Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are a class of persistent organic pollutants with myriad biological effects, including carcinogenicity. We present data showing gender-specific genotoxicity in Fischer 344 transgenic BigBlue rodents exposed to 4-chlorobiphenyl (PCB3), a hydroxylated metabolite, and the positive control 3-methylcholanthrene (3-MC) where female rats are more resistant to the genotoxic effects of the test compounds compared to their male counterparts. This difference is further highlighted through our examination of gene expression, organ-specific weight changes, and tissue morphology. The purpose of the present study was to explores the complex and multifaceted issues of lower molecular weight PCBs as initiators of carcinogenesis, by examining the mutagenicity of PCB3, a hydroxylated metabolite (4′-OH-PCB3), and 3-methylcholanthrene (3-MC, positive control) in a transgenic rodent model. Previous findings indicated that PCB3 is mutagenic in the liver of male BigBlue transgenic rats under identical exposure conditions. We expected that female rats would be equally, if not more sensitive than male rats, since a 2-year carcinogenesis bioassay with Sprague-Dawley rats and commercial PCB mixtures reported much higher liver cancer rates in female than in male rats. The current study, however, revealed a similar trend in the mutation frequencies across all four treatment groups in females as reported previously in males, but increased variability among animals within each group and a lower overall effect, led to non significant differences in mutation frequencies. A closer analysis of the possible reasons for this negative result using microarray, organ weight and histology data comparisons shows that female Fischer 344 rats 1) had a higher baseline mutation frequency in the corn oil control group and greater variability than male rats; 2) responded with robust gene expression changes, which may also play a role in our observation of 3) highly increased liver, spleen, and lung weight in 3-MC and PCB3-treated animals and thus changed distribution and kinetics of the test compounds. Our analysis indicates that female transgenic BigBlue Fischer 344 rats are more resistant to PCB3 and 3-MC genotoxicity compared to their male counterparts.
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