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Prevention of Carcinogen and Inflammation-Induced Dermal Cancer by Oral Rapamycin Includes Reducing Genetic Damage
- Source :
- Cancer Prevention Research. 8:400-409
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2015.
-
Abstract
- Cancer prevention is a cost-effective alternative to treatment. In mice, the mTOR inhibitor rapamycin prevents distinct spontaneous, noninflammatory cancers, making it a candidate broad-spectrum cancer prevention agent. We now show that oral microencapsulated rapamycin (eRapa) prevents skin cancer in dimethylbenz(a)anthracene (DMBA)/12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) carcinogen-induced, inflammation-driven carcinogenesis. eRapa given before DMBA/TPA exposure significantly increased tumor latency, reduced papilloma prevalence and numbers, and completely inhibited malignant degeneration into squamous cell carcinoma. Rapamycin is primarily an mTORC1-specific inhibitor, but eRapa did not reduce mTORC1 signaling in skin or papillomas, and did not reduce important proinflammatory factors in this model, including p-Stat3, IL17A, IL23, IL12, IL1β, IL6, or TNFα. In support of lack of mTORC1 inhibition, eRapa did not reduce numbers or proliferation of CD45−CD34+CD49fmid skin cancer initiating stem cells in vivo and marginally reduced epidermal hyperplasia. Interestingly, eRapa reduced DMBA/TPA-induced skin DNA damage and the hras codon 61 mutation that specifically drives carcinogenesis in this model, suggesting reduction of DNA damage as a cancer prevention mechanism. In support, cancer prevention and DNA damage reduction effects were lost when eRapa was given after DMBA-induced DNA damage in vivo. eRapa afforded picomolar concentrations of rapamycin in skin of DMBA/TPA-exposed mice, concentrations that also reduced DMBA-induced DNA damage in mouse and human fibroblasts in vitro. Thus, we have identified DNA damage reduction as a novel mechanism by which rapamycin can prevent cancer, which could lay the foundation for its use as a cancer prevention agent in selected human populations. Cancer Prev Res; 8(5); 400–9. ©2015 AACR.
- Subjects :
- Male
Cancer Research
Skin Neoplasms
Carcinogenesis
DNA damage
9,10-Dimethyl-1,2-benzanthracene
Administration, Oral
Down-Regulation
DMBA
mTORC1
Biology
medicine.disease_cause
Chemoprevention
Article
Mice
medicine
Animals
Humans
Cells, Cultured
Carcinogen
Inflammation
Mice, Knockout
Sirolimus
Cancer prevention
integumentary system
Cancer
3T3 Cells
medicine.disease
Mice, Inbred C57BL
Oncology
Immunology
Carcinogens
Cancer research
Skin cancer
DNA Damage
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 19406215 and 19406207
- Volume :
- 8
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Cancer Prevention Research
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....6f7507c2a6445be61d27d0832d704b32
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1158/1940-6207.capr-14-0313-t