| Literature DB >> 35094809 |
Xinyao Tang1, Yiyi Chen2, Xia Zhu3, Yeqiu Miao4, Dongxia Wang5, Jing Zhang6, Ruirui Li7, Lishi Zhang8, Jinyao Chen9.
Abstract
Alternariol monomethyl ether (AME), a typical Alternaria toxin, has often been detected in grains. We have measured the general toxicity and genotoxicity of AME with a 28-day multi-endpoint (Pig-a assay + in vivo micronucleus [MN] test + comet assay) platform. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were administered AME (1.84, 3.67, or 7.35 μg/kg body weight/day), N-Ethyl-N-nitrosourea (40 mg/kg body weight/day), or corn oil by gavage for 28 consecutive days. Another group (AME-high-dose + recovery) was maintained for a further 14 days after the end of the AME administration. Hematology and serum biochemistry results suggested that AME might compromise the immune system. The histopathology results indicated that AME can cause liver (inflammatory cell infiltration, steatosis, and edema), kidney (renal glomerular atrophy), and spleen (white pulp atrophy) damage. The genotoxicity results showed that AME can induce gene mutations, chromosome breakage, and DNA damage, but the effects were diminished after the recovery period. According to point-of-departure analysis (BMDL10), the risk to the population of exposure to AME cannot be ignored and further assessment is needed.Entities:
Keywords: Comet assay; Micronucleus test; Pig-a assay; Point of departure; Recovery period
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Year: 2021 PMID: 35094809 DOI: 10.1016/j.mrgentox.2021.503435
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mutat Res Genet Toxicol Environ Mutagen ISSN: 1383-5718 Impact factor: 2.873