Company Profile
What's New
Product Information
Applications Info
Tech Reference List
Information Request
Contact Us
Careers
Email Newsletter
Frequently Asked Questions
In Vitro Basics
In Vitro Toxicology Testing (Non-Animal Safety Testing)
Nanoparticle Research Using MatTek Human Tissue Constructs
Site Map
Search




MatTek Corporation
200 Homer Avenue
Ashland, MA  01721
508-881-6771
FAX:  508-879-1532
E-mail Us

Reproducibility Guaranteed!
Front page
Search

Category: Technical References, EpiDerm, EpiAirway

566. EVALUATION OF IN VITRO MODELS FOR REACH TOXICITY TESTING: INDUCIBILITY OF XENOBIOTIC METABOLIZING ENZYME (XME) ACTIVITY IN IN VITRO HUMAN AIRWAY (EPIAIRWAY™) AND EPIDERMAL (EPIDERM™) MODELS.


Bolmarcich1, J., Zhao2, G., Morgan2, L., Jackson, Jr.1, G.R., Klausner1, M., Falzareno2, T. and Hayden1, P.J. 1MatTek Corporation, Ashland, Massachusetts, USA. 2Tandem Labs, Woburn, Massachusetts, USA. Presented at 49th Annual SOT Meeting, Salt Lake City, Utah (2010). Summary:

Dermal and airway epithelia contain XMEs including phase I (oxidative) and phase II (conjugative) activities. These XMEs may play a role in biotransformation of drugs and chemicals, leading to altered drug activity or formation of toxic/mutagenic metabolites. Consideration of metabolic activity is therefore important for development of in vitro toxicity/genotoxicty assays required by REACH and similar testing programs.

Baseline XME activity of dermal and airway epithelia is reportedly low, however many XMEs may be inducible via various nuclear receptor pathways. To evaluate inducibility of XME, in vitro human epidermal (EpiDerm™) and airway epithelial (EpiAirway™) models were exposed to a chemical cocktail including 3-methylcholanthrene (AhR activator), Rifampicin (CAR/PXR activator), Clofibric acid (PPAR activator), Chlorpromazine (CAR activator), and T-butylhydroquinone (ARE/EpRE activator). Induction of XME expression was evaluated by qPCR arrays containing 168 Phase I/II XME genes.

The airway model expressed higher levels of many XMEs. Remarkably, CYP1A1 was induced 337-fold and 225-fold in EpiAirway™ and EpiDerm™, respectively. To determine induction of Phase I activity, a substrate cocktail was incubated with the models and metabolites were determined by LC/MS or fluorimetry. Baseline metabolism activity was very low. Significant induction of metabolic activity was observed only for the CYP1A1/CYP1B1 substrate.

The results indicate that numerous changes in XME expression levels can be induced in epithelial tissues by nuclear receptor pathways. However, with the exception of CYP1A1/1B1, Phase I XME metabolic activity in human epidermal and airway epithelium appears to be low.

==================== Request an Electronic Copy (PDF format) of this Technical Paper ==================== EpiDerm Data Sheet EpiDerm Specifications EpiDerm Technical References ==================== EpiAirway Data Sheet EpiAirway Specifications EpiAirway Technical References


Keywords: 1-OH-bufuralol, 1-OH-midazolam, 4-OH-tolbutamide, 6-OH-clorzoxazone, ARE/EpRE activator, AhR activator, Biotransformation, CAR activator, CAR/PXR activator, CYP1A1, PPAR activator, Phase I XME Expression, Phase II XME Expression, Xenobiotic metabolizing enzyme (XME), qPCR

Materials Tested: 3-methylcholanthrene, Bufuralol, Chlorpromazine, Clofibric acid, Clorzoxazone, Midazolam, Rifampicin, T-buthydroquinone, Tolbutamide



Top