Ethylnitrosourea induces neoplasia in zebrafish (Danio rerio).
Journal
  Laboratory investigation; a journal of technical methods and pathology.
Citation
  Lab Invest. 80(3):379-85
Publication date
  2000 Mar
Authors
  Beckwith LG
Moore JL
Tsao-Wu GS
Harshbarger JC
Cheng KC
Investigators
  Keith C. Cheng
Grant agencies
  National Institute of General Medical Sciences
National Cancer Institute
Grants
  NIGMS 1F32GM19794
NCI 5R01-CA73935
NCI NO1-CB-77021
MeSH headings
  Carcinogens
Ethylnitrosourea
Papilloma
Skin Neoplasms
MeSH qualifiers
  toxicity
chemically induced
Abstract
  The zebrafish (Danio rerio) has been successfully used to discover hundreds of genes involved in development and organogenesis. To address the potential of zebrafish as a cancer model, it is important to determine the susceptibility of zebrafish to tumors. Germ line mutations are most commonly induced for zebrafish mutant screens by exposing adult male zebrafish to the alkylating agent, ethylnitrosourea (ENU). To determine whether ENU induces tumors, we compared the incidence of tumors in ENU-treated fish with untreated controls. Interestingly, 18 of 18 (100%) fish mutagenized with either 2.5 or 3.0 mM ENU developed epidermal papillomas, which numbered 1 to 22 per fish, within 1 year of treatment. The induced epidermal lesions included epidermal hyperplasia, flat papillomas (0.2 to 1.2 mm), and pedunculated papillomas (1.2 to 8 mm in greatest dimension), but no skin cancers. Angiogenesis was evident in papillomas larger than approximately 1 mm. All but two papillomas contained the three cell types (keratinocytes, club, and mucous cells) of normal zebrafish epidermis; histologic variants lacked either club cells or mucous cells. Two cavernous hemangiomas and a single malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor were also found in the treated fish. None of five untreated controls developed tumors. These studies establish the feasibility of the zebrafish as an experimental model for the study of skin tumors.
Medline ID
  20205940