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Title: Metabolism and testicular toxicity of 1,3-dinitrobenzene in the rat: evaluation of the stage-synchrony model.

Authors: Brown, C D; Jacobson, C F; Miller, M G

Published In Reprod Toxicol, (1997 Jan-Feb)

Abstract: Because many testicular toxicants cause damage to specific stages of spermatogenesis, the present study has investigated the utility of a model in which the testis is synchronized to contain only a few closely related spermatogenic stages. The susceptibility of different stages to 1,3-dinitrobenzene (1,3-DNB) toxicity was investigated in rats, the testes of which had been stage synchronized by a vitamin A depletion/repletion (VADR) procedure. 1,3-DNB (25 mg/kg, IP) or vehicle was injected 58, 61, or 78 d after vitamin A readministration, and testicular histopathology was evaluated 48 h later. At the time of sacrifice, testes in the three groups were synchronized to stages I-VI, VII-IX, or X-XIV+I. The data indicated that tubules in all stages of spermatogenesis, in both synchronized and unsynchronized animals, demonstrated histopathologic changes in response to 1,3-DNB. However, the lesion seen in synchronized animals was more severe and less stage specific than that seen in weight-matched, unsynchronized animals. This increase in degree of susceptibility could be partially explained by differences in toxicokinetics. Stage-synchronized testes could provide unique insights into stage-specific cellular and molecular events, especially for in vitro studies where the stage enrichment could be maximally exploited. However, results obtained from in vivo toxicity studies using animals subjected to VADR should be interpreted carefully in light of the confounding physiologic/metabolic perturbations potentially induced by the VADR procedure.

PubMed ID: 9138634 Exiting the NIEHS site

MeSH Terms: No MeSH terms associated with this publication

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