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Publication : Etiology of bromate-induced cancer and possible modes of action-studies in Japan.

First Author  Umemura T Year  2006
Journal  Toxicology Volume  221
Issue  2-3 Pages  154-7
PubMed ID  16473452 Mgi Jnum  J:110388
Mgi Id  MGI:3640144 Doi  10.1016/j.tox.2006.01.007
Citation  Umemura T, et al. (2006) Etiology of bromate-induced cancer and possible modes of action-studies in Japan. Toxicology 221(2-3):154-7
abstractText  Renal cell tumors were significantly increased in male and female rats given potassium bromate at 250 and 500 mg/L in drinking water. In at least one other study renal cell tumors were produced in male rats at 125 mg/L. Among male mice given 750 mg/L of potassium bromate, there were no significant differences in renal cell tumors between treated and control groups after 88 weeks on test. In oxidative DNA damage tests 8-oxodeoxyguanosine (8-oxodG also referred to as 8-OH-dG) was induced in DNA in the male rat kidney in 1 week, and in females after 3 weeks at 500 mg/L, and also in both male and female rats at 250 mg/L, but not at 125 mg/L. DNA adducts are considered to be an initial step in the carcinogenesis process, however, the administered doses are not always sufficient to cause mutations, possibly due to DNA repair. In the two-step rat renal carcinogenesis model using N-ethyl-N-hydroxyethylnitrosamine (EHEN) as initiator, promotion activity by potassium bromate was measured using the BrdU labeling index. The promoting activity of bromate in male rats was much greater and extended to doses as low as 60 mg/L in male rats, whereas in females the response was limited to 250 and 500 mg/L. Therefore, it was concluded that the mechanisms contributing to cancer in the male rat were more complex than in the female rat. The accumulation of alpha2mu-globulin in the kidneys of male rats exposed to potassium bromate probably accounts for the greater labeling index in the male rat relative to the female rat. Accumulation of alpha(2mu)-globulin as a result of treatment with chemicals is unique to the male rat and does contribute to carcinogenic responses. Neither humans nor female rats display this response. Nevertheless, bromate must be considered carcinogenic because of the response of the female rats. The better correlation between 8-oxodG formation and tumor response indicates that dose-response information from the female rat would be much more relevant to human risk assessment. The fact that an elevation of BrdU-LI in the kidney of the female rat is consistent with the possibility that cell proliferation observed in female rats resulted from oxidative stress and/or cytotoxic responses in the kidney. Therefore, oxidative stress is most likely the mechanism of interest for cancer risk in humans.
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