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Featured researches published by R. D. Brown.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2010

The Sheep Erythrocyte T-Dependent Antibody Response (TDAR)

Kimber L. White; D. L. Musgrove; R. D. Brown

The sheep erythrocyte T-dependent antibody Response (TDAR) evaluates the ability of animals sensitized in vivo to produce primary IgM antibodies to sheep erythrocytes (sRBC). The assay enumerates the number of antigen specific IgM antibody producing cells in the spleen. When exposure to the test material takes place in vivo, as does sensitization, the actual quantification of the number of antibody producing cells occurs ex vivo. Following the animal being euthanized, a single cell suspension of spleen cells is prepared. These spleen cells containing the IgM secreting plasma cells are incubated in a semisolid matrix of agar, sheep erythrocytes, and guinea pig serum as a single cell layer between a Petri dish and glass cover slip. After a 3 h incubation period, lysis of sRBCs around each of the IgM secreting antigen specific plasma cells results in the formation of a clear plaque, which can easily be counted. The TDAR has been found to be the most sensitive functional assay for evaluating effects on the immune system, particularly the humoral immune component. The TDAR to sheep erythrocytes still remains the gold standard for evaluating the potential adverse effects of xenobiotics on the immune system.


Drug and Chemical Toxicology | 1994

Subchronic 10 Day Immunotoxicity of Polydimethylsiloxane (Silicone) Fluid, Gel and Elastomer and Polyurethane Disks in Female B6C3F1 Mice

S. G. Bradley; A. E. Munson; J. A. McCay; R. D. Brown; D. L. Musgrove; S. Wilson; M. Stern; M. I. Luster; Kimber L. White

Millions of people have been exposed to silicones because of the widespread use in consumer products such as cosmetics and toiletries, food products, household products and paints. Silicones have wide use in medical practice, including lubricants in tubing and syringes, and as implantable devices. The most prevalent silicone in medical use is polydimethylsiloxane. This study was undertaken to determine the subchronic immunotoxicologic potential of the principal constituents of breast implants: silicone fluid, silicone gel and silicone elastomer. An alternative covering for devices containing silicone gels, polyurethane, was also included in the study. Silicone fluid and gel were injected subcutaneously into female B6C3F1 mice (1 ml/mouse) and 6 mm disks of silicone elastomer or polyurethane were implanted subcutaneously. There were no treatment-related deaths or overt signs of toxicity. None of the tested materials had notable effects on body or organ weights, erythrocytes or leukocytes in the blood, blood chemistries such as alanine aminotransferase, urea nitrogen, glucose, albumin or total protein. The cellularity of the bone marrow and responses to CSF-GM and CSF-M were normal. The tested silicones did not alter the distribution of B cells and T cells in the spleen, but polyurethane perturbed the distribution of CD4+CD8+ and CD4-CD8- T cells. The antibody response to sheep erythrocytes was not markedly altered, nor were proliferative responses to concanavalin A, phytohemagglutinin, lipopolysaccharide or allogeneic cells. Reticuloendothelial function was normal, but polyurethane evoked an enhanced phagocytosis of Covaspheres by adherent peritoneal cells. Natural killer cell activity and serum complement were not altered. All silicone materials afforded modest protection to a challenge with Listeria monocytogenes that killed 40 to 58% of control mice. Host resistance to Streptococcus pneumoniae or the B16F10 tumor was not affected by any of the treatments. There is a pattern indicative of some perturbation of T cell differentiation in mice implanted with a polyurethane disk.


Drug and Chemical Toxicology | 1994

Immunotoxicity of 180 Day Exposure to Polydimethylsiloxane (Silicone) Fluid, Gel and Elastomer and Polyurethane Disks in Female B6C3F1 Mice

S. G. Bradley; Kimber L. White; J. A. McCay; R. D. Brown; D. L. Musgrove; S. Wilson; M. Stern; Michael I. Luster; A. E. Munson

Millions of people have been exposed to silicones which are present in consumer goods such as cosmetics and toiletries, processed foods and household products. In addition, silicones have been used extensively in medical practice as a lubricant in tubing and syringes, and as implantable devices. A silicone widely used in medical practice is polydimethylsiloxane. This study was undertaken to determine the immunotoxicologic potential of long term exposure to the principal constituents of breast implants: silicone fluid, silicone gel and silicone elastomer. An alternative covering for devices containing silicone gels, polyurethane, was also included in the study. Silicone fluid and gel were injected subcutaneously into female B6C3F1 mice (1 ml/mouse) and 6 mm disks of silicone elastomer or polyurethane were implanted subcutaneously. There were no treatment-related deaths or overt signs of toxicity during the 180 day exposure. None of the tested materials had notable effects on body or organ weights, erythrocytes or leukocytes in the blood, blood chemistries such as alanine aminotransferase, urea nitrogen, glucose, albumin or total protein, or serum CH 50 or C3 levels. The cellularity of the bone marrow and responses to CSF-GM and CSF-M were normal. The tested silicones and polyurethane marginally reduced the level of Ig+ cells in the spleen but did not consistently alter the distribution of T cell surface markers. The antibody response to sheep erythrocytes was not markedly altered, nor were proliferative responses to concanavalin A, phytohemagglutinin, lipopolysaccharide or allogeneic cells. Reticuloendothelial function was normal, as was phagocytosis of chicken erythrocytes and Covaspheres by adherent peritoneal cells. Natural killer cell activity was depressed in all silicone treatment groups and in mice implanted with polyurethane. No silicone or polyurethane treatment group displayed altered susceptibility to a challenge with Listeria monocytogenes, Streptococcus pneumoniae or the B16F10 tumor. The only consistent effect of 180 day exposure to silicone materials or polyurethane was a modest depression of natural killer cell activity.


Drug and Chemical Toxicology | 1994

Immunotoxicity of Mono-Nitrotoluenes in Female B6C3F1 Mice: II. Meta-Nitrotoluene

L. A. Burns; S. G. Bradley; Kimber L. White; J. A. McCay; B. A. Fuchs; M. Stern; R. D. Brown; D. L. Musgrove; Michael P. Holsapple; Michael I. Luster; A. E. Munson

The nitrotoluenes are chemicals used in dyes, agricultural products, pharmaceuticals and explosives. In the present studies, the toxicology and immunotoxicity of meta-nitrotoluene (m-nitrotoluene) were evaluated. Mice, exposed to m-nitrotoluene at dose levels of 200, 400 and 600 mg/kg/body weight for 2 weeks by gastric gavage, gained body weight over the treatment period to a slightly greater extent than the control groups. Of the selected organs weighed, the liver and kidney of mice exposed to m-nitrotoluene were increased in weight while the thymus weight was decreased. The liver of mice exposed to m-nitrotoluene, but not ortho-nitrotoluene, showed slight to moderate swelling of the hepatocytes adjacent to the central veins. The hepatocyte swelling appeared to be reversible and there was no evidence of necrosis. The hematology and serum chemistries examined were unaffected by m-nitrotoluene exposure although there were modest decreases in the percentage of polymorphonuclear leukocytes and eosinophils in differential blood counts. Bone marrow cellularity and the number of CFU/M and CFU/GM were unaffected by m-nitrotoluene exposure. m-Nitrotoluene suppressed the IgM response to sRBC and the DHR response to KLH. There was a slight (8%) decrease in the percentage of B lymphocytes in the spleen. The response to the T cell mitogens was suppressed by as much as 39%. Fc-mediated adherence and phagocytosis of chicken erythrocytes and NK cell activity were increased dose dependently in mice exposed to m-nitrotoluene. Several immune parameters were unaffected by exposure to m-nitrotoluene, including the IgG response to sRBC, responses to the B cell mitogen LPS and to allogeneic cells, and serum interferon levels. Resistance to Streptococcus pneumoniae and Plasmodium yoelii were unaffected also. Resistance to the tumor model PYB6 was increased. Exposure of mice to m-nitrotoluene decreased resistance to Listeria monocytogenes. The decreased resistance to L. monocytogenes may be related to an effect on T cells, evidenced by a decrease in T cell numbers and in the DHR.


Toxicology | 2000

Carbon tetrachloride is immunosuppressive and decreases host resistance to Listeria monocytogenes and Streptococcus pneumoniae in female B6C3F1 mice

Tai L. Guo; J. A. McCay; R. D. Brown; D. L. Musgrove; Dori R. Germolec; L. Butterworth; A. E. Munson; Kimber L. White

Carbon tetrachloride (CCl(4)) is an environmental contaminant that has been detected in ambient air, seawater, surface-water and snow. The immunotoxic potential of CCl(4) was evaluated in female B6C3F1 mice. The animals were administered with CCl(4) daily for 14 days at doses of 50, 100, 500 or 1000 mg/kg body weight by gavage with corn oil as a vehicle. Exposure to CCl(4) resulted in an increase of liver weight but not the body weight and the weights of brain, spleen, lungs, thymus and kidneys. Exposure to CCl(4) produced minimal effect on differential hematological parameters; however, it produced a significant increase in serum glutamic-pyruvic transaminase (SGPT) levels in all dose groups while other serum chemistries showed sporadic increases, primarily at the dose level of 1000 mg/kg. Exposure to CCl(4) produced a decreased humoral immune response; the IgM antibody forming cell (AFC) response to sheep red blood cells (sRBC) was suppressed with the maximal decrease (45%) observed at the dose level of 1000 mg/kg. The IgM serum titer to sRBC was also reduced with a maximal decrease (54%) observed at the dose level of 500 mg/kg. Although exposure to CCl(4) had no effects on the mixed leukocyte response (MLR), cytotoxic T lymphocyte activity and natural killer (NK) cell activity, a decrease in both the absolute number and the percentage of CD4(+)CD8(-) at the dose level of 500 mg/kg was observed. The functional activity of the mononuclear phagocyte system was compromised as reflected by a decrease in the vascular clearance of (51)Cr-sRBC and a decrease in the uptake of (51)Cr-sRBC by the liver. Finally, in the two host resistance models evaluated, exposure to CCl(4) decreased host resistance to both Streptococcus pneumoniae and Listeria monocytogenes with greater susceptibility to the latter. Overall, these studies demonstrate that CCl(4) was immunosuppressive in female B6C3F1 mice.


Drug and Chemical Toxicology | 1994

Immunotoxicity of 2,4-Diaminotoluene in Female B6C3F1 Mice

L. A. Bums; S. G. Bradley; Kimber L. White; J. A. McCay; B. A. Fuchs; M. Stern; R. D. Brown; D. L. Musgrove; Michael P. Holsapple; Michael I. Luster; A. E. Munson

2,4-Diaminotoluene (DAT) has been demonstrated to be a potent carcinogen. The present studies were carried out to determine the toxic and immunotoxic potential of DAT. Mice exposed to DAT at 25-100 mg/kg per day for 14 days by gavage showed a 42% increase in liver weight and a slight decrease in spleen weight. Histopathologic evaluation of selected organs showed the liver to be the major target with morphological changes which were dose dependent. The high dose (100 mg/kg) was associated with moderate centrilobular necrosis. No abnormal structure was noted in the spleen, lungs, thymus, kidney or mesenteric lymph nodes. The liver toxicity was associated with an elevation in alanine aminotransferase activity. The only change noted in selected hematologic parameters was a 64% increase in peripheral blood leukocytes. Mice exposed to DAT showed a decreased IgM and IgG response to sheep erythrocytes. The decrease was not a function of a decreased number of B cells because the number of B cells increased dose dependently. Proliferative capacity of immunocompetent cells was not impaired by exposure to DAT as measured by the response to several mitogens. The delayed hypersensitivity response to keyhole limpet hemocyanin in mice exposed to DAT was increased. Natural killer cell activity was decreased dose dependently and may represent a spleen cell pool shift because the number of B cells increased in the presence of a decreasing spleen size. Serum C3 was suppressed at the high dose of DAT. Phagocytosis by splenic macrophages, but not peritoneal macrophages, was inhibited by DAT exposure. DAT exposure for 14 days decreased host resistance to the bacteria, Streptococcus pneumoniae and Listeria monocytogenes, while host resistance to the pulmonary tumor model, B16F10, and the PYB6 fibrosarcoma was unaffected by DAT exposure. These data indicate that DAT is hepatotoxic and perturbs the differentiation and maturation of leukocytes.


Drug and Chemical Toxicology | 2001

Immunotoxicity of sodium bromate in female B6C3F1 mice : A 28-day drinking water study

Tai L. Guo; J. Ann McCay; Neil A. Karrow; R. D. Brown; D. L. Musgrove; Robert W. Luebke; Dori R. Germolec; Kimber L. White

Bromate is one of the water disinfection by-products (DBPs) produced during the process of ozonation. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the immunotoxic potential of sodium bromate (SB) in female B6C3F1 mice. SB was administered in the drinking water for 28 days at doses of 80–800 mg/l. There was no difference in drinking water consumption between the animals exposed to SB and the tap water controls. Exposure to SB did not produce any signs of overt toxicity. Furthermore, no significant differences were observed in body weight, body weight gain, or the weights of thymus, liver, kidneys or lungs. No gross pathological lesions were observed in SB-treated animals. However, animals exposed to SB had a significant increase in absolute (28%) and relative (26%) spleen weights. The erythrocyte count, hemoglobin, hematocrit, mean corpuscular volume (MCV), platelet count, total leukocyte count, and counts of differential leukocytes were unaffected by SB. A dose-related increase in reticulocytes was observed following exposure to SB with the greatest increase (78%) observed at the highest dose level. Overall, there were no changes in the absolute number of total T cells, CD4+CD8− T cells, CD4−CD8+ T cells, natural killer (NK) cells and macrophages. Exposure to SB did not affect the percentage of B cells, although a slight increase in absolute number of B cells at the dose of 600 mg/l was observed. There was no alteration in IgM antibody-forming cell (AFC) response, mixed leukocyte reaction (MLR) and NK cell activity after exposure to SB. When the activity of peritoneal macrophages, unstimulated or stimulated with IFN-γ and LPS, was evaluated using the cytotoxic/cytostatic assay of B16F10 tumor cells, the suppressive effect of macrophages on the proliferation of B16F10 tumor cells was decreased after exposure to SB. In conclusion, SB, when administered in the drinking water at doses from 80 mg/l to 800 mg/l, produced minimal toxicological and immunotoxic effects in female B6C3F1 mice.


Drug and Chemical Toxicology | 2000

OXYMETHOLONE MODULATES CELL-MEDIATED IMMUNITY IN MALE B6C3F1 MICE

Niel A. Karrow; J. A. McCay; R. D. Brown; D. L. Musgrove; A. E. Munson; Kimber L. White

Oxymetholone is a synthetic androgen, structurally related to testosterone. It is currently used to treat anemias, but has also been abused as a performance enhancing anabolic steroid by the sport community. Concern about its suspected immunomodulatory properties provided the incentive for a detailed investigation into its effects on the mammalian immune system. In this study, male B6C3F1 mice were treated for 14 d with oxymetholone (0, 50, 150, and 300 mg/kg) by gastric intubation, then evaluated for immunotoxicity using a panel of immunotoxicity assays. Except for an increasing trend in kidney and liver weights, and a dose-dependent increase in serum blood urea nitrogen levels, no other signs of systemic toxicity were observed. Bone marrow DNA synthesis was reduced, though this did not translate into alterations in myeloid or monocyte colony forming units. Spleen B and T cell numbers, antibody response to sheep red blood cells, proliferative response to both mitogen and immunoglobulin receptor immunogens, and NK cell activity were all unaltered in mice treated with oxymetholone. Peritoneal macrophage activity was also unaffected by oxymetholone treatment. A 38% decrease in the spleen cell mixed leukocyte response, and a 15% decrease in cytotoxic T cell activity, measured in the highest oxymetholone treatment group, indicate that cell-mediated immunity was impaired following exposure. This immunomodulation did not however, translate into a change in host resistance to Listeria monocytogenes.


Drug and Chemical Toxicology | 2001

Evaluation of the immunomodulatory effects of the macrolide antibiotic, clarithromycin, in female B6C3F1 mice : A 28-day oral gavage study

Niel A. Karrow; J. A. McCay; R. D. Brown; D. L. Musgrove; Dori R. Germolec; Kimber L. White

The macrolide antibiotic, clarithromycin, is used extensively to treat bacterial infections associated with pneumonia, duodenal ulcers, and the advanced stages of human immunodeficiency viral (HIV) infection. In addition to its antimicrobial properties, several studies have indicated that clarithromycin also has anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory properties. In this study, clarithromycins immunomodulatory properties were evaluated using female B6C3F1 mice and a panel of immune assays that were designed to evaluate potential changes in innate, and acquired cellular and humoral immune responses. Female B6C3F1 mice were treated daily by gavage with clarithromycin (0, 125, 250, and 500 mg/kg) for 28 days then evaluated for immunomodulation. Minimal immunological changes were observed after 28 days of treatment. A slight increase in the number of spleen antibody-forming cells was observed at the 250 mg/kg treatment level, but not at other doses. Serum IgM levels were unaffected by the clarithromycin treatment. A significant increase in the number of splenic macrophages was also observed in mice treated with 125 mg/kg of clarithromycin, but this increase was not observed at the other treatment levels. Innate and cell-mediated immunity, as measured by natural killer cell activity, and mixed leukocyte and cytotoxic T cell response, respectively, were unchanged following treatment with clarithromycin. These results suggest that the immune system is not a target for clarithromycin at doses of 500 mg/kg or below.


Drug and Chemical Toxicology | 2001

EVALUATION OF THE IMMUNOMODULATORY EFFECTS OF THE DISINFECTION BY-PRODUCT, SODIUM CHLORITE, IN FEMALE B6C3F1 MICE: A DRINKING WATER STUDY

Niel A. Karrow; Tai L. Guo; J. Ann McCay; Greg W. Johnson; R. D. Brown; Debrorah L. Musgrove; Dori R. Germolec; Robert W. Luebke; Kimber L. White

Sodium chlorite is an inorganic by-product of chlorine dioxide formed during the chlorination of drinking water. Relatively little is known about the adverse health effects of exposure to sodium chlorite in drinking water. In this study, we evaluated sodium chlorites immunomodulatory properties using female B6C3F1 mice and a panel of immune assays that were designed to evaluate potential changes in innate and acquired cellular and humoral immune responses. Female B6C3F1 mice were exposed to sodium chlorite in their drinking water (0, 0.1, 1, 5, 15, and 30 mg/L) for 28 days, and then evaluated for immunomodulation. Overall, minimal toxicological and immunological changes were observed after exposure to sodium chlorite. Increases in the percentages of blood reticulocytes, and the relative spleen weights were both observed at different sodium chlorite treatment levels; however, these increases were not dose-dependent. An increasing trend in the number of spleen antibody-forming cells was observed over the range of sodium chlorite concentrations. This increase was not, however, significant at any individual treatment level, and was not reflected by changes in serum IgM levels. A significant increase (26%) in the total number of splenic CD8+ cells was observed in mice treated with 30 mg/L of sodium chlorite, but not at the other concentrations. Splenic mixed leukocyte response and peritoneal macrophage activity were unaffected by sodium chlorite. Lastly, exposure to sodium chlorite did not affect natural killer cell activity, although a decrease in augmented natural killer cell activity (42%) was observed at the lowest sodium chlorite treatment level. These results suggest that sodium chlorite, within the range 0.1–30 mg/L, produces minimal immunotoxicity in mice.

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Kimber L. White

Virginia Commonwealth University

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D. L. Musgrove

Virginia Commonwealth University

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J. A. McCay

Virginia Commonwealth University

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A. E. Munson

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Dori R. Germolec

National Institutes of Health

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Niel A. Karrow

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Tai L. Guo

Virginia Commonwealth University

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M. Stern

Virginia Commonwealth University

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S. G. Bradley

Virginia Commonwealth University

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J. Ann McCay

Virginia Commonwealth University

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