Literature DB >> 24747293

A robotic BG1Luc reporter assay to detect estrogen receptor agonists.

Matthew A Stoner1, Chun Z Yang1, George D Bittner2.   

Abstract

Endocrine disrupting chemicals with estrogenic activity (EA) have been associated with various adverse health effects. US agencies (ICCVAM/NICEATM) tasked to assess in vitro transcription activation assays to detect estrogenic receptor (ER) agonists for EA have recently validated a BG1Luc assay in manual format, but prefer robotic formats. We have developed a robotic BG1Luc EA assay to detect EA that demonstrated 100% concordance with ICCVAM meta-analyses and ICCVAM BG1Luc results in manual format for 27 ICCVAM test substances, i.e. no false negatives or false positives. This robotic assay also consistently assessed other, more problematic ICCVAM test substances such as clomiphene citrate, L-thyroxin, and tamoxifen. Agonist responses using this robotic BG1Luc assay were consistently inhibited by the ER antagonist ICI 182,780, confirming that agonist responses were due to binding to ERs rather than to a non-specific agonist response. This robotic assay also detected EA in complex mixtures of substances such as extracts of personal care products, plastic resins or plastic consumer products. This robotic BG1Luc assay had at least as high accuracy and greater sensitivity and repeatability when compared to its manual version or to the other ICCVAM/OECD validated assays for EA (manual BG1Luc and CERI).
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  BG1Luc; Bisphenol A; Endocrine disruptor; Estrogen; Estrogenic activity; Tritan™

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24747293      PMCID: PMC4088324          DOI: 10.1016/j.tiv.2014.03.013

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Toxicol In Vitro        ISSN: 0887-2333            Impact factor:   3.500


  22 in total

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Review 8.  Role of nutrition and environmental endocrine disrupting chemicals during the perinatal period on the aetiology of obesity.

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Review 9.  Components of plastic: experimental studies in animals and relevance for human health.

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2.  Chemicals having estrogenic activity can be released from some bisphenol A-free, hard and clear, thermoplastic resins.

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3.  Method Development for Effect-Directed Analysis of Endocrine Disrupting Compounds in Human Amniotic Fluid.

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