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Reports

Effect of dietary selenium on the induction of altered hepatic foci and hepatic tumors by the peroxisome proliferator ciprofibrate

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Pages 261-271 | Received 20 Apr 1990, Accepted 14 Jun 1990, Published online: 04 Aug 2009
 

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to determine if the dietary antioxidant selenium could inhibit hepatocarcinogenesis induced by peroxisome proliferators, which are hypothesized to induce tumors by increased production of hydrogen peroxide or other reactive oxygen species. Rats were fed diets containing the peroxisome proliferator ciprofibrate and one of three concentrations (0.04, 0.2, or 1.0 ppm) of selenium for 6 or 21 months. The incidence of hepatic tumors and the number and volume of γ‐glutamyl transpeptidase‐positive, A TPase‐negative, glucose‐6‐phosphatase‐negative, and gtucose‐6‐phosphatase‐positivefoci at 21 months were lower in rats fed higher levels of selenium (no foci or tumors were seen at 6 mo). Indices of oxidative damage in the liver (thiobarbituric acid reactants, conjugated dienes, and lipid‐soluble fluorescence products), however, were not decreased in rats fed the high‐selenium diet. Therefore, selenium was protective against ciprofibrate‐induced hepatocarcinogenesis, but not by reducing the degree of oxidative damage. The liver selenium and glutathione concentrations, and liver selenium‐dependent glutathione peroxidase activity, increased as dietary selenium increased. Therefore, inhibition of carcinogenesis by selenium was correlated with increased levels of glutathione and glutathione peroxidase, but these did not inhibit the indices of oxidative damage. Peroxisomal ß‐oxidation also increased with the dietary selenium content; it therefore does not appear to be a factor in the inhibition of hepatocarcinogenesis in rats fed higher levels of selenium.

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