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Toxicologic Pathology | 2002

Application of cDNA Microarray Technology to In Vitro Toxicology and the Selection of Genes for a Real-Time RT-PCR-Based Screen for Oxidative Stress in Hep-G2 Cells

Kevin Morgan; Hong Ni; H. Roger Brown; Lawrence Yoon; Charles W. Qualls; Lynn M. Crosby; Randall Reynolds; Betty Gaskill; Steven P. Anderson; Thomas B. Kepler; Tracy Brainard; Nik Liv; Marilyn Easton; Christine L. Merrill; Don Creech; Dirk Sprenger; Gary Conner; Paul R. Johnson; Tony R. Fox; Maureen Sartor; Erika Richard; Sabu Kuruvilla; Warren Casey; Gina R. Benavides

Large-scale analysis of gene expression using cDNA microarrays promises the rapid detection of the mode of toxicity for drugs and other chemicals. cDNA microarrays were used to examine chemically induced alterations of gene expression in HepG2 cells exposed to a diverse group of toxicants at an equitoxic exposure concentration. The treatments were ouabain (43 μM), lauryl sulfate (260 μ M), dimethylsulfoxide (1.28 M), cycloheximide (62.5 μM), tolbutamide (12.8 mM), sodium fluoride (3 mM), diethyl maleate (1.25 mM), buthionine sulfoximine (30 mM), potassium bromate (2.5 mM), sodium selenite (30 μM), alloxan (130 mM), adriamycin (40 μM), hydrogen peroxide (4 mM), and heat stress (45•C × 30 minutes). Patterns of gene expression were correlated with morphologic and biochemical indicators of toxicity. Gene expression responses were characteristically different for each treatment. Patterns of expression were consistent with cell cycle arrest, DNA damage, diminished protein synthesis, and oxidative stress. Based upon these results, we concluded that gene expression changes provide auseful indicator of oxidative stress, as assessed by the GSH:GSSG ratio. Under the conditions of this cell culture test system, oxidative stress upregulated 5 genes, HMOX1, p21waf1/cip1, GCLM, GR, TXNR1 while downregulating CYP1A1 and TOPO2A. Primers and probes for these genes were incorporated into the design of a 7-gene plate for RT-PCR. The plate design permitted statistical analysis and allowed clear discrimination between chemicals inducing oxidative vs nonoxidative stress. A simple oxidative stress score (0—1), based on the responses by the 7 genes (including p-value) on the RT-PCR plate, was correlated with the GSH:GSSG ratio using linear regression and ranking (Pearson product) procedures. These analyses yielded correlation coefficients of 0.74 and 0.87, respectively, for the treatments tested (when 1 outlier was excluded), indicating a good correlation between the biochemical and transcriptional measures of oxidative stress. We conclude that it is essential to measure the mechanism of interest directly in the test system being used when assessing gene expression as a tool for toxicology. Tables 1—15, referenced in this paper, are not printed in this issue of Toxicologic Pathology. They are available as downloadable text files at http://taylorandfrancis.metapress.com/openurl.asp?genre=journal&issn=0192-6233. To access them, click on the issue link for 30(4), then select this article. A download option appears at the bottom of this abstract. In order to access the full article online, you must either have an individual subscription or a member subscription accessed through www.toxpath.org.


Toxicologic Pathology | 1994

Fluorosis in a wild cotton rat (Sigmodon hispidus) population inhabiting a petrochemical waste site

Madhav G. Paranjpe; A.M. Sundeep Chandra; Charles W. Qualls; Scott T. McMurry; Michael D. Rohrer; Max M. Whaley; Robert L. Lochmiller; Karen McBee

We have developed an in situ mammalian model for evaluating environmental contamination using wild cotton rats. In a series of experiments, 200 male cotton rats were captured during 4 collection periods (spring 1991 = 35; fall 1991 = 60; spring 1992 = 53; fall 1992 = 52). A total of 103 of these cotton rats were captured from control sites, and the remaining 97 were captured from an abandoned oil refinery. All sites were located in the vicinity of Cyril, Oklahoma. There were alterations in the incisors of cotton rats captured from the refinery site. Normal color of cotton rat incisors is deep yellow-orange, which is imparted by a pigment normally produced by ameloblasts. Grossly, the upper incisors of 37 of 97 rats and lower incisors of 54 of 97 rats were affected. The affected incisors were white, chalky, and thin with striations and erosions of the enamel. Microscopic examination revealed that there were dysplastic and necrotic changes in the ameloblasts. The bone fluoride levels were significantly higher in rats captured from the refinery as compared to the rats captured from the control sites.


Journal of Wildlife Diseases | 1996

Environmental, Age, and Sex Effects on Cotton Rat (Sigmodon Hispidus) Hematology

G. L. Robel; Robert L. Lochmiller; Scott T. McMurry; Charles W. Qualls

We determined the effects of sex, age, and environment (inbred, captive-wild, and wild animals) on selected blood parameters of the cotton rat (Sigmodon hispidus) in central Oklahoma (USA) from 1990 to 1994. Male and female cotton rats had similar blood profiles. Age-related differences were confined to differential white blood cell counts where adults possessed greater numbers of neutrophils and lower numbers of lymphocytes compared to juveniles. Environment had a strong influence on many hematological parameters. Hematocrit, hemoglobin concentration, RBC count, and eosinophil number were generally greater for wild stocks compared to inbred animals, and differences were more pronounced for adults than juveniles.


Toxicologic Pathology | 1993

Biochemical and Morphological Alterations in Xylazine-Induced Pulmonary Edema*,†

Hamid R. Amouzadeh; Charles W. Qualls; John H. Wyckoff; Gladstone K. Dzata; Subbiah Sangiah; Andy Mauromoustakos; Larry E. Stein

Sprague-Dawley rats were given 42 mg/kg xylazine intramuscularly, and lungs were lavaged with phosphate-buffered saline 3, 6, and 12 hr later. Total protein, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), xanthine oxidase (XO), tumor necrosis factor (TNF), and interleukin 1 (IL-1) were measured in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF). Protein concentration, LDH, XO, and TNF levels were increased (p < 0.05) in the BALF from xylazine-treated rats as compared to controls. IL-1 level was unchanged at 3 and 6 hr and was reduced (p < 0.05) at 12 hr. Another group of rats was given 42 mg/kg xylazine intramuscularly, and lungs were fixed 0.5 and 12 hr later. Histologically, severe pulmonary edema (PE) involving the alveoli and perivascular stroma was observed. Fibrin, increased numbers of eosinophils, and macrophages with foamy cytoplasm were present in the alveoli of all treated animals. Ultrastructurally, endothelial damage, characterized by thinning, detachment from basement membranes, or bleb formation, was observed. The lesions were similar in both xylazine groups, differing mainly in severity with the 12-hr group having more severe lesions than the 0.5-hr group. To determine whether endothelial injury is caused by direct toxicity of xylazine, bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cells (BPAECs) were incubated with xylazine (0.3, 3, and 30 μg) for 0.5 or 3 hr. Xylazine did not have any effects on BPAECs, as indicated by phase-contrast microscopy and dye-exclusion viability assay. These results indicate that xylazine-induced PE is due to increased permeability resulting from endothelial injury, which is not caused by direct effect of xylazine on pulmonary endothelium. While oxygen radicals and TNF are possibly involved, IL-1 does not appear to play a role in xylazine-induced PE.


Toxicologic Pathology | 1997

1,3,5-Trinitrobenzene-Induced Alpha-2u-Globulin Nephropathy

Soochong Kim; Charles W. Qualls; Gunda Reddy; Eric L. Stair

Male and female Fischer-344 (F-344) and male NCI-Black-Reiter (NBR) rats were dosed with 0, 35.5, or 71 mg 1,3,5-trinitrobenzene (TNB)/kg/day for 10 days. Male F-344 rats were dosed with TNB (0 and 35.5 mg/kg) for 20 and 30 days. Hematoxylin and eosin and Mallory-Heidenhain stains and alpha-2u-globulin and proliferating cell nuclear antigen immunohistochemical stains were performed on kidney sections. All treated male F-344 rats exhibited dose-related accumulation of hyaline droplets containing alpha-2u-globulin in proximal tubules. The kidney weights were significantly increased in male and female rats treated with TNB. Significant increases in cell proliferation in proximal tubules were observed in male F-344 rats. Renal changes observed in TNB-treated rats appeared identical to those from other chemicals that induce alpha-2u-globulin nephropathy in male rats. No hyaline droplet accumulation was found in female F-344 and male NBR rats at any doses. We can conclude that TNB induces dose-related exacerbation of hyaline droplets containing alpha-2u-globulin in male rat kidney and subsequent cell proliferation.


Toxicologic Pathology | 1995

1,3,5-Trinitrobenzene-Induced Encephalopathy in Male Fischer-344 Rats

A.M. Sundeep Chandra; Charles W. Qualls; Gunda Reddy

Administration of 1,3,5-trinitrobenzene (TNB) to male Fischer-344 rats produced ataxia after 6 or 7 oral doses (71 mg/kg). Light microscopic examination after 10 days revealed petechial hemorrhages in the brain stem and cerebellum and bilaterally symmetric degeneration and necrosis (malacia) with reactive gliosis in the cerebellar peduncles. The malacia was dorsal and lateral to the fourth ventricle involving the cerebellar nuclei, medial and lateral vestibular nuclei, and inferior colliculi. Blood vessels associated with the lesion had widened Virchow-Robin spaces, occasionally with extravasated erythrocytes. Rats administered daily oral doses of 35.5 mg/kg of TNB for 10 days and 35.5 and 71 mg/kg of TNB for 1 or 4 days did not have brain lesions.


Journal of Wildlife Diseases | 2000

FLUOROSIS RISKS TO RESIDENT HISPID COTTON RATS ON LAND- TREATMENT FACILITIES FOR PETROCHEMICAL WASTES

Daniel P. Rafferty; Robert L. Lochmiller; Soochong Kim; Charles W. Qualls; Jackie L. Schroder; Nicholas T. Basta; Karen McBee

Land-treatment of petroleum wastes is a widely used industrial practice, yet there has been no comprehensive evaluation of the long-term risks to human or terrestrial ecosystems from such practices. We evaluated cotton rat (Sigmodon hispidus) populations on three sites in Oklahoma (USA) that historically used land-treatment for disposal of various petroleum wastes (July 1995–March 1997). Average concentrations of fluoride in soil from these sites ranged from 878 to 4317 mg/kg. A census of resident cotton rats on land-treatment sites revealed a high incidence (40% overall) of dental lesions compared to reference populations (<1% dental lesions). During winter there was a 34% to 65% increase compared to summer in frequency of dental lesions in cotton rats on two of the three land-treatment sites. Incidence of dental lesions on two land-treatment sites was greater (9–16%) in female cotton rats compared to males. Cotton rats from land-treatment sites had higher concentrations of fluoride in bone and greater severity of dental lesions compared to reference animals. Dental lesions were considered to be most consistent with dental fluorosis because of elevated fluoride in bone. Neither concentration of fluoride in soil nor level of fluoride in bone was a good predictor of severity of dental lesions in cotton rats on land-treatment sites.


Journal of Wildlife Diseases | 1990

Strongyloidiasis in Cotton Rats (Sigmodon hispidus) from Central Oklahoma

Chandikumar S. Elangbam; Charles W. Qualls; Robert L. Lochmiller; James F. Boggs

Thirty-one of 40 cotton rats (Sigmodon hispidus) collected from central Oklahoma were infected with Strongyloides sp. (78% prevalence). Larvae of Strongyloides sp. (rhabditiform or filariform) were not demonstrable in intestinal contents and scrapings. Female nematodes recovered from intestinal contents and scrapings had morphological similarities with Strongyloides sigmodontis. Cotton rats infected with Strongyloides sp. were indistinguishable clinically from non-infected hosts. Infected animals had no significant gross lesions, but the presence of Strongyloides sp. in the intestinal mucosa was associated with villus atrophy and mild to moderate infiltration of the lamina propria by lymphocytes, plasma cells and occasional eosinophils. Other organs or tissues examined were free from lesions induced by Strongyloides sp.


Carcinogenesis | 2004

Fibrates induce hepatic peroxisome and mitochondrial proliferation without overt evidence of cellular proliferation and oxidative stress in cynomolgus monkeys

Debie J. Hoivik; Charles W. Qualls; Rosanna C. Mirabile; Neal F. Cariello; Carie L. Kimbrough; Heidi M. Colton; Steven P. Anderson; M. Santostefano; Ronda J. Ott Morgan; Ray R. Dahl; Alan R. Brown; Zhiyang Zhao; Paul N. Mudd; William B. Oliver; H. Roger Brown; Richard T. Miller


Toxicological Sciences | 2003

Effects of Minimally Toxic Levels of Carbonyl Cyanide P-(Trifluoromethoxy) Phenylhydrazone (FCCP), Elucidated through Differential Gene Expression with Biochemical and Morphological Correlations

Sabu Kuruvilla; Charles W. Qualls; Ronald D. Tyler; Sam M. Witherspoon; Gina R. Benavides; Lawrence W. Yoon; Karen M. Dold; Roger H. Brown; Subbiah Sangiah; Kevin Morgan

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Gina R. Benavides

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Lynn M. Crosby

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Kevin Morgan

Queen's University Belfast

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