Serum progesterone concentrations in Galago crassicaudatus were quantified at 3-week intervals th... more Serum progesterone concentrations in Galago crassicaudatus were quantified at 3-week intervals throughout the 136-day pregnancy. Progesterone concentrations were significantly elevated over those of nonpregnant controls as early as 6 weeks after conception. Progesterone continued to increase throughout gestation. The progesterone profile in pregnant G. crassicaudatus quantitatively resembles that of chimpanzees and qualitatively resembles that of humans. In two animals that aborted, progesterone concentrations after abortion decreased to values comparable to those seen in nonpregnant animals.
Four experiments were designed to investigate the influence of photoperiod and other environmenta... more Four experiments were designed to investigate the influence of photoperiod and other environmental factors on androgen production and reproductive maturation in deer mice. Male prairie deer mice (Peromyscus maniculatus), born in a light/dark cycle of 6L:18D, either remained in this short photoperiod or were switched to a long day regimen of 16L:8D at weaning. In a cross-sectional experiment, the deer mice were killed between 3 and 8 weeks of age for measurement of serum testosterone concentration and reproductive organ weights. In a second experiment, blood was collected from each mouse at weekly intervals between 3 and 9 weeks of age. This repeated measures design was used to reduce the high variability in testosterone values observed in the first experiment. Reproductive organs were weighed at the termination of the experiment. Testosterone concentrations and reproductive organ weights were greater in males reared in the long photoperiod in both experiments. In a third experiment, the animals were housed under five different conditions to test the influence of high ambient temperature and melatonin as well as photoperiod. At 7 weeks of age, they received an injection of hCG or saline. More testosterone was released in deer mice reared in 16L:8D and 27 C than in those reared in short days (6L:18D) or those reared in high ambient temperature (35 C) or those treated with exogenous melatonin. One week later, animals were sacrificed. The single hCG treatment caused significant reversal of the suppression of accessory sex organ weights following melatonin, short days or 35 C temperature. In a fourth experiment, the additive influence of melatonin and 35 C temperature was tested. Animals treated with 35 C or both melatonin and 35 C had lower serum testosterone at 7 weeks of age, released less testosterone after hCG, and had smaller organ weights with or without hCG than long day controls. The influence of melatonin treatment and 35 C temperature appears to be additive for testicular weight and testosterone release after hCG. Thus, the attenuation of reproductive development that accompanied short days, melatonin treatment and high ambient temperature occurred via diminished testosterone secretion, which can be overcome at least in part by gonadotropin treatment.
Intra-atrial cannulation provides assessment of endocrine change within animals. Protocols for pe... more Intra-atrial cannulation provides assessment of endocrine change within animals. Protocols for permanent tethers used in short-term 5- to 10-day experiments and permanent vascular access used in long-term (>10 days) experiments are presented. A protocol for blood processing is also included. Data from a longitudinal endocrine baseline assessment (LEBA) and an endocrine challenge test (ECT) are presented as well.
The discovery of antiprogestational steroids by the Roussel-Uclaf group not only was a major scie... more The discovery of antiprogestational steroids by the Roussel-Uclaf group not only was a major scientific advance but also opened the way to new methods of fertility control and new therapies for such conditions as cancer. RU486, the prototype of the series, is distinguished by a p-(N,N-dimethylaminophenyl) substituent at the 11 beta- position of the steroid framework, a 4,9-dien-3-one system and 17 beta-hydroxy-17 alpha-propynyl substituents. We examined the effect of varying the 17 alpha- substituent in 17 beta-hydroxy compounds analogous to RU486, the effect of introducing a progesterone side chain at C-17, and the effects of further substitution at C-17 alpha and C-16 alpha on the activity of these latter compounds. These studies indicate an important role for D-ring substituents in determining the balance of agonist/antagonist activity in this series. For example, 17 alpha-acetoxy-17 beta-acetyl substitution gave a potent antagonist, whereas 16 alpha-ethyl-17 beta-acetyl substitution resulted in a compound with potent progestational (agonist) activity. The compounds present opportunities for further interesting and useful biological investigations.
Analogs of (4aRS,5SR,9bRS)-2-ethyl-2,3,4,4a,5,9b-hexahydro-7-meth yl-5-p- tolyl-1H-indeno[1,2-c]p... more Analogs of (4aRS,5SR,9bRS)-2-ethyl-2,3,4,4a,5,9b-hexahydro-7-meth yl-5-p- tolyl-1H-indeno[1,2-c]pyridine (Sandoz 20-438, 10a; R1 = ethyl, R2 = R3 = methyl, R4 = H) have been synthesized and tested in mice for their ability to reduce testes weight and disrupt spermatogenesis. The activity was strongly dependent on stereoisomerism and chirality, consistent with a mechanism of action involving interaction with a specific macromolecule. It was affected by changes in the nitrogen substituent and most strikingly by changes in the p-substituent of the 5-aryl ring. A hydrogen, fluorine, hydroxy, or methoxy substituent led to loss of activity, whereas methyl (Sandoz 20-438, 10a), carboxylate (RTI-4587-054, 10k; R1 = ethyl, R2 = methyl, R3 = COOH, R4 = H), ester (RTI-4587-056, 12b; R1 = ethyl, R2 = methyl, R3 = COOMe, R4 = H), formyl (RTI-4587-030, 12i; R1 = ethyl, R2 = methyl, R3 = CHO, R4 = H), or hydroxymethyl (RTI-4587-055, 12g; R1 = ethyl, R2 = methyl, R3 = CH2OH, R4 = H) groups resulted in antispermatogenic compounds. Methyl ester 12b was an effective antifertility agent, without apparent effects on mating, when given orally to male mice at 7-15 mg/kg daily for 35 days. Further evaluation of these compounds as male contraceptive agents and probes for study of spermatogenesis appears warranted.
Toxicological sciences : an official journal of the Society of Toxicology, 1999
Modulation of endocrine function is frequently a confounding factor in the interpretation of chro... more Modulation of endocrine function is frequently a confounding factor in the interpretation of chronic rodent toxicology studies. Of particular interest are agents that cause deviation of thyroid hormone homeostasis and result in thyroid cancer for rodents. An endocrine challenge test (ECT), commonly used to study endocrine organ health in human and veterinary medicine, quantifies the response of the thyroid to tropic hormones. This study compared the response of Fischer (F344) and Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats to a thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) ECT and a thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) ECT and characterized the dose-response curve. TSH, thyroxine (T4), triiodothyronine (T3), and prolactin responses were characterized for several doses of TRH over a 4-h time period. Animals were equipped with intra-atrial cannulae and were free moving at all times during blood sampling. Both strains of rats responded to intravenous TRH by releasing TSH into their blood in a dose-responsive fashion....
... C. Edgar Cook,* Joseph M. Jump, Pingsheng Zhang, John R. Stephens, Yue-Wei Lee, Patricia A. F... more ... C. Edgar Cook,* Joseph M. Jump, Pingsheng Zhang, John R. Stephens, Yue-Wei Lee, Patricia A. Fail, and Stephanie A. Anderson. ... 5) Cook, CE; Wani, MC; Jump, JM; Lee, Y.-W.; Fail, PA; Anderson, SA; Gu, Y.-Q.; Petrow, V. Structure-Activity Studies of 2,3,4,4a,5,9b ...
To compare the efficacies of erythromycin and quinacrine for nonsurgical sterilization in rats. Q... more To compare the efficacies of erythromycin and quinacrine for nonsurgical sterilization in rats. Quinacrine used for nonsurgical sterilization in women is mutagenic, and most clinical regimens have had a higher failure rate than surgical sterilization. This acute mammal study included five groups of rats assigned randomly and evaluated at two times after treatment. Adult female Sprague-Dawley rats. Five groups of female Sprague-Dawley rats (20 per group) were given 70 or 280 mg/kg of erythromycin lactobionate, 350 mg/kg of quinacrine hydrochloride, or vehicle control administered transcervically. Rats were mated 21 days later. Additional groups (n = 4 per group) were treated and killed 21 days later without mating. Fourteen days after mating, numbers of ovarian corpora lutea, total uterine implants, and embryos were evaluated. For unmated animals, uterine sections were examined for fibrosis and lumen closure. Neither drug altered numbers of corpora lutea. Erythromycin decreased pregn...
This companion article offers an alternative interpretation for the quinacrine-induced uterine tu... more This companion article offers an alternative interpretation for the quinacrine-induced uterine tumors observed in a 2-year bioassay in rats (CaBio, Cancel et al., 2010), and provides additional data from two new experiments that support a different interpretation and analysis. Our major premise is that the design of the Cancel et al. bioassay was flawed, particularly regarding dose selection that allowed for misinterpretation of carcinogenic activity. We feel the totality of the information provided herein dictates that the doses (70/70, 70/250 and 70/350 mg/kg quinacrine) causing uterine tumors in their study clearly exceeded the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) typically administered in chronic cancer studies. Our new data support this conclusion and serve to explain the development of lesions, especially the uterine tumors, they have reported. We argue that the rat uterus is not a valid surrogate for the human fallopian tube. Further, we maintain that quinacrine is not genotoxic in vivo, as suggested in their paper. In summary, we believe that quinacrine is not carcinogenic in rats at doses that do not exceed the MTD.
The potential reproductive toxicity of a mixture of 25 chemicals (MIX) formulated to simulate con... more The potential reproductive toxicity of a mixture of 25 chemicals (MIX) formulated to simulate contaminated groundwater supplies near hazardous waste dumps was evaluated in CD-1 Swiss mice and Sprague-Dawley rats using the reproductive assessment by continuous breeding protocol. Male and female mice and rats were exposed to MIX in the drinking water at concentrations of 1, 5, and 10% of a technically achievable stock solution. For mice, body weight and feed consumption were not affected by MIX but water consumption was decreased for both the 5 and 10% MIX groups in both F0 and F1 animals. For F0 mice, the number of live pups/litter was decreased at 10% MIX and the number of females/litter was decreased 10 and 17% at the mid and high MIX dose, respectively. Vaginal cytology was normal, as were testis weight and testicular spermatid head count. For F1 mice, fertility was unaffected, but there was a decreased number of female pups/litter (19%) and a decreased adjusted live pup weight at 10% MIX. At necropsy, cauda epididymal sperm concentration and spermatid head count were reduced (20%) in the presence of normal testis, epididymis, prostate, seminal vesicle, liver, and kidney/adrenal weight. Female estrous cyclicity was altered at 5 and 10% MIX with normal kidney/adrenal, uterus, and ovary/oviduct weight. For rats, F0 body weight and feed consumption were not affected by MIX but water consumption was decreased 10, 30, and 40% in the low-, medium-, and high-dose MIX groups, respectively, and 39% in the high-dose MIX F1 animals. Rat fertility was normal but there was a decreased number of male pups/litter (11%) and a decreased live pup weight (6%) at 10% MIX. Male and female (F1) pup weights were decreased on Postnatal Days 0, 4, 7, 14, and 21 (10% MIX) and remained lower through necropsy on Day 120 +/- 10. F1 fertility was normal but F2 pup weights were decreased (10% MIX). At necropsy, F1 (10% MIX) male body weight was decreased 16% and relative kidney, testis, epididymis, and prostate weights were increased in the presence of normal sperm concentration percentage motile sperm and percentage abnormal sperm. Estrous cyclicity was normal as were kidney/adrenal and ovary weight while female liver weight was reduced 14%. In summary, a "cocktail" of 25 chemicals commonly found in contaminated groundwater at or near hazardous waste sites was administered in drinking water at doses which resulted in severely decreased water consumption in both mice and rats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
The potential reproductive toxicity of a mixture of 25 chemicals (MIX) formulated to simulate con... more The potential reproductive toxicity of a mixture of 25 chemicals (MIX) formulated to simulate contaminated groundwater supplies near hazardous waste dumps was evaluated in CD-1 Swiss mice and Sprague-Dawley rats using the reproductive assessment by continuous breeding protocol. Male and female mice and rats were exposed to MIX in the drinking water at concentrations of 1, 5, and 10% of a technically achievable stock solution. For mice, body weight and feed consumption were not affected by MIX but water consumption was decreased for both the 5 and 10% MIX groups in both F0 and F1 animals. For F0 mice, the number of live pups/litter was decreased at 10% MIX and the number of females/litter was decreased 10 and 17% at the mid and high MIX dose, respectively. Vaginal cytology was normal, as were testis weight and testicular spermatid head count. For F1 mice, fertility was unaffected, but there was a decreased number of female pups/litter (19%) and a decreased adjusted live pup weight at 10% MIX. At necropsy, cauda epididymal sperm concentration and spermatid head count were reduced (20%) in the presence of normal testis, epididymis, prostate, seminal vesicle, liver, and kidney/adrenal weight. Female estrous cyclicity was altered at 5 and 10% MIX with normal kidney/adrenal, uterus, and ovary/oviduct weight. For rats, F0 body weight and feed consumption were not affected by MIX but water consumption was decreased 10, 30, and 40% in the low-, medium-, and high-dose MIX groups, respectively, and 39% in the high-dose MIX F1 animals. Rat fertility was normal but there was a decreased number of male pups/litter (11%) and a decreased live pup weight (6%) at 10% MIX. Male and female (F1) pup weights were decreased on Postnatal Days 0, 4, 7, 14, and 21 (10% MIX) and remained lower through necropsy on Day 120 +/- 10. F1 fertility was normal but F2 pup weights were decreased (10% MIX). At necropsy, F1 (10% MIX) male body weight was decreased 16% and relative kidney, testis, epididymis, and prostate weights were increased in the presence of normal sperm concentration percentage motile sperm and percentage abnormal sperm. Estrous cyclicity was normal as were kidney/adrenal and ovary weight while female liver weight was reduced 14%. In summary, a "cocktail" of 25 chemicals commonly found in contaminated groundwater at or near hazardous waste sites was administered in drinking water at doses which resulted in severely decreased water consumption in both mice and rats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Carisoprodol (CARI), a commonly prescribed neuromuscular relaxant, was evaluated for reproductive... more Carisoprodol (CARI), a commonly prescribed neuromuscular relaxant, was evaluated for reproductive toxicity in Swiss CD-1 mice using the Reproductive Assessment by Continuous Breeding (RACB) protocol. Male and female mice were given CARI in corn oil suspension by daily gavage at doses of 0, 300, 750, and 1200 mg/kg body wt/day. Clinical signs of general toxicity in F0 animals included sedation, primarily in the high-dose group during the first week of exposure, and reduced body weight in high-dose females. CARI administration for 14 weeks did not affect the ability of the F0 animals to produce litters. However, decreases in proportion of pups born alive (4%) and absolute (5%) and adjusted live pup weight (7%) were observed at 1200 mg/kg CARI when compared to controls. In a crossover mating trial to determine the affected sex, there were no significant differences in the measured reproductive parameters. CARI at the high dose increased the proportion of time spent in proestrus and estrus, but cycle length was unaffected. At F0 necropsy (Week 27 of treatment), all sperm parameters were normal. Right epididymis and liver weights, relative to body weight, were increased (12 and 23%, respectively) over the control group for high-dose males. A mating trial to determine the fertility and reproductive competence of the F1 generation showed no effect of CARI on indices of mating, pregnancy, or fertility, the proportion of F2 pups born alive, the sex ratio of live F2 pups, live F2 pup weight, or gestation length.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Pesticides and fertilizers, as used in modern agriculture, contribute to the overall low-level co... more Pesticides and fertilizers, as used in modern agriculture, contribute to the overall low-level contamination of groundwater sources. In order to determine the potential of pesticide and fertilizer mixtures to produce reproductive or developmental toxicity at concentrations up to 100 x the median level found in groundwater, we prepared and studied two mixtures of pesticides and a fertilizer (ammonium nitrate). One mixture containing aldicarb, atrazine, dibromochloropropane, 1,2-dichloropropane, ethylene dibromide, and simazine plus ammonium nitrate was considered to be a representative of groundwater contamination in California (CAL). The other, containing alachlor, atrazine, cyanazine, metolachlor, metribuzin, and ammonium nitrate, simulated groundwater contamination in Iowa (IOWA). Each mixture was administered in the drinking water of either Swiss CD-1 mice during a Reproductive Assessment by Continuous Breeding study or pregnant Sprague-Dawley rats (gd 6-20) at three dose levels (1x, 10x, and 100x) where 1x was the median concentration of each pesticide component as determined in the groundwater surveys in California or Iowa. Unlike conventional toxicology studies, the purpose of this study was to evaluate the health effects of realistic human concentrations. Thus, the testing concentrations are probably well below the maximally tolerated dose. Propylene glycol was used as the solubilizer for the pesticides in drinking water formulations in both studies. In the reproductive study, neither mixture caused any clinical signs of toxicity, changes in food or water consumption, or body weight in either F0 or F1 mice at doses up to 100x the median groundwater concentrations. There were no treatment-related effects on fertility or any measures of reproductive performance of either the F0 or the F1 generation mice exposed to either CAL or IOWA at up to 100x. Similarly, measures of spermatogenesis, epididymal sperm concentration, percentage motile sperm, percentage abnormal sperm, and testicular and epididymal histology were normal. In the developmental study, CAL- or IOWA-exposed females did not exhibit any significant treatment-related clinical signs of toxicity. No adverse effects of CAL or IOWA were observed for measures of embryo/fetal toxicity, including resorptions per litter, live litter size, or fetal body weight. CAL or IOWA did not cause an increased incidence of fetal malformations or variations. In summary, administration of these pesticide/fertilizer mixtures at levels up to 100-fold greater than the median concentrations in groundwater supplies in California or Iowa did not cause any detectable reproductive (mice), general, or developmental toxicity (rats).
Serum progesterone concentrations in Galago crassicaudatus were quantified at 3-week intervals th... more Serum progesterone concentrations in Galago crassicaudatus were quantified at 3-week intervals throughout the 136-day pregnancy. Progesterone concentrations were significantly elevated over those of nonpregnant controls as early as 6 weeks after conception. Progesterone continued to increase throughout gestation. The progesterone profile in pregnant G. crassicaudatus quantitatively resembles that of chimpanzees and qualitatively resembles that of humans. In two animals that aborted, progesterone concentrations after abortion decreased to values comparable to those seen in nonpregnant animals.
Four experiments were designed to investigate the influence of photoperiod and other environmenta... more Four experiments were designed to investigate the influence of photoperiod and other environmental factors on androgen production and reproductive maturation in deer mice. Male prairie deer mice (Peromyscus maniculatus), born in a light/dark cycle of 6L:18D, either remained in this short photoperiod or were switched to a long day regimen of 16L:8D at weaning. In a cross-sectional experiment, the deer mice were killed between 3 and 8 weeks of age for measurement of serum testosterone concentration and reproductive organ weights. In a second experiment, blood was collected from each mouse at weekly intervals between 3 and 9 weeks of age. This repeated measures design was used to reduce the high variability in testosterone values observed in the first experiment. Reproductive organs were weighed at the termination of the experiment. Testosterone concentrations and reproductive organ weights were greater in males reared in the long photoperiod in both experiments. In a third experiment, the animals were housed under five different conditions to test the influence of high ambient temperature and melatonin as well as photoperiod. At 7 weeks of age, they received an injection of hCG or saline. More testosterone was released in deer mice reared in 16L:8D and 27 C than in those reared in short days (6L:18D) or those reared in high ambient temperature (35 C) or those treated with exogenous melatonin. One week later, animals were sacrificed. The single hCG treatment caused significant reversal of the suppression of accessory sex organ weights following melatonin, short days or 35 C temperature. In a fourth experiment, the additive influence of melatonin and 35 C temperature was tested. Animals treated with 35 C or both melatonin and 35 C had lower serum testosterone at 7 weeks of age, released less testosterone after hCG, and had smaller organ weights with or without hCG than long day controls. The influence of melatonin treatment and 35 C temperature appears to be additive for testicular weight and testosterone release after hCG. Thus, the attenuation of reproductive development that accompanied short days, melatonin treatment and high ambient temperature occurred via diminished testosterone secretion, which can be overcome at least in part by gonadotropin treatment.
Intra-atrial cannulation provides assessment of endocrine change within animals. Protocols for pe... more Intra-atrial cannulation provides assessment of endocrine change within animals. Protocols for permanent tethers used in short-term 5- to 10-day experiments and permanent vascular access used in long-term (>10 days) experiments are presented. A protocol for blood processing is also included. Data from a longitudinal endocrine baseline assessment (LEBA) and an endocrine challenge test (ECT) are presented as well.
The discovery of antiprogestational steroids by the Roussel-Uclaf group not only was a major scie... more The discovery of antiprogestational steroids by the Roussel-Uclaf group not only was a major scientific advance but also opened the way to new methods of fertility control and new therapies for such conditions as cancer. RU486, the prototype of the series, is distinguished by a p-(N,N-dimethylaminophenyl) substituent at the 11 beta- position of the steroid framework, a 4,9-dien-3-one system and 17 beta-hydroxy-17 alpha-propynyl substituents. We examined the effect of varying the 17 alpha- substituent in 17 beta-hydroxy compounds analogous to RU486, the effect of introducing a progesterone side chain at C-17, and the effects of further substitution at C-17 alpha and C-16 alpha on the activity of these latter compounds. These studies indicate an important role for D-ring substituents in determining the balance of agonist/antagonist activity in this series. For example, 17 alpha-acetoxy-17 beta-acetyl substitution gave a potent antagonist, whereas 16 alpha-ethyl-17 beta-acetyl substitution resulted in a compound with potent progestational (agonist) activity. The compounds present opportunities for further interesting and useful biological investigations.
Analogs of (4aRS,5SR,9bRS)-2-ethyl-2,3,4,4a,5,9b-hexahydro-7-meth yl-5-p- tolyl-1H-indeno[1,2-c]p... more Analogs of (4aRS,5SR,9bRS)-2-ethyl-2,3,4,4a,5,9b-hexahydro-7-meth yl-5-p- tolyl-1H-indeno[1,2-c]pyridine (Sandoz 20-438, 10a; R1 = ethyl, R2 = R3 = methyl, R4 = H) have been synthesized and tested in mice for their ability to reduce testes weight and disrupt spermatogenesis. The activity was strongly dependent on stereoisomerism and chirality, consistent with a mechanism of action involving interaction with a specific macromolecule. It was affected by changes in the nitrogen substituent and most strikingly by changes in the p-substituent of the 5-aryl ring. A hydrogen, fluorine, hydroxy, or methoxy substituent led to loss of activity, whereas methyl (Sandoz 20-438, 10a), carboxylate (RTI-4587-054, 10k; R1 = ethyl, R2 = methyl, R3 = COOH, R4 = H), ester (RTI-4587-056, 12b; R1 = ethyl, R2 = methyl, R3 = COOMe, R4 = H), formyl (RTI-4587-030, 12i; R1 = ethyl, R2 = methyl, R3 = CHO, R4 = H), or hydroxymethyl (RTI-4587-055, 12g; R1 = ethyl, R2 = methyl, R3 = CH2OH, R4 = H) groups resulted in antispermatogenic compounds. Methyl ester 12b was an effective antifertility agent, without apparent effects on mating, when given orally to male mice at 7-15 mg/kg daily for 35 days. Further evaluation of these compounds as male contraceptive agents and probes for study of spermatogenesis appears warranted.
Toxicological sciences : an official journal of the Society of Toxicology, 1999
Modulation of endocrine function is frequently a confounding factor in the interpretation of chro... more Modulation of endocrine function is frequently a confounding factor in the interpretation of chronic rodent toxicology studies. Of particular interest are agents that cause deviation of thyroid hormone homeostasis and result in thyroid cancer for rodents. An endocrine challenge test (ECT), commonly used to study endocrine organ health in human and veterinary medicine, quantifies the response of the thyroid to tropic hormones. This study compared the response of Fischer (F344) and Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats to a thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) ECT and a thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) ECT and characterized the dose-response curve. TSH, thyroxine (T4), triiodothyronine (T3), and prolactin responses were characterized for several doses of TRH over a 4-h time period. Animals were equipped with intra-atrial cannulae and were free moving at all times during blood sampling. Both strains of rats responded to intravenous TRH by releasing TSH into their blood in a dose-responsive fashion....
... C. Edgar Cook,* Joseph M. Jump, Pingsheng Zhang, John R. Stephens, Yue-Wei Lee, Patricia A. F... more ... C. Edgar Cook,* Joseph M. Jump, Pingsheng Zhang, John R. Stephens, Yue-Wei Lee, Patricia A. Fail, and Stephanie A. Anderson. ... 5) Cook, CE; Wani, MC; Jump, JM; Lee, Y.-W.; Fail, PA; Anderson, SA; Gu, Y.-Q.; Petrow, V. Structure-Activity Studies of 2,3,4,4a,5,9b ...
To compare the efficacies of erythromycin and quinacrine for nonsurgical sterilization in rats. Q... more To compare the efficacies of erythromycin and quinacrine for nonsurgical sterilization in rats. Quinacrine used for nonsurgical sterilization in women is mutagenic, and most clinical regimens have had a higher failure rate than surgical sterilization. This acute mammal study included five groups of rats assigned randomly and evaluated at two times after treatment. Adult female Sprague-Dawley rats. Five groups of female Sprague-Dawley rats (20 per group) were given 70 or 280 mg/kg of erythromycin lactobionate, 350 mg/kg of quinacrine hydrochloride, or vehicle control administered transcervically. Rats were mated 21 days later. Additional groups (n = 4 per group) were treated and killed 21 days later without mating. Fourteen days after mating, numbers of ovarian corpora lutea, total uterine implants, and embryos were evaluated. For unmated animals, uterine sections were examined for fibrosis and lumen closure. Neither drug altered numbers of corpora lutea. Erythromycin decreased pregn...
This companion article offers an alternative interpretation for the quinacrine-induced uterine tu... more This companion article offers an alternative interpretation for the quinacrine-induced uterine tumors observed in a 2-year bioassay in rats (CaBio, Cancel et al., 2010), and provides additional data from two new experiments that support a different interpretation and analysis. Our major premise is that the design of the Cancel et al. bioassay was flawed, particularly regarding dose selection that allowed for misinterpretation of carcinogenic activity. We feel the totality of the information provided herein dictates that the doses (70/70, 70/250 and 70/350 mg/kg quinacrine) causing uterine tumors in their study clearly exceeded the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) typically administered in chronic cancer studies. Our new data support this conclusion and serve to explain the development of lesions, especially the uterine tumors, they have reported. We argue that the rat uterus is not a valid surrogate for the human fallopian tube. Further, we maintain that quinacrine is not genotoxic in vivo, as suggested in their paper. In summary, we believe that quinacrine is not carcinogenic in rats at doses that do not exceed the MTD.
The potential reproductive toxicity of a mixture of 25 chemicals (MIX) formulated to simulate con... more The potential reproductive toxicity of a mixture of 25 chemicals (MIX) formulated to simulate contaminated groundwater supplies near hazardous waste dumps was evaluated in CD-1 Swiss mice and Sprague-Dawley rats using the reproductive assessment by continuous breeding protocol. Male and female mice and rats were exposed to MIX in the drinking water at concentrations of 1, 5, and 10% of a technically achievable stock solution. For mice, body weight and feed consumption were not affected by MIX but water consumption was decreased for both the 5 and 10% MIX groups in both F0 and F1 animals. For F0 mice, the number of live pups/litter was decreased at 10% MIX and the number of females/litter was decreased 10 and 17% at the mid and high MIX dose, respectively. Vaginal cytology was normal, as were testis weight and testicular spermatid head count. For F1 mice, fertility was unaffected, but there was a decreased number of female pups/litter (19%) and a decreased adjusted live pup weight at 10% MIX. At necropsy, cauda epididymal sperm concentration and spermatid head count were reduced (20%) in the presence of normal testis, epididymis, prostate, seminal vesicle, liver, and kidney/adrenal weight. Female estrous cyclicity was altered at 5 and 10% MIX with normal kidney/adrenal, uterus, and ovary/oviduct weight. For rats, F0 body weight and feed consumption were not affected by MIX but water consumption was decreased 10, 30, and 40% in the low-, medium-, and high-dose MIX groups, respectively, and 39% in the high-dose MIX F1 animals. Rat fertility was normal but there was a decreased number of male pups/litter (11%) and a decreased live pup weight (6%) at 10% MIX. Male and female (F1) pup weights were decreased on Postnatal Days 0, 4, 7, 14, and 21 (10% MIX) and remained lower through necropsy on Day 120 +/- 10. F1 fertility was normal but F2 pup weights were decreased (10% MIX). At necropsy, F1 (10% MIX) male body weight was decreased 16% and relative kidney, testis, epididymis, and prostate weights were increased in the presence of normal sperm concentration percentage motile sperm and percentage abnormal sperm. Estrous cyclicity was normal as were kidney/adrenal and ovary weight while female liver weight was reduced 14%. In summary, a "cocktail" of 25 chemicals commonly found in contaminated groundwater at or near hazardous waste sites was administered in drinking water at doses which resulted in severely decreased water consumption in both mice and rats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
The potential reproductive toxicity of a mixture of 25 chemicals (MIX) formulated to simulate con... more The potential reproductive toxicity of a mixture of 25 chemicals (MIX) formulated to simulate contaminated groundwater supplies near hazardous waste dumps was evaluated in CD-1 Swiss mice and Sprague-Dawley rats using the reproductive assessment by continuous breeding protocol. Male and female mice and rats were exposed to MIX in the drinking water at concentrations of 1, 5, and 10% of a technically achievable stock solution. For mice, body weight and feed consumption were not affected by MIX but water consumption was decreased for both the 5 and 10% MIX groups in both F0 and F1 animals. For F0 mice, the number of live pups/litter was decreased at 10% MIX and the number of females/litter was decreased 10 and 17% at the mid and high MIX dose, respectively. Vaginal cytology was normal, as were testis weight and testicular spermatid head count. For F1 mice, fertility was unaffected, but there was a decreased number of female pups/litter (19%) and a decreased adjusted live pup weight at 10% MIX. At necropsy, cauda epididymal sperm concentration and spermatid head count were reduced (20%) in the presence of normal testis, epididymis, prostate, seminal vesicle, liver, and kidney/adrenal weight. Female estrous cyclicity was altered at 5 and 10% MIX with normal kidney/adrenal, uterus, and ovary/oviduct weight. For rats, F0 body weight and feed consumption were not affected by MIX but water consumption was decreased 10, 30, and 40% in the low-, medium-, and high-dose MIX groups, respectively, and 39% in the high-dose MIX F1 animals. Rat fertility was normal but there was a decreased number of male pups/litter (11%) and a decreased live pup weight (6%) at 10% MIX. Male and female (F1) pup weights were decreased on Postnatal Days 0, 4, 7, 14, and 21 (10% MIX) and remained lower through necropsy on Day 120 +/- 10. F1 fertility was normal but F2 pup weights were decreased (10% MIX). At necropsy, F1 (10% MIX) male body weight was decreased 16% and relative kidney, testis, epididymis, and prostate weights were increased in the presence of normal sperm concentration percentage motile sperm and percentage abnormal sperm. Estrous cyclicity was normal as were kidney/adrenal and ovary weight while female liver weight was reduced 14%. In summary, a "cocktail" of 25 chemicals commonly found in contaminated groundwater at or near hazardous waste sites was administered in drinking water at doses which resulted in severely decreased water consumption in both mice and rats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Carisoprodol (CARI), a commonly prescribed neuromuscular relaxant, was evaluated for reproductive... more Carisoprodol (CARI), a commonly prescribed neuromuscular relaxant, was evaluated for reproductive toxicity in Swiss CD-1 mice using the Reproductive Assessment by Continuous Breeding (RACB) protocol. Male and female mice were given CARI in corn oil suspension by daily gavage at doses of 0, 300, 750, and 1200 mg/kg body wt/day. Clinical signs of general toxicity in F0 animals included sedation, primarily in the high-dose group during the first week of exposure, and reduced body weight in high-dose females. CARI administration for 14 weeks did not affect the ability of the F0 animals to produce litters. However, decreases in proportion of pups born alive (4%) and absolute (5%) and adjusted live pup weight (7%) were observed at 1200 mg/kg CARI when compared to controls. In a crossover mating trial to determine the affected sex, there were no significant differences in the measured reproductive parameters. CARI at the high dose increased the proportion of time spent in proestrus and estrus, but cycle length was unaffected. At F0 necropsy (Week 27 of treatment), all sperm parameters were normal. Right epididymis and liver weights, relative to body weight, were increased (12 and 23%, respectively) over the control group for high-dose males. A mating trial to determine the fertility and reproductive competence of the F1 generation showed no effect of CARI on indices of mating, pregnancy, or fertility, the proportion of F2 pups born alive, the sex ratio of live F2 pups, live F2 pup weight, or gestation length.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Pesticides and fertilizers, as used in modern agriculture, contribute to the overall low-level co... more Pesticides and fertilizers, as used in modern agriculture, contribute to the overall low-level contamination of groundwater sources. In order to determine the potential of pesticide and fertilizer mixtures to produce reproductive or developmental toxicity at concentrations up to 100 x the median level found in groundwater, we prepared and studied two mixtures of pesticides and a fertilizer (ammonium nitrate). One mixture containing aldicarb, atrazine, dibromochloropropane, 1,2-dichloropropane, ethylene dibromide, and simazine plus ammonium nitrate was considered to be a representative of groundwater contamination in California (CAL). The other, containing alachlor, atrazine, cyanazine, metolachlor, metribuzin, and ammonium nitrate, simulated groundwater contamination in Iowa (IOWA). Each mixture was administered in the drinking water of either Swiss CD-1 mice during a Reproductive Assessment by Continuous Breeding study or pregnant Sprague-Dawley rats (gd 6-20) at three dose levels (1x, 10x, and 100x) where 1x was the median concentration of each pesticide component as determined in the groundwater surveys in California or Iowa. Unlike conventional toxicology studies, the purpose of this study was to evaluate the health effects of realistic human concentrations. Thus, the testing concentrations are probably well below the maximally tolerated dose. Propylene glycol was used as the solubilizer for the pesticides in drinking water formulations in both studies. In the reproductive study, neither mixture caused any clinical signs of toxicity, changes in food or water consumption, or body weight in either F0 or F1 mice at doses up to 100x the median groundwater concentrations. There were no treatment-related effects on fertility or any measures of reproductive performance of either the F0 or the F1 generation mice exposed to either CAL or IOWA at up to 100x. Similarly, measures of spermatogenesis, epididymal sperm concentration, percentage motile sperm, percentage abnormal sperm, and testicular and epididymal histology were normal. In the developmental study, CAL- or IOWA-exposed females did not exhibit any significant treatment-related clinical signs of toxicity. No adverse effects of CAL or IOWA were observed for measures of embryo/fetal toxicity, including resorptions per litter, live litter size, or fetal body weight. CAL or IOWA did not cause an increased incidence of fetal malformations or variations. In summary, administration of these pesticide/fertilizer mixtures at levels up to 100-fold greater than the median concentrations in groundwater supplies in California or Iowa did not cause any detectable reproductive (mice), general, or developmental toxicity (rats).
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