RESUMEN
Epidemiological investigation and animal studies have shown that dietary n-3 PUFA prevent the development and progression of certain types of cancer. However, conflicting results have been reported by the few studies that focused on the effect of dietary n-3 PUFA on the development of metastases. In the present study, we investigated the metastatic dissemination of murine T lymphoma lines with different metastatic potential transplanted into mice fed a fish oil diet, compared with mice fed a maize oil diet. Transplantation of highly metastatic S11 cells into animals fed a fish oil diet induced a large lymphomatoid infiltration in the spleen, associated with an eight-fold increase in spleen weight, compared with normal animals on the same diet. In contrast, only a limited increase in spleen weight was found in animals transplanted with S11 cells while fed a maize oil diet. No significant increase in spleen weight was found in animals transplanted with low-metastatic 164T2 cells regardless of whether they were fed a fish oil or a maize oil diet. At the end of experiment, an overt cachexia was shown by animals fed a fish oil diet transplanted with S11 cells, but not by those transplanted with 164T2 cells. The particularly high pro-metastatic effect of dietary n-3 PUFA on S11 cells rules out the generalisation that dietary n-3 PUFA inhibit tumour growth and progression.
Asunto(s)
Ácidos Grasos Omega-3/toxicidad , Aceites de Pescado/toxicidad , Linfoma de Células T/patología , Animales , Caquexia/etiología , Femenino , Linfoma de Células T/complicaciones , Ratones , Ratones Endogámicos C57BL , Metástasis de la Neoplasia , Trasplante de Neoplasias , Aceites de Plantas/toxicidad , Bazo/patología , Células Tumorales Cultivadas , Aumento de Peso/efectos de los fármacosRESUMEN
Both epidemiological and experimental studies indicate that dietary n-3 PUFA inhibit carcinogenesis and tumour growth. Metastatic diffusion has also been found to be affected in animals fed diets containing purified n-3 PUFA or fish oil. In the present study, we investigated whether the metastatic diffusion of a highly metastatic variant (F10-SR cells) isolated from the B16 melanoma F10 line was affected by feeding host animals a diet containing 5 % fish oil. In these animals, compared with those fed a diet containing 5 % maize oil, there was a reduced number of metastatic pulmonary colonies. The immunohistochemical analysis of appropriate markers revealed that the antimetastatic effect of dietary n-3 PUFA was not related to a reduction of proliferation, but rather to an enhanced apoptotic activity. The reduction of von Willebrand factor immunoreactivity found in pulmonary colonies of F10-SR cells grown in fish oil-fed animals indicates that a decrease of angiogenesis contributes to the antimetastatic effect of dietary n-3 PUFA. This conclusion stands in spite of the higher expression of vascular endothelial growth factor observed in pulmonary colonies grown in fish oil-fed animals.