Elsevier, Cancer Letters, 2(135), p. 137-144
DOI: 10.1016/s0304-3835(98)00288-2
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We recently reported p53 mutations to be frequent in mouse invasive urinary bladder carcinomas, with and without metastasis. However, the role of p53 dysfunctions during carcinogenesis remains unclear. In the present study, heterozygous and nullizygous p53-deficient mice and their littermates were treated with the urinary bladder carcinogen, N-butyl-N-(4-hydroxybutyl)-nitrosamine (BBN), at a concentration of 0.01% in the drinking water throughout the experiment. This markedly accelerated urinary bladder carcinogenesis but not development of other tumors in the nullizygous p53-deficient mice. Thus the appearance of neoplastic urothelial lesions in nullizygotes (at day 60 of the experiment) was earlier than in wild-type mice and heterozygotes (at day 125). Moreover, malignant vascular tumors (hemangiosarcomas (HS)) were found in all four nullizygotes killed later than day 108. Mutational inactivation of the wild-type allele was not apparent in either the single transitional cell carcinoma observed in a wild-type mouse and a hemangiosarcoma in a heterozygote. Overall, it can be concluded that the number of normal p53 alleles is a significant determining factor in the susceptibility of urothelial cells to carcinogens. The role of the p53 defect in mouse urinary bladder carcinogenesis may thus be to diminish the threshold for occurrence of additional genetic alterations.