Literature DB >> 11399796

Growth and development in rats given recombinant human epidermal growth factor(1-48) as neonates.

J W Henck1, J F Reindel, J A Anderson.   

Abstract

To assess effects of supraphysiologic doses of human recombinant epidermal growth factor(1-48) (rhEGF(1-48)) on neonatal rats, 10 litters of Wistar rats/treatment group were given 0 (formulated vehicle), 10, 100, or 1000 microg/kg daily by subcutaneous injection on postnatal days (PND) 1 through 6. Clinical signs, body weight, acquisition of developmental landmarks and reflexes, and behavior were monitored during treatment and for 5 weeks thereafter (to PND 42). A subset of animals was euthanized weekly from PND 7-28 and necropsied. Selected tissues were examined microscopically. Body weight gain at 1000 microg/kg during treatment was significantly less than control. Precocious incisor eruption, eye opening, vaginal opening, and preputial separation occurred at 100 and/or 1000 microg/kg. Acquisition of reflexes (negative geotaxis, wire maneuver, acoustic startle reflex, and visual placing) was delayed at 1000 microg/kg. Acquisition of adult locomotion was also delayed at 1000 microg/kg. These effects were transient, as locomotor activity at PND 28 and 42 did not differ from control. Effects on acoustic-startle responding persisted in females to final assessment on PND 42. Habituation to repeated acoustic stimuli was impaired, as well as response inhibition following a prepulse acoustic stimulus. rhEGF(1-48) induced structural changes in the skin, retina, kidney, oral and nasal mucosa, lung, and liver. Many of these changes were consistent with the expected mitogenic activity of rhEGF(1-48) and were transient in nature, as severity and incidence diminished with time. An exception was changes observed in the retina at 1000 microg/kg (rosettes/folds and focal defects in the outer nuclear/photoreceptor layers) that were still present 3 weeks after termination of treatment. Acceleration of developmental landmarks; suppression of reflexes, behavior, and somatic growth; and mitogenic responses in epidermal tissues have been reported in rodents treated with epidermal growth factor (EGF) derived from various mammalian species. These results demonstrate that a 48-amino acid fragment of human EGF produced by recombinant technology also induces such effects.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11399796     DOI: 10.1093/toxsci/62.1.80

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Toxicol Sci        ISSN: 1096-0929            Impact factor:   4.849


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