Obesity is associated with an increased risk of mortality from certain types of cancer, including cancer of the breast. Because obesity is associated with multiple risk factors, however, the exact reasons remain uncle...Obesity is associated with an increased risk of mortality from certain types of cancer, including cancer of the breast. Because obesity is associated with multiple risk factors, however, the exact reasons remain unclear. The objective of this study was to determine which of the risk factors associated with obesity are related to enhanced tumor development. The MMTV-PyMT mouse model develops mammary tumors which share numerous characteristics with those of humans. We challenged these mice with a high fat/high carbohydrate, high caloric (HC) diet, and looked for relationships between enhanced primary tumor development and adiposity, various aspects of glucose homeostasis, and metabolic factors. The HC diet enhanced tumor progression in PyMT mice. While mice on the HC diet also developed increased adiposity, hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia, none of these risk factors was found to be associated with the observed increases in tumor growth. Rather, we found that while overall, tumor growth was enhanced in HC diet-fed mice compared to those maintained on a regular diet, it was attenuated in individuals by an HC diet-induced increase in metabolic rate and decrease in respiratory exchange ratio. Tumor size in HC diet-fed mice was directly related to p38 phosphorylation and Bcl-2 inhibition, and the degree of vascularization of these tumors was closely and indirectly related to the rate of mouse oxygen consumption. The data suggest that an increase in metabolic rate and oxygen consumption, induced by the introduction of a high caloric diet, has a protective effect against tumor growth by increasing the activity levels of the tumor suppressor p38 and decreasing the activity of the antiapoptoic protein Bcl-2, as well as by reducing hypoxia-induced tumor vascularization.展开更多
文摘Obesity is associated with an increased risk of mortality from certain types of cancer, including cancer of the breast. Because obesity is associated with multiple risk factors, however, the exact reasons remain unclear. The objective of this study was to determine which of the risk factors associated with obesity are related to enhanced tumor development. The MMTV-PyMT mouse model develops mammary tumors which share numerous characteristics with those of humans. We challenged these mice with a high fat/high carbohydrate, high caloric (HC) diet, and looked for relationships between enhanced primary tumor development and adiposity, various aspects of glucose homeostasis, and metabolic factors. The HC diet enhanced tumor progression in PyMT mice. While mice on the HC diet also developed increased adiposity, hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia, none of these risk factors was found to be associated with the observed increases in tumor growth. Rather, we found that while overall, tumor growth was enhanced in HC diet-fed mice compared to those maintained on a regular diet, it was attenuated in individuals by an HC diet-induced increase in metabolic rate and decrease in respiratory exchange ratio. Tumor size in HC diet-fed mice was directly related to p38 phosphorylation and Bcl-2 inhibition, and the degree of vascularization of these tumors was closely and indirectly related to the rate of mouse oxygen consumption. The data suggest that an increase in metabolic rate and oxygen consumption, induced by the introduction of a high caloric diet, has a protective effect against tumor growth by increasing the activity levels of the tumor suppressor p38 and decreasing the activity of the antiapoptoic protein Bcl-2, as well as by reducing hypoxia-induced tumor vascularization.