Barbara M. Elcombe
University of Dundee
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Featured researches published by Barbara M. Elcombe.
Toxicology | 2012
Clifford R. Elcombe; Barbara M. Elcombe; John R. Foster; Shu-Ching Chang; David J. Ehresman; John L. Butenhoff
The present study investigated the potential role for activation of PPARα and CAR/PXR by potassium PFOS (K⁺ PFOS) with respect to the etiology of hepatic hypertrophy and hepatocellular adenoma in rats. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were fed K⁺ PFOS (20 or 100 ppm) for either 1, 7, or 28 days. Wyeth 14,643 (Wy 14,643, 50 ppm) and phenobarbital (PB, 500 ppm) were the controls for PPARα and CAR/PXR activation, respectively. Measurements included: plasma ALT, AST, cholesterol, triglycerides, and glucose; liver protein and DNA content; liver activities of palmitoyl CoA oxidase (ACOX), Cyp4A, CYP2B, and CYP3A; induction of liver CYP4A1, CYP2E1, CYP2B1/2, and CYP3A1 proteins (SDS-PAGE and Western blots); liver and thyroid microscopic histopathology, apoptotic index, and cell proliferation index. Terminal body weight was decreased by K⁺ PFOS (100 ppm) and Wy 14,643. All test-compound treatments increased liver weight. Plasma lipids were decreased by both PFOS and Wy 14,643. After treatment for 1 day, K⁺ PFOS (100 ppm), PB, and Wy 14,643 increased mean hepatic DNA concentration and total hepatic DNA, and total DNA remained elevated after treatment for 7 days and 28 days (PB and Wy 14,643 only). Hepatic P450 concentration was elevated after 7 and 28 days by K⁺ PFOS and by PB. K⁺ PFOS and Wy 14,643 increased liver activities of ACOX and CYP4A as well as increased liver CYP4A1 protein. By 28 days of treatment, K⁺ PFOS and PB increased liver activities of CYP2B and CYP3A as well as increased liver CYP2B1/2 and CYP3A1 proteins, and Wy 14,643 increased CYP2B enzyme activity to a slight extent. All test compounds increased the liver cell proliferative index and decreased the liver apoptotic index. No histological changes of the thyroid were noted; however, PB and WY increased thyroid follicular cell proliferation index (seven-day treatment only), while K⁺ PFOS did not. The thyroid follicular cell apoptotic index did not differ between groups. The hepatomegaly and hepatocellular adenoma observed after dietary exposure of Sprague-Dawley rats to K⁺ PFOS likely are due to the increased expression of xenosensor nuclear receptors PPARα and CAR/PXR. Given the markedly lower or absent response of human hepatocytes to the proliferative stimulus from activation of PPARα and CAR/PXR, the hepatocellular proliferative response from activation of these receptors by PFOS observed in rats is not expected to be of human relevance.
Toxicology | 2012
Clifford R. Elcombe; Barbara M. Elcombe; John R. Foster; Shu-Ching Chang; David J. Ehresman; Patricia E. Noker; John L. Butenhoff
In a prior 28-day dietary study in rats with 20 and 100 ppm K⁺ PFOS, activation of PPARα and CAR/PXR were concluded to be etiological factors in K⁺ PFOS-induced hepatomegaly and hepatic tumorigenesis. The objective of this study was to evaluate persistence/resolution of K⁺ PFOS-induced, liver-related effects in male Sprague Dawley rats following a 7-day dietary exposure to K⁺ PFOS at 20 or 100 ppm. Groups of 10 rats per treatment were observed on recovery Day(s) 1, 28, 56, and 84 following treatment. Changes consistent with hepatic PPARα and CAR/PXR activation noted on recovery Day 1 included: increased liver weight; decreased plasma cholesterol, alanine aminotransferase, and triglycerides; decreased liver DNA concentration and increased hepatocellular cytosolic CYP450 concentration; increased liver activity of acyl CoA oxidase, CYP4A, CYP2B, and CYP3A; increased liver proliferative index and decreased liver apoptotic index; decreased hepatocellular glycogen-induced vacuoles; increased centrilobular hepatocellular hypertrophy. Most effects resolved to control levels during recovery. Effects on plasma cholesterol, hepatocellular cytosolic CYP450 concentrations, liver apoptotic index, CYP3A, and centrilobular hepatocellular hypertrophy persisted through the end of the recovery period. Thyroid parameters (histology, apoptosis, and proliferation) were unaffected at all time points. Mean serum PFOS concentrations on recovery Day 1 were 39 and 140 μg/mL (20 ppm and 100 ppm K⁺ PFOS, respectively), decreasing to 4 and 26 μg/mL by recovery Day 84. Thus, hepatic effects in male rats resulting from K⁺ PFOS-induced activation of PPARα and CAR/PXR resolved slowly or were still present after 84-days following a 7-day dietary treatment, consistent with the slow elimination rate of PFOS.
Toxicology | 2018
Corinne Haines; Barbara M. Elcombe; Lynsey Chatham; Audrey Vardy; Larry G. Higgins; Clifford R. Elcombe; Brian G. Lake
Phenobarbital (PB), a constitutive androstane receptor (CAR) activator, produces liver tumours in rodents by a mitogenic mode of action involving CAR activation. In this study, the hepatic effects of sodium phenobarbital (NaPB) were compared in male C57BL/6J wild type (WT) mice and in humanized mice, where both the mouse CAR and pregnane X receptor (PXR) have been replaced by their human counterparts (hCAR/hPXR mice). Investigations were also performed in cultured male C57BL/6J and CD-1 mouse, male Sprague-Dawley rat and male and female human hepatocytes. The treatment of WT and hCAR/hPXR mice with 186-984 ppm NaPB in the diet for 7 days resulted in increased relative liver weight, hypertrophy and induction of cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzyme activities. Treatment with NaPB also produced dose-dependent increases in hepatocyte replicative DNA synthesis (RDS), with the effect being more marked in WT than in hCAR/hPXR mice. While the treatment of cultured C57BL/6J and CD-1 mouse, Sprague-Dawley rat and human hepatocytes with 100 and/or 1000 μM NaPB for 4 days induced CYP enzyme activities, increased RDS was only observed in mouse and rat hepatocytes. However, as a positive control, epidermal growth factor increased RDS in hepatocytes from all three species. In summary, although human hepatocytes are refractory to the mitogenic effects of NaPB, treatment with NaPB induced RDS in vivo in hCAR/hPXR mice, which is presumably due to the human CAR and PXR receptors operating in a mouse hepatocyte regulatory environment. As the response of the hCAR/hPXR mouse to the CAR activator NaPB differs markedly from that of human hepatocytes, the hCAR/hPXR mouse is thus not a suitable animal model for studies on the hepatic effects of nongenotoxic rodent CAR activators.
Archives of Toxicology | 2010
Clifford R. Elcombe; Barbara M. Elcombe; John R. Foster; David G. Farrar; Reinhard Jung; Shu-Ching Chang; Gerald L. Kennedy; John L. Butenhoff
Archives of Toxicology | 2010
Gayathri D. Warnasuriya; Barbara M. Elcombe; John R. Foster; Clifford R. Elcombe
Toxicology | 2007
Clifford R. Elcombe; Barbara M. Elcombe; David G. Farrar; John R. Foster
Toxicology Letters | 2014
Joel M. Kronenberg; Corinne Haines; Barbara M. Elcombe; Clifford R. Elcombe
Reproductive Toxicology | 2012
Clifford R. Elcombe; Barbara M. Elcombe; John R. Foster; David G. Farrar; Reinhard Jung; Shu-Ching Chang; Gerald L. Kennedy; John L. Butenhoff
Reproductive Toxicology | 2012
Clifford R. Elcombe; Barbara M. Elcombe; John R. Foster; Shu-Ching Chang; David J. Ehresman; John L. Butenhoff
Toxicology | 2000
Carol A. Murray; Barbara M. Elcombe; Matthew Harrison; Alun Barton; Angus Reid; Cliff Elcombe