Chlorpyrifos (CPF) is a common organophosphorus (OP) pesticide. Previous studies have demonstrated that neonatal rats are more sensitive than adults to the acute toxicity of high dosages of CPF. The present study examined lethality and age-related differences in neurochemical indicators and functional signs of neurotoxicity following a broad range of acute and repeated oral CPF exposures. There was about a 9-fold difference in sensitivity to the acute-dose lethality of chlorpyrifos among neonatal (7 days-of-age) and adult (90 days-of-age) rats (LD(10): neonates = 15 mg/kg; adults = 136 mg/kg), while juvenile rats (21 days-of-age) exhibited intermediate sensitivity (LD(10) = 47 mg/kg). Neonatal and adult rats (n = 5-7/treatment/age group/time point) were given CPF (0, 0.15, 0.45, 0. 75, 1.5, 4.5, 7.5, or 15 mg/kg/day) for 14 days and sacrificed 4 h after either the first or 14th dose for neurochemical measurements (cholinesterase activity in frontal cortex, plasma and RBC, and muscarinic ([(3)H]QNB) and nicotinic ([(3)H]epibatidine) receptor binding in frontal cortex. No overt signs of functional toxicity (involuntary movements, SLUD signs) were noted in either age group by 4 h after the first dose. With repeated CPF exposures, however, signs of cholinergic toxicity were noted in both age groups at the higher dose levels [no observed effect levels (NOELs): neonate = 4.5 mg/kg/day; adult = 7.5 mg/kg/day]. Similar degrees of ChE inhibition were noted in neonatal brain and blood fractions following acute exposure, but substantial ChE inhibition was only noted in adult plasma and RBC 4 h after the first treatment. Following repeated CPF exposures, similar degrees of ChE inhibition were again noted in tissues from immature animals, but a wide range of sensitivity to inhibition was noted in adult tissues. NOELs based on ChE inhibition for adults were about 1->/=10-fold higher than in neonates with acute exposure but only 0.2-2 times higher with repeated dosing. Moreover, dose-related inhibition of brain ChE was similar between age groups, and similar reductions in both QNB and epibatidine binding were noted between the age groups after repeated dosing, even though by the end of the dosing period young animals (juveniles) were still about 3 times more sensitive than adults, based on acute lethality. We conclude that while immature animals can be markedly more sensitive to lethal effects of high doses of CPF, lesser or no age-related differences are apparent, based on non-lethal endpoints, in particular with repeated exposures.
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