Gregory S. Travlos
National Institutes of Health
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Epidemiology | 2012
Kristina W. Whitworth; Line Småstuen Haug; Donna D. Baird; Georg Becher; Jane A. Hoppin; Rolv Skjærven; Cathrine Thomsen; Merete Eggesbø; Gregory S. Travlos; Ralph E. Wilson; Matthew P. Longnecker
Background: Perfluorinated compounds are ubiquitous pollutants; epidemiologic data suggest they may be associated with adverse health outcomes, including subfecundity. We examined subfecundity in relation to 2 perfluorinated compounds—perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) and perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA). Methods: This case-control analysis included 910 women enrolled in the Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study in 2003 and 2004. Around gestational week 17, women reported their time to pregnancy and provided blood samples. Cases consisted of 416 women with a time to pregnancy greater than 12 months, considered subfecund. Plasma concentrations of perfluorinated compounds were analyzed using liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry. Adjusted odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were estimated for each pollutant quartile using logistic regression. Estimates were further stratified by parity. Results: The median plasma concentration of PFOS was 13.0 ng/mL (interquartile range [IQR] = 10.3–16.6 ng/mL) and of PFOA was 2.2 ng/mL (IQR = 1.7–3.0 ng/mL). The relative odds of subfecundity among parous women was 2.1 (95% CI = 1.2–3.8) for the highest PFOS quartile and 2.1 (1.0–4.0) for the highest PFOA quartile. Among nulliparous women, the respective relative odds were 0.7 (0.4–1.3) and 0.5 (0.2–1.2). Conclusion: Previous studies suggest that the body burden of perfluorinated compounds decreases during pregnancy and lactation through transfer to the fetus and to breast milk. Afterward, the body burden may increase again. Among parous women, increased body burden may be due to a long interpregnancy interval rather than the cause of a long time to pregnancy. Therefore, data from nulliparous women may be more informative regarding toxic effects of perfluorinated compounds. Our results among nulliparous women did not support an association with subfecundity.
American Journal of Epidemiology | 2012
Kristina W. Whitworth; Line Småstuen Haug; Donna D. Baird; Georg Becher; Jane A. Hoppin; Rolv Skjærven; Cathrine Thomsen; Merete Eggesbø; Gregory S. Travlos; Ralph E. Wilson; Lea A. Cupul-Uicab; Anne Lise Brantsæter; Matthew P. Longnecker
Perfluorooctane sulfonate and perfluorooctanoic acid are perfluorinated compounds (PFCs) widely distributed in the environment. Previous studies of PFCs and birth weight are equivocal. The authors examined this association in the Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study (MoBa), using data from 901 women enrolled from 2003 to 2004 and selected for a prior case-based study of PFCs and subfecundity. Maternal plasma samples were obtained around 17 weeks of gestation. Outcomes included birth weight z scores, preterm birth, small for gestational age, and large for gestational age. The adjusted birth weight z scores were slightly lower among infants born to mothers in the highest quartiles of PFCs compared with infants born to mothers in the lowest quartiles: for perfluorooctane sulfonate, β = -0.18 (95% confidence interval: -0.41, 0.05) and, for perfluorooctanoic acid, β = -0.21 (95% confidence interval: -0.45, 0.04). No clear evidence of an association with small for gestational age or large for gestational age was observed. Perfluorooctane sulfonate and perfluorooctanoic acid were each associated with decreased adjusted odds of preterm birth, although the cell counts were small. Whether some of the associations suggested by these findings may be due to a noncausal pharmacokinetic mechanism remains unclear.
Toxicological Sciences | 1993
Charles D. Hébert; Michael R. Elwell; Gregory S. Travlos; Chad J. Fitz; John R. Bucher
The effects of acute poisoning by cupric sulfate in a number of species are well known; however, the effects of chronic low-level ingestion of cupric sulfate are less well characterized. Because exposure of humans to cupric sulfate may occur through drinking water, food, soil, or ambient air, subchronic toxicity studies were conducted in male and female F344/N rats and B6C3F1 mice by the drinking water (2-week exposure) and dosed feed (2- and 13-week exposure) routes. Animals were evaluated for histopathology, clinical pathology, reproductive toxicity, and tissue metal accumulation, and target organs were examined by a variety of special stains and by electron microscopy to characterize the observed lesions. In drinking water, cupric sulfate concentrations of 300 to 100 ppm produced no ill effects, whereas concentrations of 3000 to 30,000 ppm were lethal to rats and mice within 2 weeks. In feed, cupric sulfate concentrations of 4000 to 16,000 ppm caused significant reductions in body weight gain in both species in the 2- and 13-week studies. Hyperplasia and hyperkeratosis of the limiting ridge of the forestomach were present in both species in the 2- and 13-week studies. Rats in the dosed feed studies had a dose-related increase in inflammation in the liver and changes in clinical chemistry parameters which were indicative of hepatocellular damage and cholestasis. Histologic changes in the kidneys of rats consisted of a dose-related increase in the number and size of eosinophilic protein droplets in the epithelial cytoplasm and the lumina of the proximal convoluted tubules. Droplets were larger and more numerous in males than in females. Urinalysis results were suggestive of renal tubular epithelial damage. Iron staining of spleens from treated animals indicated a marked depletion of iron stores in both male and female rats, but not in mice, while hematologic and clinical chemistry alterations in rats in the 13-week study, along with histologic changes in bone in the 2-week dosed feed study, were indicative of a microcytic anemia. Cupric sulfate produced no adverse effects on any of the reproductive parameters measured in rats or mice of either sex. These results indicate that cupric sulfate at high exposure levels is a hepatic and renal toxicant, as well as an inducer of anemia in rodents, with rats more sensitive than mice following subchronic exposure.
Environment International | 2014
Anne P. Starling; Stephanie M. Engel; Kristina W. Whitworth; David B. Richardson; Alison M. Stuebe; Julie L. Daniels; Line Småstuen Haug; Merete Eggesbø; Georg Becher; Azemira Sabaredzovic; Cathrine Thomsen; Ralph E. Wilson; Gregory S. Travlos; Jane A. Hoppin; Donna D. Baird; Matthew P. Longnecker
BACKGROUND Perfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) are widespread and persistent environmental pollutants. Previous studies, primarily among non-pregnant individuals, suggest positive associations between PFAS levels and certain blood lipids. If there is a causal link between PFAS concentrations and elevated lipids during pregnancy, this may suggest a mechanism by which PFAS exposure leads to certain adverse pregnancy outcomes, including preeclampsia. METHODS This cross-sectional analysis included 891 pregnant women enrolled in the Norwegian Mother and Child (MoBa) Cohort Study in 2003-2004. Non-fasting plasma samples were obtained at mid-pregnancy and analyzed for nineteen PFASs. Total cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and triglycerides were measured in plasma. Linear regression was used to quantify associations between each PFAS exposure and each lipid outcome. A multiple PFAS model was also fitted. RESULTS Seven PFASs were quantifiable in >50% of samples. Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) concentration was associated with total cholesterol, which increased 4.2mg/dL per inter-quartile shift (95% CI=0.8, 7.7) in adjusted models. Five of the seven PFASs studied were positively associated with HDL cholesterol, and all seven had elevated HDL associated with the highest quartile of exposure. Perfluoroundecanoic acid showed the strongest association with HDL: HDL increased 3.7 mg/dL per inter-quartile shift (95% CI=2.5, 4.9). CONCLUSION Plasma concentrations of PFASs were positively associated with HDL cholesterol, and PFOS was positively associated with total cholesterol in this sample of pregnant Norwegian women. While elevated HDL is not an adverse outcome per se, elevated total cholesterol associated with PFASs during pregnancy could be of concern if causal.
Toxicologic Pathology | 2001
Michelle J. Hooth; Anthony B. DeAngelo; Michael H. George; Elias T. Gaillard; Gregory S. Travlos; Gary A. Boorman; Douglas C. Wolf
Chlorine dioxide (ClO 2) is an effective drinking water disinfectant, but sodium chlorate (NaClO3) has been identified as a potentially harmful disinfection by-product. Studies were performed to describe the development of thyroid lesions in animals exposed to NaClO3 in the drinking water. Male and female F344 rats and B6C3F1 mice were exposed to 0, 0.125, 0.25, 0.5, 1.0, or 2.0 g/L NaClO3 for 21 days. Additional male F344 rats were exposed to 0, 0.001, 0.01, 0.1, 1.0, or 2.0 g/L NaClO 3 for 90 days. Female F344 rats were exposed to 0, 0.5, 1.0, 2.0, 4.0, or 6.0 g/L of NaClO3 for 105 days. Thyroid tissues were processed by routine methods for light microscopic examination, and follicular cell hyperplasia was diagnosed using a novel method. Thyroid hormone levels were altered significantly after 4 and 21 days. NaClO3 treatment induced a concentration-dependen t increase in the incidence and severity of thyroid follicular cell hyperplasia. Male rats are more sensitive to the effects of NaClO3 treatment than females. Follicular cell hyperplasi a was not present in male or female B6C3F1 mice. These data can be used to estimate the human health risk that would be associated with using ClO 2, rather than chlorine, to disinfect drinking water.
Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2009
Aimee A. D'Aloisio; Jane C. Schroeder; Kari E. North; Charles Poole; Suzanne L. West; Gregory S. Travlos; Donna D. Baird
Circulating insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) and IGF-binding protein-3 (IGFBP-3) levels have been associated with common diseases. Although family-based studies suggest that genetic variation contributes to circulating IGF-I and IGFBP-3 levels, analyses of associations with multiple IGF-I and IGFBP-3 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) have been limited, especially among African Americans. We evaluated 30 IGF-I and 15 IGFBP-3 SNPs and estimated diplotypes in association with plasma IGF-I and IGFBP-3 among 984 premenopausal African American and Caucasian women. In both races, IGFBP-3 rs2854746 (Ala32Gly) was positively associated with plasma IGFBP-3 (CC versus GG mean difference among Caucasians, 631 ng/mL; 95% confidence interval, 398-864; African Americans, 897 ng/mL; 95% confidence interval, 656-1,138), and IGFBP-3 diplotypes with the rs2854746 GG genotype had lower mean IGFBP-3 levels than reference diplotypes with the CG genotype, whereas IGFBP-3 diplotypes with the CC genotype had higher mean IGFBP-3 levels. IGFBP-3 rs2854744 (-202 A/C) was in strong linkage disequilibrium with rs2854746 in Caucasians only, but was associated with plasma IGFBP-3 in both races. Eight additional IGFBP-3 SNPs were associated with ≥5% differences in mean IGFBP-3 levels, with generally consistent associations between races. Twelve IGF-I SNPs were associated with ≥10% differences in mean IGF-I levels, but associations were generally discordant between races. Diplotype associations with plasma IGF-I did not parallel IGF-I SNP associations. Our study supports that common IGFBP-3 SNPs, especially rs2854746, influence plasma IGFBP-3 levels among African Americans and Caucasians but provides less evidence that IGF-I SNPs affect plasma IGF-I levels. (Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 2009;18(3):954–66)
Toxicologic Pathology | 2013
Kristine L. Witt; Matthew D. Stout; Ronald A. Herbert; Gregory S. Travlos; Grace E. Kissling; Bradley J. Collins; Michelle J. Hooth
Hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)) is a contaminant of water and soil and is a human lung carcinogen. Trivalent chromium (Cr(III)), a proposed essential element, is ingested by humans in the diet and in dietary supplements such as chromium picolinate (CP). The National Toxicology Program (NTP) demonstrated that Cr(VI) is also carcinogenic in rodents when administered in drinking water as sodium dichromate dihydrate (SDD), inducing neoplasms of the oral cavity and small intestine in rats and mice, respectively. In contrast, there was no definitive evidence of toxicity or carcinogenicity following exposure to Cr(III) administered in feed as CP monohydrate (CPM). Cr(VI) readily enters cells via nonspecific anion channels, in contrast to Cr(III), which cannot easily pass through the cell membrane. Extracellular reduction of Cr(VI) to Cr(III), which occurs primarily in the stomach, is considered a mechanism of detoxification, while intracellular reduction is thought to be a mechanism of genotoxicity and carcinogenicity. Tissue distribution studies in additional groups of male rats and female mice demonstrated higher Cr concentrations in tissues following exposure to Cr(VI) compared to controls and Cr(III) exposure at a similar external dose, indicating that some of the Cr(VI) escaped gastric reduction and was distributed systemically. The multiple potential pathways of Cr-induced genotoxicity will be discussed.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Nils-Halvdan Morken; Gregory S. Travlos; Ralph E. Wilson; Merete Eggesbø; Matthew P. Longnecker
Background The relationship of maternal glomerular filtration rate (GFR) in pregnancy to fetal size needs to be better characterized as it impacts an ongoing debate about confounding effect of maternal GFR in investigations of important environmental contaminants. We aimed to characterize the size of the association between maternal GFR and infant birth weight. Materials and Methods A sub-cohort of 953 selected women (470 women with and 483 women without preeclampsia) in the Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort (MoBa), recruited during 2003–2007 were analyzed. GFR in the second trimester was estimated based on plasma creatinine. Birth weight was ascertained from the Medical Birth Registry of Norway. Multivariate linear regression was used to evaluate the association between maternal GFR in second trimester (estimated by the Cockroft-Gault [GFR-CG] and the modification of diet in renal disease [GFR-MDRD] formulas) and infant birth weight. Partial correlation coefficients were also calculated. Results Maternal GFR-CG (β: 0.73 g/ml/min, p = 0.04) and GFR-MDRD (β: 0.83 g/ml/min, p = 0.04) were associated with infant birth weight in models adjusted for maternal weight in kilograms, preeclampsia, and gestational age at delivery (days). Partial correlation coefficients for the association between infant birth weight and GFR were 0.07 for both formulas. Although the birth weight-GFR association was stronger among the women with preeclampsia, the difference from women without preeclampsia was not statistically significant. Conclusion These data support an association between GFR during pregnancy and infant birth weight, and indicate that GFR may confound selected epidemiologic associations.
Toxicology | 2008
Scott S. Auerbach; Joel Mahler; Gregory S. Travlos; Richard D. Irwin
Allyl acetate (AAC), allyl alcohol (AAL), and acrolein (ACR) are used in the manufacture of detergents, plastics, pharmaceuticals, and chemicals and as agricultural agents. A metabolic relationship exists between these chemicals in which allyl acetate is metabolized to allyl alcohol and subsequently to the highly reactive, alpha,beta-unsaturated aldehyde, acrolein. Due to the weaker reactivity of the protoxicants, allyl acetate and allyl alcohol, relative to acrolien we hypothesized the protoxicants would attain greater systemic exposure and therefore deliver higher doses of acrolein to the internal organs. By extension, the higher systemic exposure to acrolein we hypothesized should lead to more internal organ toxicity in the allyl acetate and allyl alcohol treated animals relative to those treated with acrolein. To address our hypothesis we compared the range of toxicities produced by all three chemicals in male and female Fischer 344/N rats and B6C3F1 mice exposed 5 days a week for 3 months by gavage in 0.5% methylcellulose. Rats (10/group) were dosed with 0-100mg/kg allyl acetate, 0-25mg/kg allyl alcohol, or 0-10mg/kg acrolein. Mice (10/group) were dosed with 0-125mg/kg allyl acetate, 0-50mg/kg allyl alcohol, or 0-20mg/kg acrolein. The highest dose of allyl acetate and acrolein decreased survival in both mice and rats. The primary target organ for the toxicity of all three chemicals in both species and sexes was the forestomach; squamous epithelial hyperplasia was observed following exposure to each chemical. In both species the highest allyl acetate dose group exhibited forestomach epithelium necrosis and hemorrhage and the highest dose of acrolein led to glandular stomach hemorrhage. Liver histopathology was the most apparent with allyl acetate, was also observed with allyl alcohol, but was not observed with acrolein. All chemicals had effects on the hematopoietic system with allyl acetate having the most pronounced effect. When dosed at quantities limited by toxicity, allyl acetate and allyl alcohol produce higher levels of urinary mercapturic acids than the minimally toxic dose of acrolein. This observation is likely due to biotransformation of allyl acetate and ally alcohol to acrolein that occurs after absorption and suggests that these chemicals are protoxicants that increase systemic exposure of acrolein. Increased systemic exposure to acrolein is likely responsible for the differences in hepatic toxicological profile observed with these chemicals.
Food and Chemical Toxicology | 2001
Kamal M. Abdo; Michael L. Cunningham; M.L Snell; Ronald A. Herbert; Gregory S. Travlos; S.R Eldridge; John R. Bucher
Methyleugenol, a food flavor and fragrance agent, was tested for toxicity in male and female F344/N rats and B6C3F1 mice. Groups of 10 males and 10 females per sex per species were administered 0, 10, 30, 100, 300 or 1000 mg methyleugenol/kg body weight in 0.5% aqueous methylcellulose by gavage, 5 days per week for 14 weeks. Additional groups of rats and mice of each sex were dosed similarly and used for hematology and clinical chemistry studies. Groups of 10 male and 10 female rats and mice received the vehicle by gavage on the same dosing schedule and served as vehicle controls. For serum gastrin, gastric pH and cell proliferation studies groups of 10 female rats were given 0, 37, 75 or 150 mg/kg, once daily 5 days per week for 30 or 90 days or 300 or 1000 mg/kg for 30 days; male mice were given 0, 9, 18.5, 37, 75, 150 or 300 mg/kg for 30 or 90 days. For the gastrin, pH and cell proliferation studies, groups of 10 female rats and 10 male mice were given the vehicle for 30 or 90 days and served as controls. Methyleugenol administration to rats induced erythrocyte microcytosis and thrombocytosis in male and female rats. It also caused an increase in serum alanine aminotransferase and sorbitol dehydrogenase activities and bile acid concentration, suggesting hepatocellular injury, cholestasis or altered hepatic function. Additionally, methyleugenol induced hypoproteinemia and hypoalbuminemia, evidenced by decreased total protein and albumin concentrations in both male and female rats, suggesting in inefficiency of dietary protein utilization due to methyleugenol-induced toxic effects on the liver and glandular stomach of rats and mice. The increase in gastrin and gastric pH of rats and mice given methyleugenol suggests that gastrin feedback was impaired and resulted in conditions not conducive to protein digestion. In rats, methyleugenol caused an increase in the incidences of hepatocyte cytologic alteration, cytomegaly, Kupffer cell pigmentation, mixed foci of cellular alteration and bile duct hyperplasia of the liver and atrophy and chronic inflammation of the mucosa of the glandular stomach. In mice, it caused an increase in the incidence of cytologic alteration, necrosis, bile duct hyperplasia and subacute inflammation of the liver and atrophy, degeneration, necrosis, edema, mitotic alteration, and cystic glands of the fundic region of the glandular stomach. The increased incidences of adrenal gland cortical hypertrophy and/or cytoplasmic alteration in the submandibular salivary glands, adrenal glands, testis and uterus of rats were considered secondary to the chemical-related effects observed in the liver and glandular stomach. Based on mortality, body weight gain, clinical chemistry and gross and microscopic evaluation of tissues of rats and mice, the no-observed-effect level (NOEL) of methyleugenol for both species was estimated at 10 mg/kg.