Induction of Glandular Stomach Cancers in Helicobacter pylori‐sensitive Mongolian Gerbils Treated with N‐Methyl‐N‐nitrosourea and N‐Methyl‐N′‐nitro‐N‐nitrosoguanidine in Drinking Water

Abstract
An animal model of stomach carcinogenesis was established using Mongolian gerbils with N‐methyl‐N‐nitrosourea (MNU) and N‐methyl‐N′‐nitro‐N‐nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) as the carcinogens. In addition, the sensitivity of these gerbils to Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) was confirmed. One hundred and sixty specific pathogen‐free male MGS/Sea animals, 7 weeks old, were treated with MNU in the drinking water (30 ppm for alternate weeks to give 10 weeks exposure, or 10 ppm or 3 ppm for 20 weeks continuous exposure), or given MNNG in the drinking water at 400 ppm or 200 ppm for 20 weeks, or orally inoculated with ATCC43504 H. pylori (1.7×1088 CFUs/animal). Adenocarcinomas in the glandular stomach were found in 2 out of 12 effective animals (2/12) treated with 30 ppm MNU at week 20, although all were dead or moribund by week 30 due to MNU toxicity. At week 50, the incidences of gastric adenocarcinomas in groups treated with 10 ppm MNU, 3 ppm MNU, 400 ppm MNNG, and 200 ppm MNNG were 2/21 (9.5%), 1/23 (4.3%), 7/11 (63.6%), and 1/10 (10.0%). The lesions were generally well differentiated, although poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma was also found in a single gerbil in each of the 10 ppm MNU and 400 ppm MNNG groups. In control animals no tumors were found. In the infection study, the animals were killed at week 20, and H. pylori was detected in all cases, causing multiple erosions with marked inflammatory cell infiltration in the lamina propria and submucosa, and frequent formation of lymphoid follicles. Thus, MNU and MNNG in the drinking water induced neoplastic lesions in the glandular stomach epithelium of H. pylori‐sensitive gerbils.