With advancements in whole slide imaging technology and improved understanding of the features of pathologist workstations required for digital slide evaluation, many institutions are investigating broad digital pathology adoption. The benefits of digital pathology evaluation include remote access to study or diagnostic case materials and integration of analysis and reporting tools. Diagnosis based on whole slide images is established in human medical pathology, and the use of digital pathology in toxicologic pathology is increasing. However, there has not been broad adoption in toxicologic pathology, particularly in the context of regulatory studies, due to lack of precedence. To address this topic, as well as practical aspects, the European Society of Toxicologic Pathology coordinated an expert international workshop to assess current applications and challenges and outline a set of minimal requirements needed to gain future regulatory acceptance for the use of digital toxicologic pathology workflows in research and development, so that toxicologic pathologists can benefit from digital slide technology.
The European Society of Toxicologic Pathology organized an expert workshop in May 2018 to address adversity considerations related to thyroid follicular cell hypertrophy and/or hyperplasia (FCHH), which is a common finding in nonclinical toxicity studies that can have important implications for risk assessment of pharmaceuticals, food additives, and environmental chemicals. The broad goal of the workshop was to facilitate better alignment in toxicologic pathology and regulatory sciences on how to determine adversity of FCHH. Key objectives were to describe common mechanisms leading to thyroid FCHH and potential functional consequences; provide working criteria to assess adversity of FCHH in context of associated findings; and describe additional methods and experimental data that may influence adversity determinations. The workshop panel was comprised of representatives from the European Union, Japan, and the United States. Participants shared case examples illustrating issues related to adversity assessments of thyroid changes. Provided here are summary discussions, key case presentations, and panel recommendations. This information should increase consistency in the interpretation of adverse changes in the thyroid based on pathology findings in nonclinical toxicity studies, help integrate new types of biomarker data into the review process, and facilitate a more systematic approach to communicating adversity determinations in toxicology reports.
Lysosomes have a central role in cellular catabolism, trafficking, and processing of foreign particles. Accumulation of endogenous and exogenous materials in lysosomes represents a common finding in nonclinical toxicity studies. Histologically, these accumulations often lack distinctive features indicative of lysosomal or cellular dysfunction, making it difficult to consistently interpret and assign adverse dose levels. To help address this issue, the European Society of Toxicologic Pathology organized a workshop where representative types of lysosomal accumulation induced by pharmaceuticals and environmental chemicals were presented and discussed. The expert working group agreed that the diversity of lysosomal accumulations requires a case-by-case weight-of-evidence approach and outlined several factors to consider in the adversity assessment, including location and type of cell affected, lysosomal contents, severity of the accumulation, and related pathological effects as evidence of cellular or organ dysfunction. Lysosomal accumulations associated with cytotoxicity, inflammation, or fibrosis were generally considered to be adverse, while those found in isolation (without morphologic or functional consequences) were not. Workshop examples highlighted the importance of thoroughly characterizing the biological context of lysosomal effects, including mechanistic data and functional in vitro readouts if available. The information provided here should facilitate greater consistency and transparency in the interpretation of lysosomal effects.
Testosterone-repressed prostate message-2 (TRPM-2) was originally isolated and cloned from the regressing ventral prostate of the rat. In this tissue, and in other hormone-dependent tissues such as the mammary gland, this gene is induced in the absence of the appropriate trophic hormone. Sequence analysis of the cDNA and genomic clones of TRPM-2 have demonstrated that the coding sequence of this gene is identical to S35-S45 (also known as SGP-2 and clusterin), which is constitutively expressed by the Sertoli cells of the adult testis. Using Northern, slot blot, S1-nuclease analysis, and in situ hybridization, we have investigated the regulation of TRPM-2 expression in the testis and epididymis during development. Slot blot analysis of RNA extracted from the testis and epididymis of 7-, 14-, 28-, 35-, and 91-day-old rats demonstrates that the gene is induced to detectable levels between days 7 and 14 and that the relative level of expression does not change significantly after day 14. In situ hybridization using frozen sections of testis from day 2-, 7-, 14-, 28-, 35-, and 91-day-old rats confirms that there is little expression of TPRM-2 in the seminiferous epithelium of 7-day-old rats, but this increases considerably after 14 days, primarily in Sertoli cells but also in association with meiotic developing spermatogenic cells. However, TRPM-2 mRNA is expressed in the rete testis at 2 days of age, reaches a peak at 35 days of age, and continues to be expressed in the adult. Slot blot analysis demonstrates that TRPM-2 is also induced in the epididymis between 7 and 14 days of age, although, as has been demonstrated by in situ hybridization, TRPM-2 mRNA is detectable in the epithelial cells in the head of the epididymis but is barely detectable in the midportion or tail regions. Northern analysis suggests that the size of the TRPM-2 transcript in the testis also changes during development. In the early stages of testicular development, the TRPM-2 transcript appears to be a broad band of approximately 1.5 kb, while the transcript in the adult appears to be approximately 1.8 kb in length. S1-nuclease protection assays suggest that this increase in size is not due to differential splicing of the first exon of TRPM-2/SGP-2 and most probably reflects a difference in the polyadenylation of the mRNA in the testis at different times during development.
2′-methoxyethyl (MOE) antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) tested in multidose intrathecal nonhuman primate (NHP) toxicity studies have consistently revealed the presence of single large vacuoles in pyramidal neurons of the hippocampus in the absence of any cellular response. Termed “macrovesicular,” these vacuoles were characterized by immunohistochemistry and transmission electron microscopy which showed that these vacuoles are dilated lysosomes in neurons containing accumulated ASO. Additionally, two NHP studies were conducted to investigate the role of tissue fixation on their histogenesis. In Fixation Study 1, 6 doses of 5 mg 2′-MOE ASO with a full phosphorothioate backbone were administered by lumbar puncture over 5 weeks; in Fixation Study 2, 5 doses of 35 mg 2′-MOE ASO with a mixed phosphorothioate/phosphodiester backbone were administered over 12 weeks. At necropsy in each study, brain slices were either immersion fixed in neutral buffered 10% formalin or Carnoy’s fixative; frozen at −80 °C; or perfusion fixed with modified Karnovsky’s fixative. Fixed samples were processed to paraffin, sectioned, and stained with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) and compared with H&E cryosections prepared from the frozen tissue of the same brain. The presence of vacuoles in fixed brain tissue but never in fresh frozen tissue showed that they arose during postmortem tissue fixation, and as such represent a processing artifact that is not relevant to human safety assessment of intrathecally administered 2′-MOE ASOs.
Determining adversity of effects in toxicology studies continues to pose a dilemma to practicing toxicologists and pathologists. How this determination is made may follow either a focused or broad approach to assessing the study data. The choice of which approach is best is dependent on a variety of factors. Therefore, we present a philosophical perspective on the determination of adversity across toxicology studies that may be applied in inhalation studies and those conducted by other routes of exposure.
Nonhuman primates (NHPs) are utilized in nonclinical safety testing due to their phylogenetic proximity to humans and similarity in physiology and anatomy. However, ethical considerations and the increased demand for NHPs, coupled with the current shortage in their supply, have increased the calls to minimize their use. In addition, the increased demand and supply shortage of NHPs have increased the use of animals sourced from different geographical origins, and animals of different ages, which can complicate the interpretation of study results. Coupled with the relative uniqueness of findings induced by novel therapeutic modalities, there is an increasing need for a deeper understanding of the systemic pathobiology of NHPs. Here we provide a brief preview of the two main themes discussed in this special issue, which include the influence of geographical origin, age, and sex on background pathology, clinical pathology reference values, other relevant toxicology endpoints, and organ system pathology.
We have previously reported that a heterodimeric protein secreted by rat Sertoli cells is antigenically related to a protein associated with outer dense fibers of the sperm tail. Therefore, we have explored the possibility that Sertoli and spermatogenic cells express a similar gene encoding a homologous protein. A Sertoli cell heterodimeric protein cDNA probe recognizes specific mRNA in pachytene and round spermatids fractionated by centrifugal elutriation; however, this specific mRNA was less prominent than in cultured Sertoli cells. In agreement with these observations, in situ hybridization experiments show that Sertoli cells are predominantly engaged in active heterodimeric protein mRNA synthesis, while meiotic prophase spermatocytes and spermatids also show significant but less abundant specific mRNA. Immunoblotting experiments demonstrate that, while Sertoli cells synthesize a heterodimeric protein consisting of two disulfide-linked components with molecular masses of 45 and 35 kD, both primary spermatocytes and round spermatids synthesize single 30 kD monomers not associated by disulfide linkage but recognized by antisera to Sertoli cell heterodimeric protein. Immunoblotting and immunogold electron microscopic studies show that antisera to Sertoli cell heterodimeric protein recognize a protein associated with outer dense fibers. This immunoreactivity was abolished by a 5-min pronase treatment, without affecting the integrity of outer dense fibers. Results of this study and previous studies demonstrate that both Sertoli and spermatogenic cells express a similar gene and that an antigenically related product encoded by this gene becomes associated with outer dense fibers during their assembly at spermiogenesis.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
334 Leonard St
Brooklyn, NY 11211
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.