Correlation of epizootiological observations with experimental data: chemical induction of chromatophoromas in the croaker, Nibea mitsukurii.

Article Details

Citation

Kimura I, Taniguchi N, Kumai H, Tomita I, Kinae N, Yoshizaki K, Ito M, Ishikawa T

Correlation of epizootiological observations with experimental data: chemical induction of chromatophoromas in the croaker, Nibea mitsukurii.

Natl Cancer Inst Monogr. 1984 May;65:139-54.

PubMed ID
6431288 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Chromatophoromas in the croaker nibe, Nibea mitsukurii, are common neoplasms in feral fish which inhabit the shallow water in a unique geographic distribution along the Pacific coast of Japan. We undertook surveys of the epizootiology of tumor-bearing fish at 25 sites. The highest tumor incidence occurred at the station near the mouth of the Kumano river and was 47% (1,415 of 2,991). The incidence at 2 adjacent survey stations located approximately 18 and 30 km away were 2.7 and 2.5%, respectively. At the other survey stations, no tumor incidences were recorded or they were less than 5%. During the course of experimental studies on the chromatophoromas using tank-reared nibe, we found that nifurpirinol (NP), a drug used for the treatment of fish diseases, might also induce the chromatophoromas in the fish, as well as N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine and 7,12-dimethylbenz[alpha]anthracene. Therefore, tank-reared nibe 5 months of age were divided into 4 groups of about 50 each and exposed to water containing 0, 0.5, 1, or 2 ppm NP, respectively, fourteen times for 1 hour each time. Three hundred nibe were kept as untreated controls. The incidences of chromatophore hyperplasia or neoplasia per group at 13 months were as follows: the untreated: 2.9% (6 of 204), 0 ppm: 5.3% (2 of 38), 0.5 ppm: 73% (36 of 49), 1 ppm: 87% (20 of 23), and 2 ppm: 100% (2 of 2). These and other results led us to believe that 1) NP is a carcinogen, 2) nibe have a high susceptibility to induction of chromatophoromas by chemical carcinogens, and 3) some environmental chemicals are causal factors in the hyperendemic occurrences of the tumors in wild nibe.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Drugs