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Toxicologic pathology · Jan 2014
Consensus diagnoses and mode of action for the formation of gastric tumors in rats treated with the chloroacetanilide herbicides alachlor and butachlor.
- Satoshi Furukawa, Takanori Harada, Daryl Thake, Michael J Iatropoulos, and James H Sherman.
- 1Biological Research Laboratories, Toxicology and Environmental Science Department, Nissan Chemical Industries Ltd., Saitama, Japan.
- Toxicol Pathol. 2014 Jan 1;42(2):386-402.
AbstractA panel of pathologists (Panel) was formed to evaluate the pathogenesis and human relevance of tumors that developed in the fundic region of rat stomachs in carcinogenicity and mechanistic studies with alachlor and butachlor. The Panel evaluated stomach sections stained with hematoxylin and eosin, neuron-specific enolase, and chromogranin A to determine the presence and relative proportion of enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cells in the tumors and concluded all tumors were derived from ECL cells. Biochemical and pathological data demonstrated the tumor formation involved a nongenotoxic threshold mode of action (MOA) initially characterized by profound atrophy of the glandular fundic mucosa that affected gastric glands, but not surface epithelium. This resulted in a substantial loss of parietal cells and a compensatory mucosal cell proliferation. The loss of parietal cells caused a marked increase in gastric pH (hypochlorhydria), leading to sustained and profound hypergastrinemia. The mucosal atrophy, together with the increased gastrin, stimulated cell growth in one or more ECL cell populations, resulting in neoplasia. ECL cell autocrine and paracrine effects led to dedifferentiation of ECL cell tumors. The Panel concluded the tumors develop via a threshold-dependent nongenotoxic MOA, under conditions not relevant to humans.
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