J Pharm Pharmaceut Sci (www.cspscanada.org) 8(2):316-321, 2005
Melatonin Modulates The Oxidant–Antioxidant Imbalance During N‑Nitrosodiethylamine Induced Hepatocarcinogenesis In Rats
Dakshayani, KB. Subramanian, P., Manivasagam,
T., Mohamed Essa, M and Manoharan, S
Department of Biochemistry, Annamalai University, Annamalainagar-608 002, Tamil Nadu, India.
Received March 11 2005, Revised June 6 2005, Accepted June 7 2005, Published August 12 2005
Corresponding Author: P. Subramanian, Department of Biochemistry Annamalai University Annamalainagar-608002 psub@rediffmail.com annamalai_rhythm@yahoo.co.in
abstract. PURPOSE: Melatonin, the
principle hormone of pineal gland plays an important role in several biological
processes. The effects of melatonin on hepatic marker enzymes [aspartate and alanine transaminases (AST and
ALT)], lipid peroxides [thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS)] and
antioxidants [reduced glutathione (GSH), glutathione peroxidase (GPx) and glutathione-S-transferase
(GST)] during N-nitrosodiethylamine (NDEA) – induced
hepatocarcinogenesis in rats were studied. METHODS:
Male albino Wistar rats of body weight 150-170 g were divided into four groups
of six animals each. Group I animals served as control, Group II animals
received single intraperitoneal injection of NDEA at a dose of 200 mg/kg body
weight followed by weekly subcutaneous
injections of CCl4 at a dose of 3 mL/kg body weight. Group III
animals were treated as in Group II and melatonin (5 mg/kg body weight) was
administered intraperitoneally. Group IV animals received melatonin alone at
the same dose as Group III animals.
RESULTS: A significant
increase in the activities of serum AST and
ALT was observed in NDEA treated rats when compared with control animals.
Melatonin administered rats showed a significant decrease in the activities of these enzymes when compared with
NDEA treated animals. In the liver of NDEA-treated animals, decreased lipid
peroxidation associated with enhanced antioxidant levels was observed.
Administration of melatonin positively modulated these changes. CONCLUSION:
Our results indicate that melatonin exerts chemopreventive effect by restoring
the activities of hepatic marker enzymes and reversing the oxidant-antioxidant
imbalance during NDEA-induced hepatocarcinogenesis.
Hepatocellular carcinoma is the fifth most common
cancer in the world (1, 2). The major risk factors of this disease include
hepatitis B and C viral infections, exposure to nitrosocompounds and aflatoxin B1 and alcoholic liver disease
(3, 4). A number of endogenous and exogenous cancer risk factors generate
oxygen free radicals in vivo (5, 6) and initiate carcinogenic
process (7). N-Nitrosodiethylamine (NDEA) is one of the most important environmental
hepatocarcinogens that has been reported to generate free radicals to exert its
carcinogenic effects (8) and it has been widely used in the field of
experimental hepatocarcinogenesis (9,10).
Several antioxidants
with different efficacies protect against oxidative abuse caused by wide range
of carcinogens including NDEA (11). Melatonin, N-acetyl-5-methoxytryptamine is
a pineal gland hormone. It is a direct free radical scavenger, an indirect
antioxidant and an immunomodulatory agent (12). It holds the unique position of
being the only known chronobiotic regulator of neoplastic cell growth (13, 14).
Both in
vitro and on different animal models of tumorgenesis, melatonin has been
found to inhibit neoplastic growth and to delay tumor progression (15, 16). The
present study was designed to analyse the effect of melatonin on hepatic marker enzymes
(aspartate and alanine transaminases), lipid peroxides (thiobarbituric acid
reactive substances); glutathione and its dependent enzymes (glutathione
peroxidase and glutathione-S-transferase) during NDEA- induced
hepatocarcinogenesis in rats.
Adult male Wistar rats
(150-170 g) obtained from Central Animal House, Rajah Muthiah Medical College,
Annamalai University, Annamalainagar were used in the present study. Commercial
pellet diet (Kamdhenu agencies, Bangalore, India) and water were made available
to the animals ad libitum. Animals were maintained in a controlled
environment (temperature 30 ± 3°C) with 12 h
light/dark cycles in an experimental room simulating
natural conditions. In Annamalainagar (11°24¢N,
79°42¢E),
the light dark (LD) cycle is almost 12:12 h throughout the year (17).
The animals were maintained in accordance with the guidelines of National
Institute of Nutrition, Indian Council of Medical Research, Hyderabad, India
and approved by the ethical committee, Annamalai University.
NDEA was purchased from Sigma
Chemical Co., USA. Melatonin was purchased from Sisco Research Laboratories,
Mumbai. All other chemicals used in the study were of analytical grade.
One gram of NDEA was dissolved
in 1mL of saline and administered to each rat at a dose of 200 mg/kg body
weight once intraperitoneally (18), followed by subcutaneous injections of
carbon tetrachloride (CCl4)
[3 mL/kg body weight/week] for 6 weeks (10).
Animals
were divided into four groups of six animals each. Group I rats served as
controls, Group II rats received single intraperitoneal injection of NDEA (200
mg/kg body weight) followed by weekly subcutaneous injections of CCl4
(10). Animals in Group III were treated as in Group II, in addition melatonin
[5 mg/kg body weight] (19) was administered intraperitoneally throughout the
experimental period of 20 weeks. Group IV animals received melatonin alone at
the same dose as group III animals.
At the end of
experimental period of 20 weeks, the animals were sacrificed by cervical dislocation;
blood samples and liver tissue were used for analysis.
10% tissue homogenate was
prepared using an appropriate buffer for the estimation of lipid peroxides and
antioxidants.
The
activities of these enzymes were estimated by the method of Reitman and Frankel
(20). 0.2 mL of serum was added to 1 mL of phosphate buffer containing
substrate, mixed and incubated for 60 minutes for AST and 30 minutes for ALT at 37°C. Then 1 mL of
dinitrophenylhydrazine was added and incubated for 20 minutes at room
temperature and 10 mL of 0.4% sodium hydroxide was added, mixed well and after
five minutes, read at 550 nm. Blank and a series of standards were processed
similarly.
TBARS were assayed by the
method of Niehaus and Samuelsson (21). To 1 mL of tissue homogenate, 2 mL of
TCA-TBA-HCl reagent was added, mixed thoroughly and kept in boiling water bath
for 15 minutes. The precipitate was removed by centrifugation. A series of
standards was processed similarly and the absorbance was read at 535 nm.
GSH was estimated by the
method of Ellman (22). 0.5 mL of tissue homogenate was precipitated with 2 mL
of 5% TCA. After centrifugation, 1 mL of supernatant was taken and added 0.5 mL
of Ellman’s reagent (19.8 mg of 5,5’ dithio(bis)nitrobenzoic acid in 100
mL of 1% sodium citrate) and 3 mL of phosphate buffer. Standards were treated
in a similar way and the colour developed was read at 412 nm.
GPx activity was measured by
the method of Rotruck et al. (23). To 0.2 mL of buffer, 0.2 mL of EDTA,
0.1 mL of sodium azide and 0.5 mL of tissue homogenate were added. To that
mixture, 0.2 mL of glutathione solution and 0.1 mL of hydrogen peroxide were
added. The contents were mixed well and incubated at 37°C for 10 minutes along with
the control tubes containing all the reagents but no enzyme. After 10 minutes,
the reaction was arrested by the addition of 0.4 mL of 10% TCA. 0.2 mL of
tissue homogenate was added to the control tubes. The tubes were centrifuged
and supernatant was assayed for glutathione content by adding Ellman’s reagent.
GST
activity was measured by the method of Habig et al. (24). The reaction
mixture containing 1 mL of buffer, 0.1 mL of 1-chloro-2, 4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB),
0.1 mL of homogenate and 1.7 mL of distilled water was incubated at 37°C
for 5 minutes. The reaction was then started by the addition of 1 mL of
glutathione. The increase in absorbance was followed for 3 minutes at 340 nm.
The reaction mixture without the enzyme was used as blank.
Statistical analysis was
carried out by analysis of variance (ANOVA) and the groups were compared using
Duncan’s Multiple Range Test (DMRT).
The activities of serum aspartate and alanine
transaminases were found to be significantly higher in NDEA plus CCl4
treated rats when compared with control animals and lower in the animals
treated with NDEA plus CCl4 as well as melatonin when compared with
NDEA plus CCl4 treated animals. The animals treated with melatonin
alone showed no significant change in the activities of transaminases (Table
1).
The levels of thiobarbituric acid reactive
substances in the liver of NDEA plus CCl4
treated animals were significantly decreased when compared with control
animals. NDEA plus CCl4 as well as melatonin treated animals showed
significantly increased levels of TBARS when compared with NDEA and CCl4
treated animals.
Table 1. Changes in activities of serum aspartate and alanine transaminases (AST
and ALT)
|
Control |
NDEA |
NDEA +
Melatonin |
Melatonin
|
AST (IU/L) |
92.15 ± 5.40a |
240.32 ± 22.36b |
130.33 ± 8.50c |
86.16 ± 4.75a |
ALT (IU/L) |
38.66 ± 2.50a |
125.39 ± 6.44b |
54.12 ± 2.60c |
36.19 ± 1.41a |
ANOVA followed by Duncan’s multiple range test.
Values not sharing a common superscript (a, b, c)
differ significantly at p £ 0.05
The animals treated with melatonin alone did not show
any significant change in the levels of TBARS (Table 2).
Table
2. Changes in the levels of TBARS and GSH and activities of GPx and GST in
liver of experimental animals
|
Control |
NDEA + CCl4 |
NDEA + CCl4 + Melatonin |
Melatonin |
TBARS (mmoles x 10 -3/mg protein) |
0.903 ± 0.072a |
0.148 ± 0.031b |
0.517 ± 0.049c |
0.911 ± 0.016a |
GSH (mg/mg protein) |
0.128± 0.07 a |
0.150 ± 0.09b |
0.134 ± 0.09c |
0.126 ± 0.08a |
GPx (UA/mg
protein) |
11.76 ± 0.71 a |
21.50 ± 1.78b |
15.26 ± 0.93c |
12.80 ± 0.71a |
GST (UB/mg
protein) |
690.53 ± 26.83 a |
1070.61 ± 44.72b |
820.19 ± 35.77c |
671.31 ±26.87a |
UA
: mmoles of GSH utilized/min
UB
: mmoles of CDNB-GSH conjugate
formed/min
ANOVA
followed by Duncan’s multiple range test
Values
not sharing a common superscript (a, b, c) differ significantly at p £
0.05
The levels of GSH and the activities of
glutathione peroxidase and glutathione-S-transferase in liver of NDEA plus CCl4
treated animals were significantly higher when compared with control animals. Administration
of melatonin restored the levels of GSH and the activities of GPx and GST to
near normal levels. The animals treated with melatonin alone showed no
significant change in the levels of GSH and in the activities of GSH related
enzymes (Table 2).
NDEA undergoes metabolic activation by cytochrome P450
enzymes to reactive electrophiles that are
cytotoxic, mutagenic and carcinogenic (25). Serum transaminases are sensitive
indicators of hepatic injury (26). Several reports have shown an increase in
the activities of AST and ALT during NDEA-induced hepatocarcinognesis (27, 28).
Elevated activities of serum AST and ALT observed in NDEA and CCl4
treated rats may be due to NDEA induced hepatic damage and subsequent leakage
of these enzymes into circulation. It has been reported that NDEA is
transported through blood and it causes hepatic injury (8). Administration of
melatonin restored the activities of these enzymes to near normal values,
which may be attributed to the hepatoprotective role of melatonin.
Although, several studies have demonstrated
increased lipid peroxidation in liver during NDEA- induced hepatocarcinogenesis
(27,29,30); in primary colon tumor (31) and in breast cancer tissue (32), we
observed decreased lipid peroxidation in the liver of NDEA plus CCl4
treated rats, as evidenced by thiobarbituric acid reactive substances.
Oxidant-antioxidant balance plays a significant role in the pathogenesis of
cancer (32). Tumor cells generally display low levels of lipid peroxidation
(33) which in turn can stimulate cell division and promote tumor growth (34, 35).
It has been reported that mild oxidative stress stimulates while excessive
oxidative stress inhibits cell growth (36, 37). Slater et al. proposed that
rapidly dividing cells tend to set an oxidant-antioxidant status favourable to
their growth (38). The decrease in lipid peroxidation observed in NDEA plus CCl4 treated animals may be due to
stimulation of cell division and tumor promotion. Lipid peroxidation has been
found decreased in NDEA-induced hepatoma (39). In the present study, melatonin
administration modulated the lipid peroxide levels to near normal levels
that may be attributable to its inhibitory action on tumor cell proliferation.
It has been well known that melatonin controls tumor cell proliferation (40, 41).
A significant increase in GSH content and
activities of GSH related enzymes, glutathione peroxidase and
glutathione-S-transferase was observed in NDEA plus CCl4 treated
rats, which may be due to over expression of these antioxidants during enhanced
cell proliferation. Huang et al. have reported that GSH is increased in human
hepatocellular carcinoma and this increased GSH level facilitates the growth of
liver cancer cells (42). A number of studies have demonstrated an enhanced
expression of the various GST isoforms in
cancer tissue in comparison to normal tissue (43, 44). Ferruzzi et al.
have reported that GSH concentration is higher in tumor than in normal tissues
(45).
Administration of melatonin reverted the
NDEA induced alterations in GSH and GSH related enzyme activities in liver.
Sugie et al. reported that melatonin inhibited development of
hepatocellular adenomas and carcinomas induced by diethylnitrosamine and
phenobarbital in both initiation and promotion phases (46). In conclusion,
melatonin would exert a chemopreventive effect by restoring the activities of
hepatic marker enzymes and reversing the oxidant-antioxidant imbalance during hepatocarcinogenesis.
The financial assistance from UGC, New Delhi in the
form of a research project [F.3-68/2002(SR-II)] to Dr. P. Subramanian and
senior research fellowship from ICMR, New
Delhi to Ms. K.B. Dakshayani [3/2/2/49/2004/NCD-III] is gratefully acknowledged.
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