Caroline Bauch
RWTH Aachen University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Caroline Bauch.
Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology | 2012
Caroline Bauch; Susanne N. Kolle; Tzutzuy Ramirez; Tobias Eltze; Eric Fabian; Annette Mehling; Wera Teubner; Bennard van Ravenzwaay; Robert Landsiedel
Allergic contact dermatitis is a common skin disease and is elicited by repeated skin contact with an allergen. In the regulatory context, currently only data from animal experiments are acceptable to assess the skin sensitizing potential of substances. Animal welfare and EU Cosmetic Directive/Regulation call for the implementation of animal-free alternatives for safety assessments. The mechanisms that trigger skin sensitization are complex and various steps are involved. Therefore, a single in vitro method may not be able to accurately assess this endpoint. Non-animal methods are being developed and validated and can be used for testing strategies that ensure a reliable prediction of skin sensitization potentials. In this study, the predictivities of four in vitro assays, one in chemico and one in silico method addressing three different steps in the development of skin sensitization were assessed using 54 test substances of known sensitizing potential. The predictivity of single tests and combinations of these assays were compared. These data were used to develop an in vitro testing scheme and prediction model for the detection of skin sensitizers based on protein reactivity, activation of the Keap-1/Nrf2 signaling pathway and dendritic cell activation.
Toxicology in Vitro | 2011
Caroline Bauch; Susanne N. Kolle; Eric Fabian; Christina Pachel; Tzutzuy Ramirez; Benjamin Wiench; Christoph Jan Wruck; Bennard van Ravenzwaay; Robert Landsiedel
Allergic contact dermatitis is induced by repeated skin contact with an allergen. Assessment of the skin sensitizing potential of chemicals, agrochemicals, and especially cosmetic ingredients is currently performed with the use of animals. Animal welfare and EU legislation demand animal-free alternatives reflected in a testing and marketing ban for cosmetic ingredients beginning in 2013. The underlying mechanisms of induction and elicitation of skin sensitization are complex and a chemical needs to comply several properties being skin sensitizing. To account for the multitude of events in the induction of skin sensitization an in vitro test system will consist of a battery of various tests. Currently, we performed intralaboratory validations of four assays addressing three different events during induction of skin sensitization. (1) The Direct Peptide Reactivity Assay (DPRA) according to Gerberick and co-workers (Gerberick et al., 2004) using synthetic peptides and HPLC analysis. (2) Two dendritic cell activation assays based on the dendritic cell like cell lines U-937 and THP-1 and flow cytometric detection of the maturation markers CD54 and/or CD86 (Ashikaga et al., 2006; Python et al., 2007; Sakaguchi et al., 2006). (3) Antioxidant response element (ARE)-dependent gene activity in a HaCaT reporter gene cell line (Emter et al., 2010). We present the results of our intralaboratory validation of these assays with 23 substances of known sensitizing potential. The sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of the individual tests were obtained by comparison to human epidemiological data as well as to data from animal tests such as the local lymph node assay.
Toxicology in Vitro | 2016
Julie Eakins; Caroline Bauch; Heather Woodhouse; Benjamin Park; Samantha Bevan; Clive Dilworth; Paul Walker
Drug induced mitochondrial dysfunction has been implicated in organ toxicity and the withdrawal of drugs or black box warnings limiting their use. The development of highly specific and sensitive in vitro assays in early drug development would assist in detecting compounds which affect mitochondrial function. Here we report the combination of two in vitro assays for the detection of drug induced mitochondrial toxicity. The first assay measures cytotoxicity after 24h incubation of test compound in either glucose or galactose conditioned media (Glu/Gal assay). Compounds with a greater than 3-fold toxicity in galactose media compared to glucose media imply mitochondrial toxicity. The second assay measures mitochondrial respiration, glycolysis and a reserve capacity with mechanistic responses observed within one hour following exposure to test compound. In order to assess these assays a total of 72 known drugs and chemicals were used. Dose-response data was normalised to 100× Cmax giving a specificity, sensitivity and accuracy of 100%, 81% and 92% respectively for this combined approach.
Toxicology in Vitro | 2015
Caroline Bauch; Samantha Bevan; Heather Woodhouse; Clive Dilworth; Paul Walker
Drug induced phospholipidosis (PLD) is an adverse side effect which can affect registration of new drug entities. Phospholipids can accumulate in lysosomes, organelles essential in cellular biogenesis and if compromised can lead to cellular toxicity. Drug accumulation in lysosomes (lysosomotropism) is a known mechanism leading to PLD, however phospholipidosis can also occur indirectly by altering synthesis and processing of phospholipids. Drug induced PLD can be measured in vitro using High Content Screening (HCS) approaches, by either determining accumulation of phospholipids conjugated to dyes in cells or by determining accumulation of drugs within lysosomes, by competitive loss of lysosomal dye uptake. In this study we validate two in vitro assays using HepG2 and H9c2 cells in conjunction with in silico models based on physico-chemical properties using 56 compounds (28 phospholipidogenic, 25 non-phospholipidogenic and three kidney specific). Using HCS to determine PLD and lysosomal trapping in HepG2 cells in combination with in silico modelling increase the overall prediction of PLD in vivo with a sensitivity of 96%, specificity of 92% and overall accuracy of 94%. The findings of this study demonstrate the applicability of in vitro and in silico approaches to understand the mechanism underlying PLD and the utility of these approaches as a screening strategy in the pharmaceutical industry to select drug candidates with a low in vivo PLD liability.
Toxicology in Vitro | 2015
Hendrik Reuter; Silke Gerlach; Jochem Spieker; Cindy A. Ryan; Caroline Bauch; Claire Mangez; Petra Winkler; Robert Landsiedel; Marie Templier; Aurélien Mignot; Frank Gerberick; Horst Wenck; Pierre Aeby; Andreas Schepky
Allergic contact dermatitis is a delayed T-cell mediated allergic response associated with relevant social and economic impacts. Animal experiments (e.g. the local lymph node assay) are still supplying most of the data used to assess the sensitization potential of new chemicals. However, the 7th amendment to the EU Cosmetic Directive have introduced a testing ban for cosmetic ingredients after March 2013. We have developed and optimized a stable and reproducible in vitro protocol based on human peripheral blood monocyte derived dendritic cells to assess the sensitization potential of chemicals. To evaluate the transferability and the predictivity of this PBMDCs based test protocol, a ring study was organized with five laboratories using seven chemicals with a known sensitization potential (one none-sensitizer and six sensitizers, including one pro-hapten). The results indicated that this optimized test protocol could be successfully transferred to all participating laboratories and allowed a correct assessment of the sensitization potential of the tested set of chemicals. This should allow a wider acceptance of PBMDCs as a reliable test system for the detection of human skin sensitizers and the inclusion of this protocol in the toolbox of in vitro methods for the evaluation of the skin sensitization potential of chemicals.
Toxicology Letters | 2015
S. Ravenscroft; Caroline Bauch; Heather Woodhouse; Paul Walker
Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology | 2012
Caroline Bauch; Susanne N. Kolle; Tzutzuy Ramirez; Tobias Eltze; Eric Fabian; Annette Mehling; Wera Teubner; Bennard van Ravenzwaay; Robert Landsiedel
Toxicology Letters | 2018
R.A. Maclennan; Julie Eakins; Caroline Bauch; B. Park; Paul Walker
Toxicology Letters | 2017
Caroline Bauch; Julie Eakins; Clive Dilworth; Paul Walker
Toxicology Letters | 2017
Paul Walker; Caroline Bauch; Laura Purdie; Clive Dilworth