The effect of germ-free life and dietary restriction (DR) on life span and pathology was investigated in isolator housed germ-free (GF) and conventional (CV) Lobund-Wistar rats fed either ad libitum or restricted to 12 grams per day (70% of adult ad libitum intake) of a natural ingredient diet from weaning. The median length of life of ad libitum CV and GF rats was 31.0 and 33.6 months respectively, while DR increased the median length of life of CV and GF rats to 38.6 and 37.8 months respectively. DR reduced the frequency or postponed the occurrence of diseases which eventually lead to death in the Lobund-Wistar rat. This was especially true of prostate adenocarcinoma, prostatitis, and mammary fibroma. The reduced early food intake and smaller body weight of adult GF rats may be the reason ad libitum fed GF rats live slightly longer than their CV counterparts, but GF life was without additional effect on life span when food intake was restricted.
The Lobund-Wistar (L-W) rat is unique in its susceptibility to spontaneous and induced metastasizing prostate adenocarcinomas (PAs). A single IV inoculation of methylnitrosourea (MNU) produced PAs in 20% of L-W rats in 12 months. The combination of MNU plus two to seven slow-release implants of testosterone propionate (TP) induced PAs in 50-90% of rats respectively in an average of 11.5 months. The induction of PAs was prevented by early treatments of rats at risk with estradiol and less so with dihydrotestosterone (DHT). However, on a technical basis, the results were not significant. Treatments of MNU-inoculated rats with estradiol, with DHT, or by castration, at intermediate points in the projected latency time of tumor development, reduced significantly the incidences of PA development. Rats in which overt PAs had already developed in response to 12 months of exposure to implants of TP did not respond to treatment by estradiol, DHT, or castration. Thus there are early stage(s) in induced prostate tumorigenesis in L-W rats that are sensitive to modulating agents.
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