1 Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Medicine, St Michael's Hospital and University of Toronto, Room 7258, Medical Sciences Building, 1 King's College Circle, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 1A8,
2 Vitamin Metabolism Laboratory, Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University,
3 Department of Pathology, New England Medical Center, Tufts University School of Medicine,
4 Department of Pathology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School and
5 Divisions of Gastroenterology and Clinical Nutrition, Department of Internal Medicine, New England Medical Center, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, USA and
6 Department of Pathology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
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Abstract |
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Abbreviations: CA, invasive adenocarcinoma; CpG, cytosineguanine doublet; CRC, colorectal cancer; DMH, dimethylhydrazine; H&E, hematoxylin and eosin; HGD, high grade dysplasia; LGD, low grade dysplasia; MCR, mutation cluster region; dNTP, deoxynucleotide precursors.
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Introduction |
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To date, the mechanisms by which folate can modulate colorectal carcinogenesis have not been clearly elucidated. Among the proposed mechanisms (1,2) is a pro-mutagenic effect of folate deficiency due to a disruption in the transfer of one-carbon moieties, the sole biochemical function known for folate (5). Folate is an essential factor for the de novo biosynthesis of purines and the pyrimidine thymidylate (5). The fidelity of DNA replication and repair is dependent on the correct balance and availability of the deoxynucleotide precursors (dNTPs) (6). Folate deprivation causes an imbalance in the ratios of the dNTPs for DNA synthesis (79). A chronic imbalance in dNTP ratios has been shown to be pro-mutagenic in vivo and in vitro and enhances sensitivity to DNA-damaging effects of carcinogens (10). Folate is also involved in the synthesis of methionine, which is a precursor of S-adenosylmethionine, the methyl donor for most biological methylation reactions, including that of DNA (5). DNA methylation at cytosine residues in cytosineguanine doublets (CpG) is considered to play an important role in mutagenesis (11,12). CpG sequences within certain genes (e.g. the APC and p53 tumor suppressor genes) are mutational hot spots for several cancers, including CRC (1315). The majority of mutations observed in CpG sequences within these genes are CT transitions (1315). Both methylated and unmethylated cytosines in CpG dinucleotides have been observed to be hypermutable via several different mechanisms (16,17). DNA hypomethylation has also been observed to increase mutation rates at non-CpG sites via genomic instability (18). Previously, dietary folate has been shown to modulate CpG methylation in the p53 gene in a site-specific manner (19,20).
Although the pro-mutagenic effect of folate deficiency, either alone or in response to alkylating agents, has been demonstrated in cell culture systems (8,21,22), this effect is yet to be determined in the intact animal. The present study investigated whether the mutational hot spots of the Apc and p53 genes for human CRC are also mutated in a DMH rat model of CRC in the setting where manipulation of dietary folate was used to modulate colonic carcinogenesis and whether dietary folate can modulate mutations in these regions. The Apc and p53 genes are two commonly mutated genes in early and late stage human colorectal carcinogenesis, respectively (23). About 60% of the somatic mutations of the APC gene in human CRC are clustered in a 700 bp region in exon 15, designated the mutation cluster region (MCR) (13,14). The majority of p53 mutations occur within a highly conserved area spanning from codon 110 to 307 (exons 58) (15). Up to 50% of somatic APC mutations within the MCR and of p53 mutations in exons 58 in human CRC are CT transitions occurring at CpG sites (1315).
The present study was part of a larger experiment designed to determine the protective effect of different levels of dietary folate on the development of colorectal neoplasms in DMH-treated rats. The detailed protocol has been published previously (4). Briefly, 80 weanling male SpragueDawley rats (6090 g; Charles River Co., Wilmington, MA) were randomly assigned to receive an amino acid defined diet (Dyets, Bethlehem, PA) (24) containing either 0, 2 (basal dietary requirement for the rat), 8 or 40 mg folate/kg diet (n = 20 for each group). Diets and water were supplied ad libitum. Body weights were recorded weekly. Five weeks after diet initiation, weekly s.c. injections of 44 mg/kg body weight DMH base (Sigma Chemical Co., St Louis, MO) were begun and then continued for 15 weeks. The negative control rats (n = 5) were fed the identical diet containing 2 mg folate/kg diet for the same duration as the DMH-treated rats but were not injected with DMH. The rats were killed 15 weeks after the first injection of DMH (i.e. after 20 weeks of the defined diets) by exsanguination under carbon dioxide anesthesia.
At the time of death, blood was withdrawn from the inferior vena cava using a pre-heparinized 18 gauge needle into vacutainer tubes containing EDTA and centrifuged at 800 g for 10 min at 4°C. Plasma was stored at 70°C in 0.5% ascorbic acid for the plasma folate assay.
The colorectum was excised and put on a glass plate suspended on crushed ice. The colorectum was opened longitudinally, rinsed in 0.9% NaCl and examined for any macroscopic lesions under a dissecting microscope. Macroscopic lesions were identified and recorded. The colorectum was then sectioned longitudinally into two halves. The mucosal layer from one half was carefully scraped using glass slides. The resulting mucosal scrapings were rapidly weighed, frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at 70°C for subsequent analysis of colonic mucosal folate concentrations. The other half was rolled up in `Swiss roll' fashion, fixed in 10% buffered formalin and embedded in paraffin (25). A single longitudinal section (5 µm) was cut from the midline of each roll and stained with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E). The Swiss roll is a means by which an intact longitudinal section of the entire length of the colorectum can be presented on a single microscope slide (25). Since midline sections are cut without regard to the presence of macroscopic lesions, each 5 µm section constitutes a random and representative longitudinal section from the entire length of the colon (25). This method has been used previously to quantitatively and qualitatively describe DMH-induced lesions in the colorectum (3,4,25). Histological lesions in the colonic mucosa were classified into normal, low grade dysplasia (LGD), high grade dysplasia (HGD) and invasive adenocarcinoma (CA) according to previously described criteria (26) by three gastrointestinal pathologists in blind fashion.
Plasma and colonic mucosal folate concentrations were measured by a microtiter plate assay using Lactobacillus casei as previously described (27). Five micrometer thick sections were examined by H&E staining and areas corresponding to microscopic lesions were marked on the matched unstained specimens. DNA from each microscopic lesion was extracted as crude preparations using proteinase K lysis mix (10 mM TrisHCl, pH 8.0, 100 mM KCl, 2.5 mM MgCl2, 0.45% Tween 20 and 1 mg/ml proteinase K) as previously described (28). Care was taken to avoid contamination from adjacent non-neoplastic tissues. The sections were homogenized in the lysis mix and digested for 1 h at 65°C followed by 10 min at 95°C. Extracted DNA was stored at 20°C until mutation analysis was performed. Colonic DNA from normal and negative controls was extracted from areas corresponding to normal histology from paraffin blocks in a similar fashion (28).
A 2704 bp region, between nt 2074 and 4778 in exon 15 of the Apc gene, including the MCR (nt 39064589), was amplified by PCR using three pairs of exon primers to generate three overlapping segments (segment A, nt 20743061; segment B, nt 29083970; segment C, nt 38534778). The primer sequences were constructed based on the published rat Apc cDNA sequence (29; GenBank accession no. D38629) and synthesized by the ACGT Corp. (Toronto, Canada). The sequences of the primers were as follows.
Segment A:sense,5'-ATAGTCAGTAATGCATGTGGAACTCTGTGG-3';
antisense,5'-CTAGGTCGGCAGGATACTGCCCATAACTGC-3'.
Segment B:sense,5'-GTGGAATATAAGAGATCTTCAAATGACAGG-3';
antisense,5'-CTTTTATCTCTGCTATTTGCAGAGTATTCG-3'.
Segment C:sense,5'-TGTTTCTCAAGGTGTAGTTCCTTATCATCG-3';
antisense,5'-TCTTCTAATATTTCAATATCATCATCATCG-3'.
Each 5.0 µl of DNA sample was amplified by PCR in a 50 µl volume containing 100 pmol of each primer, 0.25 mM each dNTP, PCR buffer (Qiagen, Mississauga, Canada), 1.5 mM MgCl2 and 2 U of HotStart Taq polymerase (Qiagen). Following hot start PCR at 95°C for 5 min, 35 cycles of denaturation (95°C) for 1 min, annealing (54°C) for 1 min and extension (72°C) for 1 min were performed in a thermal cycler (PTC-200 DNA Engine®; MJ Research, Watertown, MA). All PCR amplifications included a 10 min extension at 72°C after cycle 35.
Exons 5, 67 and 89 of the p53 gene were amplified by PCR using three pairs of intron primers. Intron primer sequences for each exon of the rat p53 gene have been published (30) and were as follows.
Exon 5:sense:5'-GACCTTTGATTCTTTCTCCTCTCC-3';
antisense,5'-GGGAGACCCTGGACAACCAG-3'.
Exons 67:sense:5'-CTGGTTGTCCAGGGTCTCC-3';
antisense,5'-CCCAACCTGGCACACAGCTT-3'.
Exons 89:sense:5'-CTTACTGCCTTGTGCTGTGC-3';
antisense,5'-CTTAAGGGTGAAATATTCTCC-3'.
The use of intron primers obviates amplification of p53 pseudogenes present in the rat (31). All primers were synthesized by Life Technologies (Gaithersburg, MD). Each 2.5 µl of DNA sample was amplified by PCR in a 50 µl volume containing 50 pmol of each primer, 0.2 mM each dNTP, PCR buffer (Perkin Elmer Cetus, Foster City, CA), 2.0 mM MgCl2 and 2.5 U of AmpliTaq DNA polymerase (Perkin Elmer Cetus). Following hot start PCR, 30 cycles of denaturation (94°C) for 1 min, annealing (52°C for exon 5, 60°C for exons 67 and 56°C for exons 89) for 1 min and extension (72°C) for 1 min were performed in a thermal cycler (model 9600; Perkin Elmer Cetus).
The PCR products for the Apc (segments AC) and p53 (exons 59) genes were gel purified using the Qiaex II Agarose Gel Extraction Kit (Qiagen) according to the manufacturer's protocol, re-extracted and dissolved in 50 µl of ddH2O. Each PCR product was then reamplified using nested primers under the same PCR conditions as for the Apc and p53 genes, respectively, gel purified, re-extracted and dissolved in 50 µl of ddH2O.
Coding strands of segments A, B and C within exon 15 of the Apc gene and exon 5, exons 67 and exons 89 of the p53 gene from all purified PCR products were directly sequenced using the Dideoxy Terminator Label Cycle Sequencing Kit (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) and an Applied Biosystems 373 Sequencer as previously described (32). For the Apc gene, nested primers for direct sequencing were constructed based on the published rat Apc cDNA sequence (29; GenBank accession no. D38629). For the p53 gene, the published sequences of nested intron and flanking primers (30) were used for direct sequencing. All primers were synthesized by either the ACGT Corp. or Life Technologies. The Apc and p53 sequences thus generated were analyzed against the GenBank sequences [Apc, accession no. D38629 (29); p53, accession no. L07781 (31)] using the DNASIS software program (Hitachi, San Diego,CA). Mutations were confirmed by directly sequencing the opposite strand with an automated sequencer as above and by subcloning PCR products into pBluescript II KS(+) vector (Stratagene, Cambridge, UK) and directly sequencing the plasmids with inserts using a T7 DNA Sequencing Kit (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Quebec, Canada) and [-35S]dATP (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech).
Differences among groups were determined by one-way analysis of variance. Fisher's least significant difference (LSD) test was used for multiple comparisons. Pearson's coefficient of regression model was used to assess a correlation between plasma and colonic folate concentrations and dietary folate levels. For categorical response variables, differences among the groups were assessed by Fisher's exact test. Statistical analyses were performed using SYSTAT 6 for the Macintosh (Systat, Evanston, IL). All significance tests were bilateral and the significance level was set at 0.05. Results are expressed as mean ± SEM.
Previously, the larger study in which the present study was conducted demonstrated that increasing dietary folate up to four times the basal requirement leads to a progressive reduction in the evolution of macroscopic neoplasms from microscopic foci in a dose-dependent manner and that folate supplementation beyond four times the requirement does not convey further benefit (4). In the present study, a total of 31 microscopic lesions (11 LGD, seven HGD and 13 CA) from 31 rats with diagnostic agreement by the three pathologists were processed for mutation analysis. Colonic DNA from 10 rats whose colon was free of any microscopic lesions were chosen as normal. The negative control rats (n = 5) were fed the identical diet containing 2 mg folate/kg diet for the same duration as the DMH-treated rats but were not injected with DMH. The proportions of normal, LGD, HGD and CA chosen for the present study were not significantly different among the four dietary groups (Table I).
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A total of six Apc mutations were found in four dysplastic lesions and invasive adenocarcinomas: two in two LGD, two in one LGD and two in one CA (Table II). The combined mutation frequency of Apc in all the neoplastic lesions studied was 19.4% (six mutations out of 31 lesions). The frequency of mutation was not significantly different among the three neoplastic groups: 18.2% in LGD (two out of 11), 28.6% in HGD (two out of seven) and 15.4% in CA (two out of 13) (Table II
). No mutations were observed in 10 DMH-treated normal controls and five non-DMH-treated negative controls. A representative sequencing autoradiogram is shown in Figure 1
. The mutation frequency of Apc in the present study is comparable with the previously reported rate of 14.3% in colonic tumors induced by azoxymethane, a metabolite of DMH, in F344 rats (35). The Apc mutation frequency, however, varies from 0 to 100% in other chemical rodent models of CRC (29,36,37; Table III
). Discrepancies in the frequency of Apc mutations among these chemical rodent models are likely due to a species difference, the type, dose and duration of chemical carcinogens used, the sensitivity of mutation analyses and the extent of coding region examined. In human colon adenomas and carcinomas, the frequency of APC mutations varies from 40 to 80% (13,14,23). The relatively low frequency of Apc mutations observed in the present study compared with that observed in human CRC might be related to the fact that this study only analyzed Apc mutations within a 2704 bp region flanking the sequences corresponding to the human MCR. It is possible that an analysis of the entire coding region of the Apc gene (8526 bp) might have detected a higher frequency of mutations.
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In contrast to observations made in human CRC, where >60% of the somatic APC mutations are clustered in the MCR in exon 15 (13,14,23), five of the six Apc mutations (83%) observed in the present study were located upstream (nt 30783714) from the MCR and only one mutation was found in the MCR (nt 39064589) (Table II). This observation is consistent with the previous finding in azoxymethane-induced colon tumors in F344 rats (35). In the latter study, 100% of the observed Apc mutations were found upstream (nt 31733835) of the MCR (35). Also, in heterocyclic amine-induced colon tumors in F344 rats, only 28.6% of Apc mutations were observed in the MCR, whereas 28.6% were located between nt 2606 and 2761 in exon 15 and 42.8% in other exons (29). Thus, in DMH- or azoxymethane-induced colon tumors in rats, the MCR for human CRC is not commonly mutated and a 757 bp region between nt 3078 and 3835 in exon 15 upstream of the MCR may be a mutational hot spot. Because the entire coding sequence of the Apc gene was not scanned in the present study, the possibility of other mutational hot spots of the Apc gene for the DMH rat model of CRC cannot be ruled out.
In the present study, Apc mutations were found in 18.2% of the LGD lesions studied and the frequency of mutations did not significantly increase in HGD (28.6%) and CA (15.4%). This observation suggests that Apc mutations are an early molecular event in DMH-induced colorectal carcinogenesis in rats. This is consistent with human colorectal carcinogenesis, where APC mutations are considered to be an early event and a uniformly high mutation frequency of ~60% is observed in both colorectal adenomas and carcinomas (13,14,23).
Although Apc mutations were observed only in neoplastic lesions from rats receiving either 2 or 8 mg folate/kg diet (mutation frequency 10 and 21%, respectively; Table II), the frequency of mutations among the four diet groups was not significantly different. Interestingly, no C:G
T:A transitional Apc mutations at CpG sites, which are expected from folate deficiency via its effects on DNA methylation and account for >50% of somatic APC mutations within the MCR in human CRC (13,14,23), were found in neoplastic lesions in the present study. Our data suggest that dietary folate had no significant effect on the frequency and type of Apc mutations within the 2704 bp region in exon 15 examined in the present study. However, we cannot exclude the possibility that the low frequency of Apc mutations and the small number of neoplasms studied in this study precluded our ability to observe modulatory effects of folate.
In contrast to the Apc gene, no mutations were observed in the mutational hot spots of the p53 gene for human colorectal cancer (exons 59) in all DMH-induced colorectal neoplasms, DMH-treated normal controls and non-DMH-treated negative controls. Most important of all was our observation that the superimposition of folate depletion, a condition known to induce p53 hypomethylation and strand breaks in rats (19,20), did not result in p53 mutations. Our observation is consistent with previous animal studies utilizing different carcinogens in different strains of rats or mice (3845). Only one of these eight published studies demonstrated p53 mutations in exons 58 in DMH-treated mice with an overall mutation frequency of 11% (44), which is much lower than that observed in human CRC (>70%) (15). Taken together, these data suggest that p53 mutations are either absent or uncommonly involved in colorectal carcinogenesis in DMH or its metabolite, azoxymethane, rodent models. This fact implies that CRC in these rodent models may develop along a different pathway(s) independent of or by-passing the tumor suppressive function of the p53 gene commonly observed in human colorectal carcinogenesis.
In summary, the present study suggests that the Apc gene is mutated in a distinct region upstream of the human APC MCR in early stages of the DMH SpragueDawley rat model of CRC, albeit to a lesser degree than observed in human CRC. Unlike human and other rodent models of CRC, all mutations are single base missense mutations (mostly A:TG:C transitions) not resulting in truncated Apc proteins. In contrast, the mutational hot spot of the p53 gene for human CRC is not mutated in this model. This study also suggests that the mechanism by which dietary folate modulates colorectal carcinogenesis in this model (4) is probably not via its effect on mutations in the mutational hot spots of the Apc and p53 genes.
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Acknowledgments |
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Notes |
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* Presented in part at the 1998 Digestive Disease Week, May 1720, 1998, New Orleans, LA, USA, and published in abstract form in Gastroenterology, 1998, 114, G2571.
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