Department of Surgery, University of Texas, MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston 77036.
The effects of dietary arginine on the growth of a murine colon tumor metastatic to the liver were examined in a model of advanced neoplastic disease. Tumor growth was influenced by arginine both in vivo and in vitro. An arginine-supplemented diet stimulated tumor growth by 55% compared with controls. Conversely, an arginine-depleted diet inhibited tumor growth by 78% compared with controls. In vitro culture of both murine and human colon tumor cells confirmed that arginine was necessary for cell growth. Flow-cytometric analysis using propidium iodide and bromodeoxyuridine suggested that colon tumor cells cultured without arginine enter a quiescent S phase and depend on arginine for further growth and cell cycle progression. The potential roles for selective dietary arginine modulation in patients with cancer with advanced disease are discussed.