Publications by authors named "Nigel P Moore"

In order to evaluate the role of the placenta in the etiology of ethylene glycol (EG) developmental toxicity, the distribution of EG and its main metabolites, glycolic acid (GA) and oxalic acid (OX), into the conceptus was determined at the beginning and completion of placentation in the rat and rabbit. Two groups (n = 28) of timed-pregnant Wistar rats were administered EG (1000 mg/kg bw/day, oral gavage) from gestation day (GD) 6 to either GD 11 or GD 16; similarly, two groups (n = 28) of timed-pregnant New Zealand White rabbits were administered EG from GD 6 to either GD 10 or GD 19. Four animals from each group were sacrificed at 1, 3, 6, 9, 12, 18, or 24 h after the final administration, and maternal blood, extraembryonic fluid, and embryonic tissue were removed for analysis of EG, GA, and OX.

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Ethanolamine (EA) reduced implantation success in a two-generation reproduction toxicity study; the aim of this work was to explore the underlying basis for this response. When administered to pregnant rats during gestation days (GD) 1-3, 4-5, or 6-7, EA had no effect upon implantation success. In a second experiment, EA was administered either in the diet or by oral gavage from two weeks prior to mating through to GD 8.

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Ethylene glycol (EG) is a developmental toxicant in pregnant rats and mice. A suggested mechanism for this toxicity is that the EG metabolite, glycolic acid (GA), causes acidosis which may affect the embryonic heart rate (HR). This inhibition would cause periods of embryonic bradycardia and arrhythmia resulting in increased embryonic death and malformation in surviving embryos.

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Ethylene oxide (EO) is a direct acting alkylating agent; in vitro and in vivo studies indicate that it is both a mutagen and a carcinogen. However, it remains unclear whether the mode of action (MOA) for cancer for EO is a mutagenic MOA, specifically via point mutation. To investigate the MOA for EO-induced mouse lung tumors, male Big Blue (BB) B6C3F1 mice (10/group) were exposed to EO by inhalation, 6 hr/day, 5 days/week for 4 (0, 10, 50, 100, or 200 ppm EO), 8, or 12 weeks (0, 100, or 200 ppm EO).

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The distribution of monocarboxylate transporter (MCT) isoforms 1 and 4, which mediate the plasmalemmal transport of l-lactic and pyruvic acids, has been identified in the placentae of rats and rabbits at different ages of gestation. Groups of three pregnant Sprague-Dawley rats and New Zealand White rabbits were sacrificed on gestation days (GD) 11, 14, 18, or 20 and on GD 13, 18, or 28, respectively. Placentae were removed and processed for immunohistochemical detection of MCT1 and MCT4.

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The extended one-generation reproduction toxicity study (EOGRTS; OECD test guideline 433) is a new and technically complex design to evaluate the putative effects of chemicals on fertility and development, including effects upon the developing nervous and immune systems. In addition to offering a more comprehensive assessment of developmental toxicity, the EOGRTS offers important improvements in animal welfare through reduction and refinement in a modular study design. The challenge to the practitioner is to know how the modular aspects of the study should be triggered on the basis of prior knowledge of a particular chemical, or on earlier findings in the EOGRTS itself, requirements of specific regulatory frameworks notwithstanding.

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Histiotrophic nutrition via the visceral yolk sac is an essential nutritional pathway of the rodent conceptus, and inhibition of this pathway may cause growth retardation, malformations, and death in rodent embryos. Morphologic differences among species during early development indicate that the visceral yolk sac histiotrophic nutrition pathway may be of lesser importance in nonrodent species, including humans. Here, comparative studies were conducted with inhibitors of different steps in the visceral yolk sac histiotrophic nutrition pathway to determine whether the rabbit is similarly responsive to the rat.

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Glutathione (GSH), glutathione disulfide (GSSG) and 2-hydroxyethylated glutathione (HESG) are important biomarkers for exploring the genotoxicity mechanism of ethylene oxide (EO) or ethylene in vivo. A liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry method was developed for simultaneous determination of GSH, GSSG and HESG in mouse lung tissues after inhalation exposure to EO. The lower limit of quantitation for all these biomarkers was 0.

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2-Hydroxyethylated and oxidative DNA nucleosides (DNA adduct biomarkers), such as O6-(2-hydroxyethyl)-2'-deoxyguanosine (O6HEdG), N6-(2-hydroxyethyl)-2'-deoxyadenosine (N6HEdA), 1-(2-hydroxyethyl)-2'-deoxyadenosine (N1HEdA), and 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdG), N2,3-etheno-2'-deoxyguanosine (N2,3-ethenodG), α-methyl-γ-hydroxy-1,N2-propano-2'-deoxyguanosine (CrotondG), are important proposed biomarkers for exploring the genotoxicity mechanism of ethylene oxide (EO) in vivo. A liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometric method was developed for the simultaneous determination of O6HEdG, N6HEdA, N1HEdA, 8-OHdG, CrotondG, and N2,3-ethenodG together with regular 2'-deoxyguanosine (dG), and 2'-deoxyadenosine (dA) nucleosides in the DNA extracted from mouse lung tissues for the assessment of exposure to EO after inhalation. The lower limits of quantitation for 8-OHdG, CrotondG, N2,3-EthenodG, O6HEdG, N1HEdA, N6HEdA, dG, and dA were 0.

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High dose gavage administration of ethylene glycol (EG) induces teratogenicity in rodents, but not in rabbits, resulting from saturation of intermediate EG metabolism and glycolic acid (GA) accumulation. In vivo, rat embryos sequester GA 2-4-fold higher than maternal blood, a phenomenon absent in rabbits and proposed not to occur in humans. This research explored the mechanisms of GA disposition into rat and rabbit conceptuses using whole embryo culture (WEC).

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The Globally Harmonised System of Classification (GHS) is a framework within which the intrinsic hazards of substances may be determined and communicated. It is not a legislative instrument per se, but is enacted into national legislation with the appropriate legislative instruments. GHS covers many aspects of effects upon health and the environment, including adverse effects upon sexual function and fertility or on development.

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Ethylene oxide (EO) is a genotoxicant and a mouse lung carcinogen, but whether EO is carcinogenic through a mutagenic mode of action remains unclear. To investigate this question, 8-week-old male Big Blue B6C3F₁ mice (10 mice/group) were exposed to EO by inhalation-6 h/day, 5 days/week for 4 weeks (0, 10, 50, 100, or 200 ppm EO) and 8 or 12 weeks (0, 100, or 200 ppm EO). Lung DNA samples were analyzed for levels of 3 K-ras codon 12 mutations (GGT→GAT, GGT→GTT, and GGT→TGT) using ACB-PCR.

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The National Toxicology Program (NTP) database of technical reports on carcinogenicity bioassays has been interrogated for the incidence of primary pulmonary neoplasms in B6C3F1 mice. A total of 170 study reports were selected, from studies that completed the in-life phase during 1983-2007, which included neoplasm incidence data for 180 control groups comprising both male and female mice. The incidence (median and inter-quartile range) of males with alveolar/bronchiolar adenoma was 16% (12-20%), and for females it was 5% (2-8%); the incidence of males with alveolar/bronchiolar carcinoma was 8% (4-12%), and for females it was 2% (0-4%); and the incidence of males with combined alveolar/bronchiolar adenoma or carcinoma was 24% (18-30%), and for females it was 8% (6-12%).

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Acute systemic toxicity data (LD50 values) and hazard classifications derived in the rat following oral administration and dermal application have been analysed to examine whether or not orally-derived hazard classification or LD50 values can be used to determine dermal hazard classification. Comparing the oral and dermal classifications for 335 substances derived from oral and dermal LD50 values respectively revealed 17% concordance, and indicated that 7% of substances would be classified less severely while 76% would be classified more severely if oral classifications were applied directly to the dermal route. In contrast, applying the oral LD50 values within the dermal classification criteria to determine the dermal classification reduced the concordance to 15% and the relative 'under-classification' to 1%, but increased the relative 'over-classification' to 84%.

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Introduction: The emerging field of epigenetics has revealed a new layer of gene regulation that is only now being fully explored. Concomitant with the increase in our understanding of epigenetic regulation are questions as to the role environmental factors may play in altering the epigenome. As these correlations between epigenetic changes and toxicity are made, the natural next question is if the current safety assessment paradigm utilizing a no-observed-adverse-effect level (NOAEL) is protective of public health for an epigenetic mechanism.

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N-(2-aminoethyl)ethanolamine (AEEA) caused aneurysms of the great vessels in rats exposed in utero and during the first days post partum, exacerbated by postnatal treatment of the lactating dams (Moore et al., 2012). The purpose of this work was to examine the systemic availability of AEEA during gestation and early lactation.

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The reproductive and developmental toxicity of aminoethylethanolamine was evaluated in a standard screening study (OECD, 1995: Organisation for economic co-operation and development. Paris, France), in which groups of Wistar rats (10/sex/group) were administered the test substance by gavage at dosage levels of 50, 250, or 1000 mg/kg/day (groups 2-4, respectively). A control group received the vehicle, doubly distilled water.

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N-(2-Aminoethyl)ethanolamine (AEEA) induced malformations of the great vessels in the offspring of rats treated during gestation and early lactation (Schneider et al., 2012. Birth Defects Res B Dev Reprod Toxicol [in press]).

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Dissecting aortic aneurysms, generally involving the thoracic aorta, have been shown to be caused by specific aliphatic amines in developing rats. Whether such lesions might occur spontaneously in control rats is not known. Therefore, in this study, 1,016 four-day-old, untreated rats culled from ongoing scheduled breeding studies were subjected to gross and histopathological examination in order to create a background control data base on the incidence of spontaneous aortic dissecting aneurysms.

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The dermal penetration of undiluted monopropylene glycol (MPG) and dipropylene glycol (DPG) has been measured in vitro using human abdominal skin under conditions of infinite dose application, and the results compared with predictions from the SKINPERM QSAR model (ten Berge, 2009). The measured steady-state penetration rates (Jss) for MPG and DPG were 97.6 and 39.

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