Acessibilidade / Reportar erro

Trypanosoma cruzi infection and/or administration of the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory nimesulide increase the number of colonic crypts overexpressing metallothioneins in rat colon carcinogenesis

Abstract

Trypanosoma cruzi infection and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs inhibit colorectal carcinogenesis by mechanisms not completely known and metallothionein proteins (MTs) may be involved in this process. Sixty-six male Wistar rats weighing 90 to 120 g were randomly divided into seven groups (GI to GVII). GI, GII and GIII animals were subcutaneously infected with 200,000 trypomastigote forms of the Y strain of T. cruzi. After 8 weeks, GI, GII, GIV, and GVI were injected with one weekly subcutaneous dose of 12 mg/kg dimethylhydrazine for 4 weeks. In sequence, GI, GIV and GV were treated with nimesulide (10 mg/kg per dose, five times per week for 8 weeks). Groups I, III, IV, and VI had 12 animals, and each of the other groups had 6 animals. All the animals were euthanized 8 weeks after the last dimethylhydrazine injection. The colons were fixed and processed for MT immunohistochemistry. The index of MT-overexpressing colonic crypts (MTEC) was estimated as the percentage of MT-stained crypts in relation to the total number of crypts scored. Five hundred crypts per animal were scored. Data were analyzed by the Kruskal-Wallis test followed by the Dunn test. There was an increase in MTEC index in the groups either infected with T. cruzi or treated with nimesulide or both infected and treated when compared to control (401, 809, and 1011%, respectively). We suggest that the increased formation of MTEC may be related to the protection against carcinogenesis provided both by T. cruzi infection and nimesulide.

Trypanosoma cruzi; Nimesulide; Dimethylhydrazine; Metallothioneins; Colon carcinogenesis


Abstract

Introduction

Material and Methods

Braz J Med Biol Res, July 2006, Volume 39(7) 895-899

Trypanosoma cruzi infection and/or administration of the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory nimesulide increase the number of colonic crypts overexpressing metallothioneins in rat colon carcinogenesis

R.D. Escalante1, Ê.C. de Oliveira2, F.Q. Cunha3, M.V.O. Vespúcio4, A. Ribeiro-Silva4, F. Aprilli5 and Correspondence and Footnotes S.B. Garcia4

1Programa de Pós-graduação em Cirurgia, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade Federal do Ceará, Fortaleza, CE, Brasil

2Departamento de Cirurgia, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade Federal de Goiás, Goiânia, GO, Brasil

3Departamento de Farmacologia, 4Departamento de Patologia, 5Departamento de Cirurgia e Anatomia, Faculdade de Medicina de Ribeirão Preto, Universidade de São Paulo, Ribeirão Preto, SP, Brasil

Discussion

Correspondence and Footnotes Correspondence and Footnotes Correspondence and Footnotes

Trypanosoma cruzi infection and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs inhibit colorectal carcinogenesis by mechanisms not completely known and metallothionein proteins (MTs) may be involved in this process. Sixty-six male Wistar rats weighing 90 to 120 g were randomly divided into seven groups (GI to GVII). GI, GII and GIII animals were subcutaneously infected with 200,000 trypomastigote forms of the Y strain of T. cruzi. After 8 weeks, GI, GII, GIV, and GVI were injected with one weekly subcutaneous dose of 12 mg/kg dimethylhydrazine for 4 weeks. In sequence, GI, GIV and GV were treated with nimesulide (10 mg/kg per dose, five times per week for 8 weeks). Groups I, III, IV, and VI had 12 animals, and each of the other groups had 6 animals. All the animals were euthanized 8 weeks after the last dimethylhydrazine injection. The colons were fixed and processed for MT immunohistochemistry. The index of MT-overexpressing colonic crypts (MTEC) was estimated as the percentage of MT-stained crypts in relation to the total number of crypts scored. Five hundred crypts per animal were scored. Data were analyzed by the Kruskal-Wallis test followed by the Dunn test. There was an increase in MTEC index in the groups either infected with T. cruzi or treated with nimesulide or both infected and treated when compared to control (401, 809, and 1011%, respectively). We suggest that the increased formation of MTEC may be related to the protection against carcinogenesis provided both by T. cruzi infection and nimesulide.

Key words: Trypanosoma cruzi, Nimesulide, Dimethylhydrazine, Metallothioneins, Colon carcinogenesis

It has been known for decades that Trypanosoma cruzi infection has an anticancer effect (1) and we have provided evidence showing that chronic infection with T. cruzi reduces the incidence of 1,2-dimethylhydrazine-induced colorectal tumors (2). Available clinical data strongly suggest the existence of protection against colon cancer in patients with megacolon due to Chagas' disease, which is caused by T. cruzi (3). However, the mechanisms for this protection against cancer development are not known.

The observations that nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) may inhibit colorectal carcinogenesis have also produced great excitement, despite the fact that comparative data relating their chemopreventive effectiveness to relevant mechanisms of action are not available (4). It has been reported that nimesulide, a cyclooxygenase-2 selective inhibitor, showed a remarkable suppressive effect on rodent carcinogenesis but the mechanisms were not identified (5).

Interestingly, it has been known that both infections in general and NSAIDs may cause a marked increase of metallothionein (MT) expression (6-8). The MTs are low-molecular weight proteins that are induced by exposure to heavy metals and which perform many functions such as detoxification and clearance of free radicals from tissues and cells (9). Recently, it has been shown that the MTs played some protective roles during DNA damage, presumably by acting as antioxidants (10). The carcinogen dimethylhydrazine (DMH) induces the appearance of MT-overexpressing colonic crypts (MTEC) in rodents. They are randomly distributed in the epithelium and presumably arise from somatic mutation of crypt stem cells followed by colonization of the clonal unit by the mutated progeny (9,11). It has been postulated that MT overexpression may represent an important early step in the development of colonic cancer (12).

Since MTs are antioxidants and their expression has been related both to colon carcinogenesis and to infections and inflammation, the present study was designed to determine if the relative number of MT-overexpressing colonic crypts is altered during colon carcinogenesis in rats by infection with T. cruzi and/or treatment with nimesulide.

Sixty-six male Wistar rats bred at the Medical School of Ribeirão Preto, weighing 90 to 120 g at the beginning of the experiment were used. Water and a standard pellet diet (Labina, Ralston Purina do Brasil, São Paulo, SP, Brazil) were provided ad libitum. The animals were maintained in cages (5 per cage) on a 12-h light/dark cycle. The animal welfare considerations were in strict accordance with international bioethical guidelines.

The experimental design is summarized in Table 1. The animals were randomly divided into seven groups, with 12 animals each in groups I, III, IV, and VI at the beginning of the experiment, and 6 animals in each of the other groups.

The animals were infected with 200,000 trypomastigote forms of the Y strain of T. cruzi by the subcutaneous route. The infection was monitored by checking the parasitemia 5 days after infection by light microscopic examination of a blood smear (2). The animals were treated with one weekly subcutaneous dose of 12 mg/kg DMH for 4 weeks. Nimesulide was administered at 10 mg/kg per dose, five times per week for 8 weeks. The animals were killed by cervical dislocation. The colons were fixed and processed histologically for MT immunohistochemistry as previously described (9). Briefly, colorecta were removed, coiled into Swiss-rolls, fixed in neutral buffered formalin, and paraffin-embedded. Multiple 5-µm sections were cut at 40-µm intervals to provide a sample of at least 45,000 crypts per mouse. The sections were immunoperoxidase-stained for MT using the ascites-derived mouse monoclonal antibody E9 (Dako Ltd., Copenhagen, Denmark), which reacts with MT-I and MT-II,18 applied at 0.1 µg/mL (IgG, K protein) overnight at 4ºC. Normal adult rat endometrium (in which MT is consistently expressed in the glandular epithelium) was used as a positive control, while the primary antibody was excluded for negative controls.

The MTEC index was reported as the percentage of MT-stained crypts in relation to the total number of crypts scored. Five hundred crypts per animal were scored by two pathologists who were blind to group identification. Data were analyzed statistically by the Kruskal-Wallis test followed by the Dunn test. Differences were considered to be significant when P £ 0.05.

Table 1.
Experimental design.

Results and Discussion

[View larger version of this table (70 K JPG file)]

MT-positive crypts were found only in the animals treated with the DMH. In these animals, both T. cruzi infection and nimesulide ingestion were associated with an increase in the number of MT-overexpressing colonic epithelial cells when compared to the control group. Furthermore, there was an even greater increase in MT-positive crypts when T. cruzi infection was associated with nimesulide, as shown in Figures 1 and 2.

It has been observed that colorectal carcinogenesis is characterized by a significant decrease in MT expression (13). Conversely, in some conditions MT expression is considered to be protective against cancer development or to indicate a better prognosis (14). Both the T. cruzi infection and nimesulide have been reported to protect against colonic carcinogenesis (2,4).

Here we demonstrate that T. cruzi infection and nimesulide administration were associated with an increase in colonic MT expression after DMH injection in rats. Furthermore, there was an even greater increase in relative number of MT-expressing crypts when T. cruzi infection was associated with nimesulide, suggesting that there may be a cumulative effect of T. cruzi infection and NSAID. The oncological relevance of MTEC is unclear but it has been recently shown that the relative number of MTECs correlates with the formation of aberrant crypt foci, that are well-recognized biomarkers of neoplastic transformation in the colon (15). Thus, it has been proposed that MTEC may be used as a relevant murine bioassay to study early stage colorectal tumorigenesis (15).

We propose that MTEC may be less prone to developing cancer than crypts that do not overexpress MTs, since MT overexpression is thought to be a protective mechanism against both the inflammation-related tissue damage (16) and the cytotoxicity of carcinogens (17). Overexpression of MTEC may prevent further mutations that could eventually lead to the neoplastic phenotype. This view agrees with the observation of a positive association between increased MT expression and a better prognosis of colonic cancer (14) and with the fact that negative-MT subclones may be present in colonic cancers, being responsible for a higher metastatic potential (14). Interestingly, it has been proposed that the initial driving forces behind environmentally induced cancers may not be mutations, but may rather be events related to carcinogen-induced selection through the epigenetic changes that eventually establish a gene expression program characteristic of a cancer cell (18).

The mechanisms of the increase in the number of MTEC are unknown. Crypt fission may explain the spread of mutated clones on the epithelial sheets (19). This proposed mechanism is related to colonic carcinogenesis by a process called field cancerization (20). The term field cancerization has been used to describe the multiple patches of the pre-malignant disease in the epithelial sheets that may explain the presence of synchronous distant tumors within one organ such as the colon (20).

On the basis of these considerations, we propose that the spread of an increased number of MTEC could play a role in the protection against cancer by nimesulide and by T. cruzi infection. This proposal is supported by the observation that MT is expressed in a patchy pattern in the neoplastic gastrointestinal tissues, with positive parts located next to negative parts (13), and that there is a clonal variation of the cadmium response in human tumor cell lines that may be related to the MT expression (21). Further studies are needed to confirm and further define the relationship between the spread of MTEC and its role in colonic carcinogenesis in rats treated with nimesulide or infected with T. cruzi.

The mechanisms involved in the formation of MTEC also need to be further elucidated. The colonic crypt can be considered to consist of a group of clonal cells, because each one of its cells arises from a single stem cell (9,11). It is known that the expression of the cell molecules may be influenced by epigenetic mechanisms during colonic carcinogenesis (22). Recently, it has been observed that exposure to a non-genotoxic diet-related compound modulates the chemical carcinogenic effects of nitroso compounds for the induction of crypt-restricted MT immunopositivity (12). Furthermore, it has been proposed that the initial events in the environmentally induced cancers may be related to gene induction by epigenetic DNA methylation that leads to cancer cell selection and that the determination of the extent to which this concept applies to other environmental carcinogens is the challenge of the future (18). We suggest that, in our experimental model, MT overexpression may have arisen as an inherited clonal trait, perhaps through an epigenetic regulatory mechanism. This experimental model may be useful for further studies on the epigenetic mechanisms involved in carcinogenesis. More detailed studies are also warranted to explain the mechanisms and consequences of the increase in MT expression associated with nimesulide and T. cruzi infection during colonic carcinogenesis.

Figure 1
. Immunohistochemistry of metallothioneins (MT) in microscopically normal colorectal mucosa of rats treated with dimethylhydrazine (magnification, 200X). A, Colon section of a control animal with only one colonic crypt overexpressing MT (arrow) and surrounding crypts with no MT expression. B, Rat infected with Trypanosoma cruzi, showing MT overexpression in many crypts. C, Rat treated with nimesulide, showing MT overexpression in many crypts. D, Rat infected with T. cruzi and treated with nimesulide. Most of the cryps are positive for MTs (Bar = 100 µm).

[View larger version of this image (137 K JPG file)]

Figure 2
. Metallothionein-positive crypt index of Trypanosoma cruzi-infected rats treated with dimethylhydrazine and nimesulide. INF/DMH/NMS - animals infected with T. cruzi and treated with nimesulide. INF/DMH - animals infected with T. cruzi and treated with dimethylhydrazine. C/DMH/NMS - animals treated with dimethylhydrazine and nimesulide; C/DMH - control animals treated with dimethylhydrazine. *C/DMH/NMS > C/DMH (P < 0.01, Kruskal-Wallis test); **INF/DMH > C/DMH/NMS > C/DMH (P < 0.01, Kruskal-Wallis test); ***INF/DMH/NMS > INF/DMH > C/DMH/NMS > C/DMH (P < 0.01, Kruskal-Wallis test).

References

[View larger version of this image (28 K JPG file)]

1. Sheklakova LA, Kallinikova VD, Karpenko LP. Genetic heterogeneity of Trypanosoma cruzi and its direct anticancer effect in cultured human tumor cells. Bull Exp Biol Med 2003; 135: 89-92.

2. Oliveira EC, Leite MS, Miranda JA, Andrade AL, Garcia SB, Luquetti AO, et al. Chronic Trypanosoma cruzi infection associated with low incidence of 1,2-dimethylhydrazine-induced colon cancer in rats. Carcinogenesis 2001; 22: 737-740.

3. Garcia SB, Aranha AL, Garcia FR, Basile FV, Pinto AP, de Oliveira EC, et al. A retrospective study of histopathological findings in 894 cases of megacolon: what is the relationship between megacolon and colonic cancer? Rev Inst Med Trop Sao Paulo 2003; 45: 91-93.

4. Reddy BS, Hirose Y, Lubet R, Steele V, Kelloff G, Paulson S, et al. Chemoprevention of colon cancer by specific cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitor, celecoxib, administered during different stages of carcinogenesis. Cancer Res 2000; 60: 293-297.

5. Fukutake M, Nakatsugi S, Isoi T, Takahashi M, Ohta T, Mamiya S, et al. Suppressive effects of nimesulide, a selective inhibitor of cyclooxygenase-2, on azoxymethane-induced colon carcinogenesis in mice. Carcinogenesis 1998; 19: 1939-1942.

6. Manuel Y, Thomas Y, Pellegrini O. Metallothionein and tissue damage. IARC Sci Publ 1992; 231-237.

7. Ilback NG, Glynn AW, Wikberg L, Netzel E, Lindh U. Metallothionein is induced and trace element balance changed in target organs of a common viral infection. Toxicology 2004; 199: 241-250.

8. Summer KH, Klein D, de Ruiter N, Abel J. Metallothionein induction by nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs. Biol Trace Elem Res 1989; 21: 165-169.

9. Jasani B, Campbell F, Navabi H, Schmid KW, Williams GT. Clonal overexpression of metallothionein is induced by somatic mutation in morphologically normal colonic mucosa. J Pathol 1998; 184: 144-147.

10. Jia G, Sone H, Nishimura N, Satoh M, Tohyama C. Metallothionein (I/II) suppresses genotoxicity caused by dimethylarsinic acid. Int J Oncol 2004; 25: 325-333.

11. Anne CH, Williams D, Anne TG. Crypt-restricted metallothionein immunopositivity in murine colon: validation of a model for studies of somatic stem cell mutation. J Pathol 2000; 191: 306-312.

12. Donnelly ET, Bardwell H, Thomas GA, Williams ED, Hoper M, Crowe P, et al. Modulation of N-methyl-N-nitrosourea-induced crypt restricted metallothionein immunopositivity in mouse colon by a non-genotoxic diet-related chemical. Carcinogenesis 2004; 25: 847-855.

13. Janssen AM, van Duijn W, Oostendorp-Van De Ruit MM, Kruidenier L, Bosman CB, Griffioen G, et al. Metallothionein in human gastrointestinal cancer. J Pathol 2000; 192: 293-300.

14. Ofner D, Maier H, Riedmann B, Bammer T, Rumer A, Winde G, et al. Immunohistochemical metallothionein expression in colorectal adenocarcinoma: correlation with tumour stage and patient survival. Virchows Arch 1994; 425: 491-497.

15. Donnelly ET, Bardwell H, Thomas GA, Williams ED, Hoper M, Crowe P, et al. Metallothionein crypt-restricted immunopositivity indices (MTCRII) correlate with aberrant crypt foci (ACF) in mouse colon. Br J Cancer 2005; 92: 2160-2165.

16. Schwarz MA, Lazo JS, Yalowich JC, Allen WP, Whitmore M, Bergonia HA, et al. Metallothionein protects against the cytotoxic and DNA-damaging effects of nitric oxide. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1995; 92: 4452-4456.

17. Satoh M, Kondo Y, Mita M, Nakagawa I, Naganuma A, Imura N. Prevention of carcinogenicity of anticancer drugs by metallothionein induction. Cancer Res 1993; 53: 4767-4768.

18. Costa M, Klein CB. Nickel carcinogenesis, mutation, epigenetics, or selection. Environ Health Perspect 1999; 107: A438-A439.

19. Wong WM, Garcia SB, Wright NA. Origins and morphogenesis of colorectal neoplasms. APMIS 1999; 107: 535-544.

20. Garcia SB, Park HS, Novelli M, Wright NA. Field cancerization, clonality, and epithelial stem cells: the spread of mutated clones in epithelial sheets. J Pathol 1999; 187: 61-81.

21. Enger MD, Tesmer JG, Travis GL, Barham SS. Clonal variation of cadmium response in human tumor cell lines. Am J Physiol 1986; 250: C256-C263.

22. Jubb AM, Bell SM, Quirke P. Methylation and colorectal cancer. J Pathol 2001; 195: 111-134.

Address for correspondence: S.B. Garcia, Departamento de Patologia, FMRP, USP, Av. Bandeirantes, 3900, 14049-900 Ribeirão Preto, SP, Brasil. Fax: +55-16-3602-1068. E-mail: sbgarcia@fmrp.usp.br

Publication supported by FAPESP. Received March 22, 2005. Accepted February 22, 2006.

  • 1. Sheklakova LA, Kallinikova VD, Karpenko LP. Genetic heterogeneity of Trypanosoma cruzi and its direct anticancer effect in cultured human tumor cells. Bull Exp Biol Med 2003; 135: 89-92.
  • 2. Oliveira EC, Leite MS, Miranda JA, Andrade AL, Garcia SB, Luquetti AO, et al. Chronic Trypanosoma cruzi infection associated with low incidence of 1,2-dimethylhydrazine-induced colon cancer in rats. Carcinogenesis 2001; 22: 737-740.
  • 3. Garcia SB, Aranha AL, Garcia FR, Basile FV, Pinto AP, de Oliveira EC, et al. A retrospective study of histopathological findings in 894 cases of megacolon: what is the relationship between megacolon and colonic cancer? Rev Inst Med Trop Sao Paulo 2003; 45: 91-93.
  • 4. Reddy BS, Hirose Y, Lubet R, Steele V, Kelloff G, Paulson S, et al. Chemoprevention of colon cancer by specific cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitor, celecoxib, administered during different stages of carcinogenesis. Cancer Res 2000; 60: 293-297.
  • 5. Fukutake M, Nakatsugi S, Isoi T, Takahashi M, Ohta T, Mamiya S, et al. Suppressive effects of nimesulide, a selective inhibitor of cyclooxygenase-2, on azoxymethane-induced colon carcinogenesis in mice. Carcinogenesis 1998; 19: 1939-1942.
  • 6. Manuel Y, Thomas Y, Pellegrini O. Metallothionein and tissue damage. IARC Sci Publ 1992; 231-237.
  • 7. Ilback NG, Glynn AW, Wikberg L, Netzel E, Lindh U. Metallothionein is induced and trace element balance changed in target organs of a common viral infection. Toxicology 2004; 199: 241-250.
  • 8. Summer KH, Klein D, de Ruiter N, Abel J. Metallothionein induction by nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs. Biol Trace Elem Res 1989; 21: 165-169.
  • 9. Jasani B, Campbell F, Navabi H, Schmid KW, Williams GT. Clonal overexpression of metallothionein is induced by somatic mutation in morphologically normal colonic mucosa. J Pathol 1998; 184: 144-147.
  • 10. Jia G, Sone H, Nishimura N, Satoh M, Tohyama C. Metallothionein (I/II) suppresses genotoxicity caused by dimethylarsinic acid. Int J Oncol 2004; 25: 325-333.
  • 11. Anne CH, Williams D, Anne TG. Crypt-restricted metallothionein immunopositivity in murine colon: validation of a model for studies of somatic stem cell mutation. J Pathol 2000; 191: 306-312.
  • 12. Donnelly ET, Bardwell H, Thomas GA, Williams ED, Hoper M, Crowe P, et al. Modulation of N-methyl-N-nitrosourea-induced crypt restricted metallothionein immunopositivity in mouse colon by a non-genotoxic diet-related chemical. Carcinogenesis 2004; 25: 847-855.
  • 13. Janssen AM, van Duijn W, Oostendorp-Van De Ruit MM, Kruidenier L, Bosman CB, Griffioen G, et al. Metallothionein in human gastrointestinal cancer. J Pathol 2000; 192: 293-300.
  • 14. Ofner D, Maier H, Riedmann B, Bammer T, Rumer A, Winde G, et al. Immunohistochemical metallothionein expression in colorectal adenocarcinoma: correlation with tumour stage and patient survival. Virchows Arch 1994; 425: 491-497.
  • 15. Donnelly ET, Bardwell H, Thomas GA, Williams ED, Hoper M, Crowe P, et al. Metallothionein crypt-restricted immunopositivity indices (MTCRII) correlate with aberrant crypt foci (ACF) in mouse colon. Br J Cancer 2005; 92: 2160-2165.
  • 16. Schwarz MA, Lazo JS, Yalowich JC, Allen WP, Whitmore M, Bergonia HA, et al. Metallothionein protects against the cytotoxic and DNA-damaging effects of nitric oxide. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1995; 92: 4452-4456.
  • 17. Satoh M, Kondo Y, Mita M, Nakagawa I, Naganuma A, Imura N. Prevention of carcinogenicity of anticancer drugs by metallothionein induction. Cancer Res 1993; 53: 4767-4768.
  • 18. Costa M, Klein CB. Nickel carcinogenesis, mutation, epigenetics, or selection. Environ Health Perspect 1999; 107: A438-A439.
  • 19. Wong WM, Garcia SB, Wright NA. Origins and morphogenesis of colorectal neoplasms. APMIS 1999; 107: 535-544.
  • 20. Garcia SB, Park HS, Novelli M, Wright NA. Field cancerization, clonality, and epithelial stem cells: the spread of mutated clones in epithelial sheets. J Pathol 1999; 187: 61-81.
  • 21. Enger MD, Tesmer JG, Travis GL, Barham SS. Clonal variation of cadmium response in human tumor cell lines. Am J Physiol 1986; 250: C256-C263.
  • 22. Jubb AM, Bell SM, Quirke P. Methylation and colorectal cancer. J Pathol 2001; 195: 111-134.
  • Correspondence and Footnotes

  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      14 Aug 2006
    • Date of issue
      July 2006

    History

    • Accepted
      22 Feb 2006
    • Received
      22 Mar 2005
    Associação Brasileira de Divulgação Científica Av. Bandeirantes, 3900, 14049-900 Ribeirão Preto SP Brazil, Tel. / Fax: +55 16 3315-9120 - Ribeirão Preto - SP - Brazil
    E-mail: bjournal@terra.com.br