Literature DB >> 28472308

The OECD's micronucleus test guideline for single exposure to an agent and the genotox-kinetic alternative.

Pedro Morales-Ramírez1, Teresita Vallarino-Kelly1, Virginia Leticia Cruz-Vallejo1.   

Abstract

The 'Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) guidelines for the Testing of Chemicals' aims to identify whether a chemical is a genotoxic hazard, and these guidelines 'are periodically reviewed in the light of scientific progress, changing regulatory needs and animal welfare considerations'. OECD published a mammalian erythrocyte micronucleus test guideline for testing chemicals (1) that proposes: 'Animals are treated with the test chemical once…Samples of peripheral blood are taken at least twice (from the same group of animals), starting not earlier than 36 h after treatment, with appropriate intervals following the first sample, but not extending beyond 72 h'. This guidelines are base on the report by the Collaborative Study Group for the Micronucleus Test (CSGMT), which was based on the sampling of mice peripheral blood every 24 h We investigated the kinetics of micronucleus induction by taking samples prior to administration and every 8 or 10 h after single treatment. The comparisons suggest that 24-h sampling could cause not only an underestimation of the responses to various agents but also a misestimation of the time of maximal induction. We proposed that samples of peripheral blood must be collected at two different times during an optimal 25-h sampling range (from 25 to 50 h). Besides, we hypothesize that the time of maximal EPC-MN induction depends on the time required for the mechanisms involved in micronucleus production; and we suggest that a kinetic analysis of MN-PCE induction by several agents with well-known mechanisms of micronuclei induction would allow derivation of a specific relationship between the kinetics of MN-PCE induction and some process of DNA breaks and/or micronuclei induction.
© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the UK Environmental Mutagen Society. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28472308     DOI: 10.1093/mutage/gex010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mutagenesis        ISSN: 0267-8357            Impact factor:   3.000


  3 in total

1.  Assessment of the cytotoxic effects of aporphine prototypes on head and neck cancer cells.

Authors:  Dorival Mendes Rodrigues-Junior; Nicolie Melanie de Almeida Pontes; Gabriela Estrela de Albuquerque; Viviane Carlin; Givago Prado Perecim; Cristiano Raminelli; André Luiz Vettore
Journal:  Invest New Drugs       Date:  2019-05-17       Impact factor: 3.850

2.  Antinociceptive activity of Copaifera officinalis Jacq. L oil and kaurenoic acid in mice.

Authors:  Diéssica Padilha Dalenogare; Paula Ronsani Ferro; Samira Dal Toé De Prá; Flávia Karine Rigo; Caren Tatiane de David Antoniazzi; Amanda Spring de Almeida; Adriani Paganini Damiani; Giulia Strapazzon; Thanielly Thais de Oliveira Sardinha; Nathália Coral Galvani; Aline Augusti Boligon; Vanessa Moraes de Andrade; Evelyne da Silva Brum; Sara Marchesan Oliveira; Gabriela Trevisan
Journal:  Inflammopharmacology       Date:  2019-05-16       Impact factor: 4.473

Review 3.  Idiopathic Infertility as a Feature of Genome Instability.

Authors:  Agrita Puzuka; Baiba Alksere; Linda Gailite; Juris Erenpreiss
Journal:  Life (Basel)       Date:  2021-06-29
  3 in total

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