INDUCTION OF SKIN TUMORS IN THE RAT BY SINGLE EXPOSURE TO ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION

Paul T. Strickland, Fredric J. Burns, Roy E. Albert

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

14 Scopus citations

Abstract

Abstract— The dose response for tumor induction in albino rat skin by single exposures of UV radiation has been characterized. The shaved dorsal skin of 202 animals was exposed to either of two sources: one emitting a broad spectrum of wavelengths from 275 to 375 nm, and the other emitting at 254 nm. Skin tumors began to appear within 10 weeks of exposure and continued to appear for 70 weeks. The highest tumor yield was 5.5 tumors per rat and occurred when the rats were exposed to 13.0 times 104 J/m2 of the 275–375 nm UV. The 275–375 nm UV was about eight times as effective as the 254 nm UV for the induction of tumors throughout the exposure range from 0.8 times 104 to 26.0 times 104J/m2. Tissue destruction and hair follicle damage was found at the highest exposure to 275–375 nm UV but at none of the exposures to 254 nm UV. Repeated weekly exposures to 275–375 nm UV proved less effective than an equivalent single exposure for inducing tumors, even though the multiple exposures caused more severe skin damage. The transmission of the UV through excised samples of rat epidermis indicated that the exposure to the basal cell layer was about 3% of the surface exposure at 254 nm and about 15% of the surface exposure between 275 and 320 nm. The dependence of tumor yield on UV exposure was linear for 254 nm UV but was more complex for the 275–375 nm UV. For the latter more tumors were produced per unit exposure at lower exposures than at higher exposures.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)683-688
Number of pages6
JournalPhotochemistry and Photobiology
Volume30
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 1979
Externally publishedYes

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Biochemistry
  • Physical and Theoretical Chemistry

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