Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are ubiquitous environmental contaminants generated as byproducts of natural and anthropogenic combustion processes. Despite significant public health concern, physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modeling efforts for PAHs have so far been limited to naphthalene, plus simpler PK models for pyrene, nitropyrene, and benzo[a]pyrene (B[a]P). The dearth of published models is due in part to the high lipophilicity, low volatility, and myriad metabolic pathways for PAHs, all of which present analytical and experimental challenges. Our research efforts have focused upon experimental approaches and initial development of PBPK models for the prototypic PAH, B[a]P, and the more potent, albeit less studied transplacental carcinogen, dibenzo[def, p]chrysene (DBC). For both compounds, model compartments included arterial and venous blood, flow limited lung, liver, richly perfused and poorly perfused tissues, diffusion limited fat, and a two compartment theoretical gut (for oral exposures). Hepatic and pulmonary metabolism was described for both compounds, as were fractional binding in blood and fecal clearance. Partition coefficients for parent PAH along with their diol and tetraol metabolites were estimated using published algorithms and verified experimentally for the hydroxylated metabolites. The preliminary PBPK models were able to describe many, but not all, of the available data sets, comprising multiple routes of exposure (oral, intravenous) and nominal doses spanning several orders of magnitude. Supported by Award Number P42 ES016465 from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.
An extensive database on the toxicity and modes of action of ethylene glycol (EG) has been developed over the past several decades. Although renal toxicity has long been recognized as a potential outcome, in recent years developmental toxicity, an effect observed only in rats and mice, has become the subject of extensive research and regulatory reviews to establish guidelines for human exposures. The developmental toxicity of EG has been attributed to the intermediate metabolite, glycolic acid (GA), which can become a major metabolite when EG is administered to rats and mice at high doses and dose rates. Therefore, a physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model was developed to integrate the extensive mode of action and pharmacokinetic data on EG and GA for use in developmental risk assessments. The resulting PBPK model includes inhalation, oral, dermal, intravenous, and subcutaneous routes of administration. Metabolism of EG and GA were described in the liver with elimination via the kidneys. Metabolic rate constants and partition coefficients for EG and GA were estimated from in vitro studies. Other biochemical constants were optimized from appropriate in vivo pharmacokinetic studies. Several controlled rat and human metabolism studies were used to validate the resulting PBPK model. When internal dose surrogates were compared in rats and humans over a broad range of exposures, it was concluded that humans are unlikely to achieve blood levels of GA that have been associated with developmental toxicity in rats following occupational or environmental exposures.
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are ubiquitous environmental contaminants generated during combustion. Dibenzo[def,p]chrysene (DBC) is a high molecular weight PAH classified as a 2B carcinogen by the International Agency for Research on Cancer. DBC crosses the placenta in exposed mice, causing carcinogenicity in offspring. We present pharmacokinetic data of DBC in pregnant and nonpregnant mice. Pregnant (gestational day 17) and nonpregnant female B6129SF1/J mice were exposed to 15mg/kg DBC by oral gavage. Subgroups of mice were sacrificed up to 48h postdosing, and blood, excreta, and tissues were analyzed for DBC and its major diol and tetrol metabolites. Elevated maximum concentrations and areas under the curve of DBC and its metabolites were observed in blood and tissues of pregnant animals compared with naïve mice. Using a physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model, we found observed differences in pharmacokinetics could not be attributed solely to changes in tissue volumes and blood flows that occur during pregnancy. Measurement of enzyme activity in naïve and pregnant mice by activity-based protein profiling indicated a 2- to 10-fold reduction in activities of many of the enzymes relevant to PAH metabolism. Incorporating this reduction into the PBPK model improved model predictions. Concentrations of DBC in fetuses were one to two orders of magnitude below maternal blood concentrations, whereas metabolite concentrations closely resembled those observed in maternal blood.
Purpose: To investigate the ability of proton ( 1 H) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to distinguish between pulmonary inflammation and fibrosis. Materials and Methods:Three groups of Sprague-Dawley rats (n ¼ 5) were instilled intratracheally with bleomycin (2.5 U/kg or 3.5 U/kg) in saline or with saline only. Rats were imaged at 2.0 Tesla using a multi-slice Carr-PurcellMeilboom-Gill (CPMG) sequence with 6 ms echo spacing. Signal intensity (S 0 ) and T 2 were calculated on a pixel-bypixel basis using images collected before dosing and 1, 2, 4, and 7 weeks after. At each time point, data from dosed animals were compared with controls, and bivariate statistical analysis was used to classify image pixels containing abnormal tissue. At week 7, pulmonary function tests were performed, then all rats were killed, left lungs were formalin fixed and tri-chrome stained for histological analysis of collagen content, and right lungs were used to measure water and hydroxyproline (collagen) content. Results:The product S 0 ÂT 2 significantly correlated with water and collagen content in the high-dose group (P ¼ 0.004 and P ¼ 0.03, respectively). However, S 0 and T 2 of abnormal tissue were correlated for all time points (r ¼ 0.93, P < 0.001), and could not distinguish inflammation from fibrosis.Conclusion: MRI can be used to confidently localize pulmonary inflammation and fibrosis, but it lacks specificity.
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