphological changes did not occur in cells attached to glass coverslips but only those in plastic dishes. (5) Apoptosis occurred without detectable increase of caspase-3-like activity. (6) Morphological changes were inhibited by N-acetylcysteine, a scavenger of active oxygen species. These results suggest the existence of two different pathways leading to apoptosis, one for long- (UVA) and the other for short- (UVB or UVC) wavelength radiation.
We mapped 633 markers (488 AFLPs, 28 RAPDs, 34 IRSs, 75 ESTs, 4 STSs, and 4 phenotypic markers) for the Medaka Oryzias latipes, a teleost fish of the order Beloniformes. Linkage was determined using a reference typing DNA panel from 39 cell lines derived from backcross progeny. This panel provided unlimited DNA for the accumulation of mapping data. The total map length of Medaka was 1354.5 cM and 24 linkage groups were detected, corresponding to the haploid chromosome number of the organism. Thirteen to 49 markers for each linkage group were obtained. Conserved synteny between Medaka and zebrafish was observed for 2 independent linkage groups. Unlike zebrafish, however, the Medaka linkage map showed obvious restriction of recombination on the linkage group containing the male-determining region (Y) locus compared to the autosomal chromosomes.
Ultraviolet radiation within three different wavelength ranges, UVA (340-400 nm), UVB (290-320 nm) or UVC (200-290 nm), was shown to induce apoptosis in OCP13 cells, derived from the medaka fish. Morphological changes such as cell shrinkage and a decrease in the number of nucleoli appeared 4 h after UVA, UVB or UVC irradiation, although with different relative efficiencies. Doses required to induce apoptosis with similar efficiencies were about 2500-fold higher for UVA and 10-fold higher for UVB than for UVC. The following phenomena occurred after UVA irradiation but not after UVB or UVC irradiation. (1) Ultraviolet-A-induced cell detachment occurred with or without cycloheximide pretreatment. (2) Cells attached to plastic showed morphological changes such as rounding up of nuclei without a change in the cell distribution. (3) Morphological changes after UVA irradiation could not be evaded by photorepair treatment. (4) Morphological changes did not occur in cells attached to glass coverslips but only those in plastic dishes. (5) Apoptosis occurred without detectable increase of caspase-3-like activity. (6) Morphological changes were inhibited by N-acetylcysteine, a scavenger of active oxygen species. These results suggest the existence of two different pathways leading to apoptosis, one for long- (UVA) and the other for short- (UVB or UVC) wavelength radiation.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.