首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 328 毫秒
1.
Micronuclei (MN) are routinely enumerated in mouse peripheral blood to index genotoxicity. Recent data from the Collaborative Study Group for the Micronucleus Test (CSGMT) [CSGMT (The Collaborative Study Group for the Micronucleus Test), Evaluation of the rat micronucleus test with bone marrow and peripheral blood: summary of the 9th collaborative study by CSGMT/JEMS MMS, Environ. Mol. Mutagen. 32 (1998) 84-100] suggest that rat peripheral blood may also be appropriate for the enumeration of MN, if scoring is limited to the youngest fraction of reticulocytes. The experiments described herein were designed to test whether modifications to a flow cytometric scoring procedure for measuring micronucleated reticulocytes (MN-RET) in mouse peripheral blood could be extended to accurately enumerate MN in rat peripheral blood. Rats were treated with saline or one of three genotoxic agents (6-mercaptopurine, ethyl methanesulfonate or propane sultone) in an acute dosing protocol. Peripheral blood samples were subsequently collected for both microscopic and flow cytometric analysis. Micronucleus frequencies were scored in the youngest fraction of reticulocytes: scoring by microscopy was restricted to the types I and II reticulocytes based on RNA content utilizing acridine orange supravital staining; flow cytometric measurements were restricted to the youngest fraction of reticulocytes based on transferrin receptor (CD71) staining. A statistically significant dose-related increase in the incidence of MN was observed, irrespective of scoring method. A higher level of statistical discrimination between control and genotoxin-treated groups was observed for the flow cytometric data and can most likely be explained by the increased number of cells scored (10x more than microscopy) and the lower scoring variability. Together, these data suggest that (i) rat peripheral blood represents an appropriate compartment for evaluating genotoxin-induced MN when the analysis is restricted to young reticulocytes, and (ii) the measurement of MN in rat peripheral blood reticulocytes benefits from the high throughput methodology of flow cytometry.  相似文献   

2.
Erythrocyte-based micronucleus tests have traditionally been performed with bone marrow specimens, since, in most preclinical animal models, the spleen can efficiently remove aberrant erythrocytes from the circulation. Even so, evidence is mounting that by examining tens of thousands of young (CD71-positive) circulating reticulocytes for the presence of micronuclei via flow cytometry, a sensitive assay of cytogenetic damage is realized. The work described herein was designed to test this hypothesis further, using an important preclinical toxicology model, the beagle dog. In these experiments, purebred male beagles were treated for five consecutive days with cyclophosphamide (0, 6.25, 12.5 or 25mg/m(2)/day) or for two consecutive days with etoposide (0, 1.56, 6.25 or 12.5mg/m(2)/day). Before treatment, and on each day of administration, blood specimens were collected and processed for flow cytometric scoring of micronucleated reticulocyte (MN-RET) frequency. Twenty-four hours after the final administration, blood MN-RET frequencies were determined via flow cytometry, and frequencies of micronucleated bone marrow polychromatic erythrocytes (MN-PCE) were determined using acridine orange and May-Grunwald Giemsa staining. In the case of cyclophosphamide, elevated blood MN-RET frequencies were observed 2 days after treatment began, and the maximal frequency was achieved 1 day later. Similarly, etoposide-induced blood MN-RET were not evident 1 day after administration began, but a robust effect was apparent 2 days after treatments were initiated. Twenty-four hours after the final administrations, dose-related micronucleus responses were evident for both agents and in both blood and bone marrow compartments. Good overall agreement between MN-RET and MN-PCE frequencies was evidenced by high Spearman's correlation coefficients-0.89 for blood flow cytometry versus bone marrow acridine orange staining and 0.83 for blood flow cytometry versus bone marrow May-Grunwald Giemsa staining. Taken together, these results provide further support for the cross-species utility of flow cytometry-based blood MN-RET measurements.  相似文献   

3.
The frequency of micronucleated reticulocytes (MN-RETs) in the bone marrow or peripheral blood is a sensitive indicator of cytogenetic damage. While the kinetics of MN-RET induction in rodent models following irradiation has been investigated and reported, information about MN-RET induction of human bone marrow after radiation exposure is sparse. In this report, we describe a human long-term bone marrow culture (LTBMC), established in three-dimensional (3D) bioreactors, which sustains long-term erythropoiesis. Using this system, we measured the kinetics of human bone marrow red blood cell (RBC) and reticulocyte (RET) production, as well as the kinetics of human MN-RET induction following radiation exposure up to 6Gy. Human bone marrow established in the 3D bioreactor demonstrated an average percentage of RBCs among total viable cells peaking at 21% on day 21. The average percentage of RETs among total viable cells reached a maximum of 11% on day 14, and remained above 5% by day 28, suggesting that terminal erythroid differentiation was still active. Time- and dose-dependent induction of MN-RET by gamma radiation was observed in the human 3D LTBMC, with peak values occurring at approximately 3 days following 1Gy irradiation. A trend towards delayed peak to 3-5 days post-radiation was observed with radiation doses ≥2Gy. Our data reveal valuable information on the kinetics of radiation-induced MN-RET of human bone marrow cultured in the 3D bioreactor, a synthetic bioculture system, and suggest that this model may serve as a promising tool for studying MN-RET formation in human bone marrow, thereby providing opportunities to study bone marrow genotoxicity testing, mitigating agent effects, and other conditions that are not ordinarily feasible to experimental manipulation in vivo.  相似文献   

4.
The frequency of micronuclei (also known as Howell–Jolly bodies) in peripheral blood erythrocytes of humans is extremely low due to the efficiency with which the spleen sequesters and destroys these aberrant cells. In the past, this has precluded erythrocyte-based analyses from effectively measuring chromosome damage. In this report, we describe a high-throughput, single-laser flow cytometric system for scoring the incidence of micronucleated reticulocytes (MN-RET) in human blood. Differential staining of these cells was accomplished by combining the immunochemical reagent anti-CD71-FITC with a nucleic acid dye (propidium iodide plus RNase). The immunochemical reagent anti-CD42b-PE was also incorporated into the procedure in order to exclude platelets which can interfere with analysis. This analytical system was evaluated with blood samples from ten healthy volunteers, one splenectomized subject, as well as samples collected from nine cancer patients before and over the course of radio- or chemotherapy. The mean frequency of MN-RET observed for the healthy subjects was 0.09%. This value is nearly two orders of magnitude higher than frequencies observed in mature erythrocytes, and is approximately half the MN-RET frequency observed for the splenectomized subject (0.20%). This suggests that the spleen’s effect on micronucleated cell incidence can be minimized by restricting analyses to the youngest (CD71-positive) fraction of reticulocytes. Furthermore, MN-RET frequencies were significantly elevated in patients undergoing cancer therapy. Collectively, these data establish that micronuclei can be quantified in human peripheral blood reticulocytes with a single-laser flow cytometer, and that these measurements reflect the level of chromosome damage which has occurred in red marrow space.  相似文献   

5.
The frequency of micronuclei (also known as Howell-Jolly bodies) in peripheral blood erythrocytes of humans is extremely low due to the efficiency with which the spleen sequesters and destroys these aberrant cells. In the past, this has precluded erythrocyte-based analyses from effectively measuring chromosome damage. In this report, we describe a high-throughput, single-laser flow cytometric system for scoring the incidence of micronucleated reticulocytes (MN-RET) in human blood. Differential staining of these cells was accomplished by combining the immunochemical reagent anti-CD71-FITC with a nucleic acid dye (propidium iodide plus RNase). The immunochemical reagent anti-CD42b-PE was also incorporated into the procedure in order to exclude platelets which can interfere with analysis. This analytical system was evaluated with blood samples from ten healthy volunteers, one splenectomized subject, as well as samples collected from nine cancer patients before and over the course of radio- or chemotherapy. The mean frequency of MN-RET observed for the healthy subjects was 0.09%. This value is nearly two orders of magnitude higher than frequencies observed in mature erythrocytes, and is approximately half the MN-RET frequency observed for the splenectomized subject (0.20%). This suggests that the spleen's effect on micronucleated cell incidence can be minimized by restricting analyses to the youngest (CD71-positive) fraction of reticulocytes. Furthermore, MN-RET frequencies were significantly elevated in patients undergoing cancer therapy. Collectively, these data establish that micronuclei can be quantified in human peripheral blood reticulocytes with a single-laser flow cytometer, and that these measurements reflect the level of chromosome damage which has occurred in red marrow space.  相似文献   

6.
The cytogenetic effects in mice chronically fed the heterocyclic amine 2-amino-1-methyl-6-phenylimidazo[4,5b]pyridine (PhIP) were evaluated by chromosome painting, micronucleated normochromatic erythrocytes (MN NCEs) and sister chromatid exchanges (SCEs). PhIP and numerous other heterocyclic amines have been isolated from cooked foods, and many have been found to be carcinogenic in laboratory rodents. Female C57BL/6N mice were chronically fed a diet containing 0, 100, 250 or 400 ppm of PhIP beginning at 8 weeks of age. Peripheral blood and bone marrow were taken from 5 mice per treatment group at 1, 4 and 6 months from the start of exposure. PhIP was removed from the diet for a final month of the experiment, at which time blood was taken from the remaining animals. Chromosome-specific composite DNA probes for mouse chromosomes 2 and 8 were hybridized to metaphase cells from each tissue. The 1- and 4-month time points showed no statistically significant difference between the control and exposed mice for either tissue in chromosome aberration frequencies. Both MN NCEs and SCEs were analyzed at a single time point during exposure (4 months for MN NCEs and 6 months for SCEs) and again 1 month after removing PhIP from the diet. MN NCEs in the peripheral blood showed a statistically significant dose response, with all values decreasing significantly 1 month after removing PhIP from the diet. SCE frequencies in the peripheral blood showed an approximate doubling compared to control mice, and decreased to control levels 1 month after removing PhIP from the diet. SCE frequencies in the bone marrow of exposed mice showed no difference from the control animals. These results show that chronic ingestion of PhIP by female C57BL/6 mice does not produce persistent cytogenetic damage as visualized by chromosome aberrations, MN NCEs or SCEs.  相似文献   

7.
Bromodichloromethane (BDCM) is commonly present in trace amounts in drinking water as a disinfection by-product. BDCM has been shown to be carcinogenic in mice and rats when given by gavage at relatively high doses. Genotoxic activity as well as induced regenerative cell proliferation may contribute to the carcinogenic potential of BDCM. The purpose of the current studies was to evaluate the ability of BDCM to induce micronuclei (MN) in bone marrow and blood of wild-type and p53(+/-) mice on the C57BL/6 and FVB/N genetic backgrounds using the inhalation route of exposure. Toxicity studies were being conducted in this laboratory with inhaled BDCM to select doses for longer-term cancer bioassays using wild-type and p53(+/-) transgenic mice on different genetic backgrounds. Bone marrow samples from these experiments were evaluated for the induction of MN after 1 and 3 weeks of exposure. Accumulation of MN in the peripheral blood was also evaluated at the 13-week time point of a cancer study with the p53(+/-) mice. For the 1-week time point, male C57BL/6 wild-type and p53(+/-) mice and FVB/N wild-type and p53(+/-) mice were exposed daily for 6h per day for 7 consecutive days to atmospheric BDCM concentrations of 0, 1, 10, 30, 100, or 150 ppm. In a second experiment, mice were exposed daily for 6h per day for 3 weeks to atmospheric BDCM concentrations of 0, 0.5, 1, 3, 10, or 30 ppm. Resulting levels of polychromatic erythrocytes (PCE) containing MN were assessed in the bone marrow. For all of the 1- and 3-week exposure groups, the only statistically significant increase in the percentage of bone marrow PCE cells containing MN was in the 1-week 100 ppm BDCM exposure group in the FVB/N wild-type mice (control 0.26% versus exposed 1.16%). C57BL/6 p53(+/-) mice and FVB/N p53(+/-) mice were exposed daily for 6 h per day for 13 weeks to atmospheric BDCM concentrations of 0, 0.5, 3, 10, or 15 ppm. MN were quantified in samples of peripheral blood. Statistically significant increases in the percentage of peripheral blood NCE cells containing MN were seen at the highest BDCM exposure group of 15 ppm in both the C57BL/6 p53(+/-) strain (control 0.36% versus exposed 0.67%) and the FVB/N p53(+/-) strain (control 0.36% versus exposed 0.86%). These data indicate weak induction of MN by BDCM, but only at high atmospheric concentrations relative to normal environmental exposures and with extended periods of exposure. Although comparisons are difficult because responses were negative or marginal, the p53 genotype or the genetic background did not appear to substantially alter susceptibility to the genotoxic effects of BDCM.  相似文献   

8.
Bao Y  Chen H  Hu Y  Bai Y  Zhou M  Xu A  Shao C 《Mutation research》2012,743(1-2):67-74
This work investigated the effects of chronic cadmium (Cd) exposure combined with γ-ray irradiation on the cytotoxicity and genotoxicity of peripheral blood cells and bone marrow cells in rats. Results showed that when the rats were exposed to low dose (LD) Cd of 0.1mg CdCl?/(kgd) for 8 and 12 weeks, the Cd concentration in blood reached to 135-140 μg/L and no toxic effects on peripheral blood lymphocytes, white blood cells (WBC) and granulocyte-monocyte (GM) progenitor cells were observed except polychromatic erythrocytes (PCE) of bone marrow. Moreover, this chronic LD Cd exposure significantly decreased irradiation-induced micronucleus (MN) formation and hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyl transferase (hprt) mutation in lymphocytes and PCE, while the combination of LD Cd exposure and irradiation induced the additive metallothionein (MT) protein expression in bone marrow cells. When the rats were exposed to a high dose (HD) Cd of 0.5mg CdCl/?(kgd) for 8 and 12 weeks, the blood Cd level approached to 458-613 μg/L and an inflammatory response was induced, meanwhile, MN formation and hprt mutation were markedly increased, and the ratio of PCE/NCE (normochromatic erythrocyte) was significantly decreased. Furthermore, when the rats were exposed to HD Cd plus 2 Gy irradiation, additive toxic effects on MN formation, hprt mutation, PCE damage and GM progenitor cell proliferation were observed, while this combination treatment resulted in an obvious reduction of MT protein compared to HD Cd group. In conclusion, chronic exposure to LD Cd induced the adaptive response to irradiation in the genotoxicity of peripheral blood lymphocytes and PCE of bone marrow by the up-regulation of Cd-induced MT protein, but the combination of HD Cd exposure and irradiation generated the additive effects on the cytotoxicity and genotoxicity in peripheral blood lymphocytes and bone marrow cells.  相似文献   

9.
The potential adverse effects of dermal and inhalation exposure of jet fuels are important for health hazard evaluation in humans. The genotoxic potential of jet fuels, JP-8 and Jet-A, was investigated in an animal model. Mice were treated dermally with either a single or multiple applications of these jet fuels. Peripheral blood and bone marrow smears were prepared to examine the incidence of micronuclei (MN) in polychromatic erythrocytes (PCEs). In all experiments, using several different exposure regimens, no statistically significant increase in the incidence of MN was observed in the bone marrow and/or peripheral blood of mice treated with JP-8 or Jet-A when compared with those of untreated control animals. The data in mice treated with a single dose of JP-8 or Jet-A did not confirm the small but statistically significant increase in micronuclei reported in our previous study.  相似文献   

10.
Agaricus blazei Murrill extracts have previously been shown to have anticarcinogenic and antimutagenic properties. These results suggest that antimutagenic activity, besides the modulation of the immune system, might be involved in the anticarcinogenic action of A. blazei. To investigate the possible antimutagenic effect of A. blazei in vivo, we evaluated its effect on clastogenicity induced by cyclophosphamide (CP) in mice, using the micronucleus test in bone marrow (MNPCE) and in peripheral blood (MNRET). Male Swiss mice were treated with CP (25 or 50mg/kg i.p.) or with CP plus mushroom solution at three different temperatures: 4, 21, and 60 degrees C. Aqueous solution of a mixture from various lineages of the mushroom inhibited induction of micronuclei by CP in bone marrow and in peripheral blood of mice. In contrast to the mixture of lineages, a single isolated lineage did not lead to a reduction of CP-induced MN frequencies in either bone marrow or blood cells of mice. The results suggest that under certain circumstances these mushrooms exhibit antimutagenic activities that might contribute to an anticarcinogenic effect.  相似文献   

11.
The in vivo micronucleus assay working group of the International Workshop on Genotoxicity Testing (IWGT) discussed new aspects in the in vivo micronucleus (MN) test, including the regulatory acceptance of data derived from automated scoring, especially with regard to the use of flow cytometry, the suitability of rat peripheral blood reticulocytes to serve as the principal cell population for analysis, the establishment of in vivo MN assays in tissues other than bone marrow and blood (for example liver, skin, colon, germ cells), and the biological relevance of the single-dose-level test. Our group members agreed that flow cytometric systems to detect induction of micronucleated immature erythrocytes have advantages based on the presented data, e.g., they give good reproducibility compared to manual scoring, are rapid, and require only small quantities of peripheral blood. Flow cytometric analysis of peripheral blood reticulocytes has the potential to allow monitoring of chromosome damage in rodents and also other species as part of routine toxicology studies. It appears that it will be applicable to humans as well, although in this case the possible confounding effects of splenic activity will need to be considered closely. Also, the consensus of the group was that any system that meets the validation criteria recommended by the IWGT (2000) should be acceptable. A number of different flow cytometric-based micronucleus assays have been developed, but at the present time the validation data are most extensive for the flow cytometric method using anti-CD71 fluorescent staining especially in terms of inter-laboratory collaborative data. Whichever method is chosen, it is desirable that each laboratory should determine the minimum sample size required to ensure that scoring error is maintained below the level of animal-to-animal variation. In the second IWGT, the potential to use rat peripheral blood reticulocytes as target cells for the micronucleus assay was discussed, but a consensus regarding acceptability for regulatory purposes could not be reached at that time. Subsequent validation efforts, combined with accumulated published data, demonstrate that blood-derived reticulocytes from rats as well as mice are acceptable when young reticulocytes are analyzed under proper assay protocol and sample size. The working group reviewed the results of micronucleus assays using target cells/tissues other than hematopoietic cells. We also discussed the relevance of the liver micronucleus assay using young rats, and the importance of understanding the maturation of enzyme systems involved in the processes of metabolic activation in the liver of young rats. Although the consensus of the group was that the more information with regard to the metabolic capabilities of young rats would be useful, the published literature shows that young rats have sufficient metabolic capacity for the purposes of this assay. The use of young rats as a model for detecting MN induction in the liver offers a good alternative methodology to the use of partial hepatectomy or mitogenic stimulation. Additional data obtained from colon and skin MN models have been integrated into the data bases, enhancing confidence in the utility of these models. A fourth topic discussed by the working group was the regulatory acceptance of the single-dose-level assay. There was no consensus regarding the acceptability of a single dose level protocol when dose-limiting toxicity occurs. The use of a single dose level can lead to problems in data interpretation or to the loss of animals due to unexpected toxicity, making it necessary to repeat the study with additional doses. A limit test at a single dose level is currently accepted when toxicity is not dose-limiting.  相似文献   

12.
Eosinophil responses to Fasciola hepatica in rodents   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Qualitative and quantitative cellular changes in the peripheral blood and bone marrow of resistant (rat) and susceptible (mouse) hosts of Fasciola hepatica have been examined. Eosinophil numbers in the peripheral blood and bone marrow of both hosts increased almost immediately following infection. Rats responded more rapidly than mice. Bone marrow colony formation in both rats and mice was greatly enhanced following F. hepatica infection. Injection of excretory/secretory (E/S) antigens of the fluke into rats and mice caused peripheral eosinophilia. Eosinophil levels in mice dropped by day 7 post-injection, but those in rats remained high. Eosinophil precursors in the bone marrow of injected animals also rose. Bone marrow colony formation in antigen-injected mice peaked sharply at day 7 but then fell rapidly. Rats injected with E/S antigens had about twice the level of bone marrow colonies as controls, 12 days post-injection. For most parameters measured, the magnitude of the responses of rats was greater than mice, which may be significant in the context of the rat's ability to acquire resistance to reinfection.  相似文献   

13.
Micronucleated erythrocytes are selectively removed from the peripheral circulation of normal rats. Splenectomy prevents this selective removal. In normal rats treated daily for 20 days with 0.2 mg/kg triethylenemelamine (TEM), micronucleated normochromatic (mature) erythrocytes did not accumulate in peripheral blood. In these same animals, the frequencies of micronucleated cells among polychromatic (newly formed) erythrocytes increased from 0.21 to 5.25 per thousand in peripheral blood and from 1.75 to 31.5 per thousand in bone marrow. Since both control and induced frequencies in peripheral blood were approximately 15% of those in bone marrow, the removal appears to be equally efficient for cells containing either spontaneously occurring or clastogen-induced micronuclei. In splenectomized rats treated daily for 11 days with 0.2 mg/kg TEM, the frequency of micronucleated normochromatic erythrocytes (NCEs) in the peripheral blood rose rapidly to 9 times the control value and remained elevated for 50-55 days, indicating a life span approximately equivalent to that of normal erythrocytes. Among splenectomized rats exposed to either 0.15 mg/kg triethylenemelamine, 6.5 mg/kg cyclophosphamide, or 300 mg/kg urethane for periods exceeding the erythrocyte life span, the incidences of micronucleated NCEs in the peripheral blood rose steadily from a control value of 1.0 per thousand to maximum values of 15.0, 12.7 and 8.9 per thousand, respectively. During these extended exposures, the mean frequencies of micronucleated polychromatic erythrocytes (PCEs) in peripheral blood increased from a spontaneous value of 0.9 per thousand to 23.0, 13.0 and 6.6 per thousand, respectively, reflecting the frequencies among PCEs in the bone marrow and approximating the maximum values among NCEs in the peripheral blood. Thus, the frequency of micronucleated erythrocytes in the peripheral blood of splenectomized rats can be used as an index of both acute and cumulative chromosomal damage, while in normal rats the use of peripheral blood for cytogenetic monitoring is restricted by the selective removal of these micronucleated cells.  相似文献   

14.
The data for the in vivo genotoxicity of styrene (STY) are equivocal. To evaluate the clastogenicity and sister-chromatid exchange (SCE)-inducing potential of STY in vivo under carefully controlled conditions, B6C3F1 female mice were exposed by inhalation for 6 h/day for 14 consecutive days to either 0, 125, 250 or 500 ppm STY. One day after the final exposure, peripheral blood, spleen, and lungs were removed and cells were cultured for the analysis of micronucleus (MN) induction using the cytochalasin B-block method, chromosome breakage, and SCE induction. Peripheral blood smears were also made for scoring MN in erythrocytes. There was a significant concentration-related elevation of SCE frequency in lymphocytes from the spleen and the peripheral blood as well as in cells from the lung. However, no statistically significant concentration-related increases were found in the frequency of chromosome aberrations in the cultured splenocytes or lung cells, and no significant increases in MN frequencies were observed in binucleated splenocytes or normochromatic erythrocytes in peripheral blood smears.  相似文献   

15.
The mouse peripheral blood micronucleus assay using acridine orange supravital staining was compared with the standard bone marrow assay using urethane (ethyl carbamate)-treated mice. Urethane was intraperitoneally injected to CD-1 and BDF1 mice at doses ranging from 62 to 1000 and 62 to 250 mg/kg, respectively. Peripheral blood was collected from the tail 0, 24, 48, and 72 h and bone marrow cells were smeared at 24 and 42 h after the treatment. Although the response of micronucleus induction in peripheral reticulocytes was delayed by about 24 h compared to that in bone marrow polychromatic erythrocytes, the maximum frequencies of micronucleated young erythrocytes were comparable. Therefore, the peripheral blood micronucleus assay using the acridine orange supravital staining method may provide a good alternative to the conventional bone marrow assay.  相似文献   

16.
The hematological micronucleus test is regarded as an indicator of the clastogenic effect of chemicals and acute cytogenetic damage. The test can be carried out in red blood cells of the bone marrow and of the spleen, as well as in peripheral erythrocytes. We have determined the precise background values of micronucleated red blood cells for the peripheral blood of BALB/c, DBA/2, and NMRI mice. Bleeding, phenylhydrazine-induced hemolysis, and splenectomy generated an increase of micronucleated erythrocytes in the peripheral blood of mice. Our data thus demonstrate that such factors should be taken into consideration when the micronucleus test is used for screening the genotoxic potential of chemicals. Furthermore, the micronucleus-inducing effect of cyclophosphamide was studied in normal and splenectomized mice and, in addition, a comparison of the sensitivity of the micronucleus test was carried out in peripheral blood and bone marrow after cyclophosphamide treatment. Our data demonstrate that the kinetics of micronucleus formation were similar in normal and in splenectomized mice in which the micronucleus levels had returned to normal. The comparison of micronucleus formation in bone marrow and peripheral blood after cyclophosphamide treatment revealed the generation of similar quantities of micronucleated red blood cells in both tissues. The physiological mechanisms of micronucleus formation and removal and the potential role of chemically induced spleen damage during this process are discussed; the usefulness of the peripheral micronucleus test as a simple, rapid, and animal-saving modification of the standard bone marrow test is evaluated.Abbreviations CP cyclophosphamide - MN micronuclei - MNCE micronucleated normochromatic erythrocytes - MNPCE micronucleated polychromatic erythrocytes - MNRBC micronucleated red blood cells - NCE normochromatic erythrocytes - PCE polychromatic erythrocytes  相似文献   

17.
The hematological micronucleus test is regarded as an indicator of the clastogenic effect of chemicals and acute cytogenetic damage. The test can be carried out in red blood cells of the bone marrow and of the spleen, as well as in peripheral erythrocytes. We have determined the precise background values of micronucleated red blood cells for the peripheral blood of BALB/c DBA/2, and NMRI mice. Bleeding, phenylhydrazine-induced hemolysis, and splenectomy generated an increase of micronucleated erythrocytes in the peripheral blood of mice. Our data thus demonstrate that such factors should be taken into consideration when the micronucleus test is used for screening the genotoxic potential of chemicals. Furthermore, the micronucleus-inducing effect of cyclophosphamide was studied in normal and splenectomized mice and, in addition, a comparison of the sensitivity of the micronucleus test was carried out in peripheral blood and bone marrow after cyclophosphamide treatment. Our data demonstrate that the kinetics of micronucleus formation were similar in normal and in splenectomized mice in which the micronucleus levels had returned to normal. The comparison of micronucleus formation in bone marrow and peripheral blood after cyclophosphamide treatment revealed the generation of similar quantities of micronucleated red blood cells in both tissues. The physiological mechanisms of micronucleus formation and removal and the potential role of chemically induced spleen damage during this process are discussed; the usefulness of the peripheral micronucleus test as a simple, rapid, and animal-saving modification of the standard bone marrow test is evaluated.Abbreviations CP cyclophosphamide - MN micronuclei - MNCE micronucleated normochromatic erythrocytes - MNPCE micronucleated polychromatic erythrocytes - MNRBC micronucleated red blood cells - NCE normochromatic erythrocytes - PCE polychromatic erythrocytes  相似文献   

18.
The mouse peripheral blood micronucleus assay using acridine orange supravital staining was compared with the standard bone marrow assay using urethane (ethyl carbamate)-treated mice. Urethane was intraperitoneally injected to CD-1 and BDF1 mice at doses ranging from 62 to 1000 and 62 to 250 mg/kg, respectively. Peripheral blood was collected from the tail 0, 24, 48, and 72 h and bone marrow cells were smeared at 24 and 42 h after the treatment. Although the response of micronucleus induction in peripheral reticulocytes was delayed by about 24 h compared to that in bone marrow polychromatic erythrocytes, the maximum frequencies of micronucleated young erythrocytes were comparable. Therefore, the peripheral blood micronucleus assay using the acridine orange supravital staining method may provide a good alternative to the conventional bone marrow assay.  相似文献   

19.
The genotoxic potential of the jet fuels, Jet-A and JP-8, were examined in mice treated on the skin with a single dose of 240 mg/mouse. Peripheral blood smears were prepared at the start of the experiment (t = 0), and at 24, 48 and 72 h following treatment with jet fuels. Femoral bone marrow smears were made when all animals were sacrificed at 72 h. In both tissues, the extent of genotoxicity was determined from the incidence of micronuclei (MN) in polychromatic erythrocytes. The frequency of MN in the peripheral blood of mice treated with Jet-A and JP-8 increased over time and reached statistical significance at 72 h, as compared with concurrent control animals. The incidence of MN was also higher in bone marrow cells of mice exposed to Jet-A and JP-8 as compared with controls. Thus, at the dose tested, a small but significant genotoxic effect of jet fuels was observed in the blood and bone marrow cells of mice treated on the skin.  相似文献   

20.
3,3',4,4'-Tetrachloroazobenzene (TCAB) and 3,3',4, 4'-tetrachloroazoxybenzene (TCAOB) are dioxin-like chemicals that were investigated for toxicity in 13-week gavage studies in male and female B6C3F(1) mice and F344N rats by the National Toxicology Program. As part of the comprehensive toxicological investigation of these chemicals, peripheral blood smears from mice treated 5 days per week for 13 weeks with 0.1-30mg/kg/day TCAB or TCAOB were analyzed for the frequency of micronucleated (MN) normochromatic erythrocytes (NCE). Both chemicals produced significant increases in MN-NCE in male and female mice. In contrast to these positive results in subchronic exposure studies, no significant increases were seen in acute bone marrow MN tests in male mice administered three daily injections of 50-200mg/kg/day TCAB and TCAOB. The results with TCAB and TCAOB suggest that the routine integration of MN tests with subchronic toxicity studies may allow detection of mutagenic activity for some chemicals that fail to elicit responses in short-term, high dose tests. In addition, the integration of mutagenicity tests into general toxicity tests reduces the use of laboratory animals and the cost of the testing.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号