Analysis of tumor-associated alkyldiacylglycerols and other lipids during radiation-induced thymic leukemogenesis.
Кључне речи
Апстрактан
Lipid composition of thymuses investigated during the development of thymic leukemogenesis induced by exposing C57BL/6J mice to gamma radiation led to the following conclusions. 1. Alkyldiacylglycerols, a class of lipids that are generally elevated in most neoplastic tissues, occurred only in small quantities (less than 1% of the total lipids) in the thymuses of both control and irradiated mice. However, we found a 3- to 8-fold increase in this fraction in thymic tumors of mice at 5 mo after irradiation when compared to controls of similar age. However, the small quantity of this lipid class in thymic leukemia and the fact that similar levels were found in some samples of involuted thymuses of mice 3 days after irradiation, suggests to us that the level of alkyldiacylglycerols is not sufficiently specific or sensitive for detecting early stages of thymic leukemogenesis. 2. Thymuses 3 days after irradiation and leukemic thymuses contain 2- to 3-fold greater quantities of cholesterol esters than control thymuses. No major differences were found in the distribution of acyl moieties in the cholesterol esters of the various thymus samples from the same aged mice except that in thymic tumors the quantity of 18:1 esters was increased by about 25% over that of the controls. The apparent lack of specificity of increased cholesterol esters for neoplasia indicates that its measurement would not provide a suitable indicator of early neoplastic transformation. 3. Acyl composition of the triacylglycerols of thymuses revealed an increase in the 18:1 and a decrease in the 18:2 acids at 3 days after irradiation when compared to the same aged controls. However, thymic tumors occurring at 5 mo after irradiation contained less 14:0, 16:0, and 16:1 acids and increased amounts of 18:1 and 18:2 acids esterified as triacylglycerols compared to controls. The fatty acid distribution in the phospholipid fraction of thymuses was not altered by the appearance of leukemia.