Kembra L. Howdeshell
Research Triangle Park
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Kembra L. Howdeshell.
Toxicologic Pathology | 2009
Cynthia V. Rider; Vickie S. Wilson; Kembra L. Howdeshell; Andrew K. Hotchkiss; Johnathan Furr; Christy R. Lambright; L. Earl Gray
Although risk assessments are typically conducted on a chemical-by-chemical basis, the 1996 Food Quality Protection Act (FQPA) required the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to consider cumulative risk of chemicals that act via a common mechanism of toxicity. To this end, we are conducting studies with mixtures to provide a framework for assessing the cumulative effects of “antiandrogenic” chemicals. Rats were dosed during pregnancy with antiandrogens singly or in pairs at dosage levels equivalent to about one half of the ED50 for hypospadias or epididymal agenesis. The pairs include: AR antagonists (vinclozolin plus procymidone), phthalate esters (DBP plus BBP and DEHP plus DBP), a phthalate ester plus an AR antagonist (DBP plus procymidone), and linuron plus BBP. We predicted that each chemical by itself would induce few malformations; however, by mixing any two chemicals together, about 50% of the males would be malformed. All binary combinations produced cumulative, dose-additive effects on the androgen-dependent tissues. We also conducted a mixture study combining seven “antiandrogens” together. These chemicals elicit antiandrogenic effects at two different sites in the androgen signaling pathway (i.e., AR antagonist or inhibition of androgen synthesis). In this study, the complex mixture behaved in a dose-additive manner. Our results indicate that compounds that act by disparate mechanisms of toxicity display cumulative, dose-additive effects when present in combination.
Toxicological Sciences | 2009
Leon Earl Gray; Norman J. Barlow; Kembra L. Howdeshell; Joseph S. Ostby; Johnathan Furr; Clark Gray
In the rat, some phthalates alter sexual differentiation at relatively low dosage levels by altering fetal Leydig cell development and hormone synthesis, thereby inducing abnormalities of the testis, gubernacular ligaments, epididymis, and other androgen-dependent tissues. In order to define the dose-response relationship between di(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (DEHP) and the Phthalate Syndrome of reproductive alterations in F1 male rats, Sprague-Dawley (SD) rat dams were dosed by gavage from gestational day 8 to day 17 of lactation with 0, 11, 33, 100, or 300 mg/kg/day DEHP (71-93 males per dose from 12 to 14 litters per dose). Some of the male offspring continued to be exposed to DEHP via gavage from 18 days of age to necropsy at 63-65 days of age (PUB cohort; 16-20/dose). Remaining males were not exposed after postnatal day 17 (in utero-lactational [IUL] cohort) and were necropsied after reaching full maturity. Anogenital distance, sperm counts and reproductive organ weights were reduced in F1 males in the 300 mg/kg/day group and they displayed retained nipples. In the IUL cohort, seminal vesicle weight also was reduced at 100 mg/kg/day. In contrast, serum testosterone and estradiol levels were unaffected in either the PUB or IUL cohorts at necropsy. A significant percentage of F1 males displayed one or more Phthalate Syndrome lesions at 11 mg/kg/day DEHP and above. We were able to detect effects in the lower dose groups only because we examined all the males in each litter rather than only one male per litter. Power calculations demonstrate how using multiple males versus one male/litter enhances the detection of the effects of DEHP. The results at 11 mg/kg/day confirm those reported from a National Toxicology Program multigenerational study which reported no observed adverse effect levels-lowest observed adverse effect levels of 5 and 10 mg/kg/day DEHP, respectively, via the diet.
Toxicology Letters | 2013
Bethany R. Hannas; Kembra L. Howdeshell; Johnathan Furr; L. Earl Gray
Mayer–Rokitansky–Kuster–Hauser (MRKH) syndrome is characterized by uterine and vaginal canal aplasia in normal karyotype human females and is a syndrome with poorly defined etiology. Reproductive toxicity of phthalate esters (PEs) occurs in rat offspring exposed in utero, a phenomenon that is better studied in male offspring than females. The current study reports female reproductive tract malformations in the Sprague–Dawley rat similar to those characteristic of MRKH syndrome, following in utero exposure to a mixture of 5 PEs. We determined that females are ~2-fold less sensitive to the effects of the 5-PE mixture than males for reproductive tract malformations. We were not fully successful in defining the critical exposure period for females; however, incidence of malformations was 88% following dosing from GD8 to 19 versus 22% and 0% for GD8–13 and GD14–19, respectively. Overall, this study provides valuable information regarding female vulnerability to in utero phthalate exposure and further characterizes a potential model for the human MRKH syndrome.
Toxicological Sciences | 2008
Kembra L. Howdeshell; Johnathan Furr; Christy R. Lambright; Vickie S. Wilson; Bryce C. Ryan; L. Earl Gray
Toxicological Sciences | 2007
Chad R. Blystone; Johnathan Furr; Christy S. Lambright; Kembra L. Howdeshell; Bryce C. Ryan; Vickie S. Wilson; Gerald A. LeBlanc; Leon Earl Gray
Toxicological Sciences | 2007
Chad R. Blystone; Christy S. Lambright; Kembra L. Howdeshell; Johnathan Furr; Robin M. Sternberg; Brian C. Butterworth; Elizabeth J. Durhan; Elizabeth A. Makynen; Gerald T. Ankley; Vickie S. Wilson; Gerald A. LeBlanc; L. Earl Gray
Toxicology | 2007
L. Earl Gray; Johnathan Furr; Kembra L. Howdeshell; Andrew K. Hotchkiss; Vickie S. Wilson; Cynthia V. Rider
Biology of Reproduction | 2009
L. Earl Gray; Cynthia V. Rider; Kembra L. Howdeshell; Andrew K. Hotchkiss; Vickie S. Wilson; Paul M. D. Foster; Johnathan Furr
Biology of Reproduction | 2009
Kembra L. Howdeshell; Johnathan Furr; Christy R. Lambright; Vickie S. Wilson; L. Earl Gray
Archive | 2008
Kembra L. Howdeshell; Vickie S. Wilson; Johnathan Furr; Christy R. Lambright; V Cynthia; Chad R. Blystone; Andrew K. Hotchkiss; Leon Earl Gray