Journal article
Puberty-specific promotion of mammary tumorigenesis by a high animal fat diet
Breast Cancer Research, Vol.17(1), Art. 138
2015
Abstract
Introduction
Increased animal fat consumption is associated with increased premenopausal breast cancer risk in normal weight, but not overweight, women. This agrees with our previous findings in obesity-resistant BALB/c mice, in which exposure to a high saturated animal fat diet (HFD) from peripuberty through adulthood promoted mammary tumorigenesis. Epidemiologic and animal studies support the importance of puberty as a life stage when diet and environmental exposures affect adult breast cancer risk. In this study, we identified the effects of peripubertal exposure to HFD and investigated its mechanism of enhancing tumorigenesis.
Methods
Three-week-old BALB/c mice fed a low-fat diet (LFD) or HFD were subjected to 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA)-induced carcinogenesis. At 9 weeks of age, half the mice on LFD were switched to HFD (LFD-HFD group) and half the mice on HFD were switched to LFD (HFD-LFD group). Tumor gene expression was evaluated in association with diet and tumor latency.
Results
The peripubertal HFD reduced the latency of DMBA-induced mammary tumors and was associated with tumor characteristics similar to those in mice fed a continuous HFD. Notably, short-latency tumors in both groups shared gene expression characteristics and were more likely to have adenosquamous histology. Both HFD-LFD and continuous HFD tumors showed similar gene expression patterns and early latency. Adult switch from HFD to LFD did not reverse peripubertal HFD tumor promotion. Increased proliferation, hyperplasia, and macrophages were present in mammary glands before tumor development, implicating these as possible effectors of tumor promotion. Despite a significant interaction between pubertal diet and carcinogens in tumor promotion, peripubertal HFD by itself produced persistent macrophage recruitment to mammary glands.
Conclusions
In obesity-resistant mice, peripubertal HFD is sufficient to irreversibly promote carcinogen-induced tumorigenesis. Increased macrophage recruitment is likely a contributing factor. These results underscore the importance of early life exposures to increased adult cancer risk and are consistent with findings that an HFD in normal weight premenopausal women leads to increased breast cancer risk. Notably, short-latency tumors occurring after peripubertal HFD had characteristics similar to human basal-like breast cancers that predominantly develop in younger women.
Details
- Title
- Puberty-specific promotion of mammary tumorigenesis by a high animal fat diet
- Authors/Creators
- M.D. Aupperlee (Author/Creator) - Michigan State UniversityY. Zhao (Author/Creator) - Michigan State UniversityY.S. Tan (Author/Creator) - Michigan State UniversityY. Zhu (Author/Creator) - Michigan State UniversityI.M. Langohr (Author/Creator) - Michigan State UniversityE.L. Kirk (Author/Creator) - University of North Carolina at Chapel HillJ.R. Pirone (Author/Creator) - University of North Carolina at Chapel HillM.A. Troester (Author/Creator) - University of North Carolina at Chapel HillR.C. Schwartz (Author/Creator) - Michigan State UniversityS.Z. Haslam (Author/Creator) - Michigan State University
- Publication Details
- Breast Cancer Research, Vol.17(1), Art. 138
- Publisher
- BioMed Central
- Identifiers
- 991005543278007891
- Copyright
- © 2015 Aupperlee et al.
- Murdoch Affiliation
- Murdoch University
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article
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- Citation topics
- 1 Clinical & Life Sciences
- 1.119 Breast Cancer Scanning
- 1.119.454 Screening Disparities
- Web Of Science research areas
- Oncology
- ESI research areas
- Clinical Medicine