Cargando…
Sexually dimorphic behavioral responses to prenatal dioxin exposure.
Pregnant Sprague-Dawley rats received a single oral dose of 0, 20, 60, or 180 ng/kg 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin on day 8 of gestation. Each litter contributed a single male-female pair trained to press a lever to obtain food pellets under two operant behavior procedures. Initially, each leve...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
2002
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1240764/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11882475 |
_version_ | 1782125228319571968 |
---|---|
author | Hojo, Rieko Stern, Sander Zareba, Grazyna Markowski, Vincent P Cox, Christopher Kost, James T Weiss, Bernard |
author_facet | Hojo, Rieko Stern, Sander Zareba, Grazyna Markowski, Vincent P Cox, Christopher Kost, James T Weiss, Bernard |
author_sort | Hojo, Rieko |
collection | PubMed |
description | Pregnant Sprague-Dawley rats received a single oral dose of 0, 20, 60, or 180 ng/kg 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin on day 8 of gestation. Each litter contributed a single male-female pair trained to press a lever to obtain food pellets under two operant behavior procedures. Initially, each lever press was reinforced. The fixed-ratio (FR) requirement was then increased every four sessions from the initial setting of 1 to values between 6 and 71. We then studied responses for 30 days under a multiple schedule combining FR 11 and another schedule requiring a pause of at least 10 sec between responses (DRL 10-sec). TCDD evoked a sexually dimorphic response pattern. Generally, TCDD-exposed males responded at lower rates than control males. In contrast, exposed females responded at higher rates than controls. Each response measure from the mult-FR DRL schedule yielded a male-female difference score. We used the differences in response rate to calculate benchmark doses based on the relative displacement from modeled zero-dose performance of the effective dose at 1% (ED(01)) and 10% (ED(10)), as determined by a second-order polynomial fit to the dose-effect function. For the male-female difference in FR rate of responding, the mean ED(10) was 2.77 ng/kg with a 95% lower bound of 1.81 ng/kg. The corresponding ED(01) was 0.27 ng/kg with a 95% lower bound of 0.18 ng/kg. For the male-female difference in DRL rate, the mean ED(10) was 2.97 ng/kg with a 95% lower bound of 2.02 ng/kg. The corresponding ED(01) was 0.30 ng/kg with a 95% lower bound of 0.20 ng/kg. These values fall close to, but below, current estimates of human body burdens of 13 ng/kg, based on TCDD toxic equivalents. |
format | Text |
id | pubmed-1240764 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2002 |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-12407642005-11-08 Sexually dimorphic behavioral responses to prenatal dioxin exposure. Hojo, Rieko Stern, Sander Zareba, Grazyna Markowski, Vincent P Cox, Christopher Kost, James T Weiss, Bernard Environ Health Perspect Research Article Pregnant Sprague-Dawley rats received a single oral dose of 0, 20, 60, or 180 ng/kg 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin on day 8 of gestation. Each litter contributed a single male-female pair trained to press a lever to obtain food pellets under two operant behavior procedures. Initially, each lever press was reinforced. The fixed-ratio (FR) requirement was then increased every four sessions from the initial setting of 1 to values between 6 and 71. We then studied responses for 30 days under a multiple schedule combining FR 11 and another schedule requiring a pause of at least 10 sec between responses (DRL 10-sec). TCDD evoked a sexually dimorphic response pattern. Generally, TCDD-exposed males responded at lower rates than control males. In contrast, exposed females responded at higher rates than controls. Each response measure from the mult-FR DRL schedule yielded a male-female difference score. We used the differences in response rate to calculate benchmark doses based on the relative displacement from modeled zero-dose performance of the effective dose at 1% (ED(01)) and 10% (ED(10)), as determined by a second-order polynomial fit to the dose-effect function. For the male-female difference in FR rate of responding, the mean ED(10) was 2.77 ng/kg with a 95% lower bound of 1.81 ng/kg. The corresponding ED(01) was 0.27 ng/kg with a 95% lower bound of 0.18 ng/kg. For the male-female difference in DRL rate, the mean ED(10) was 2.97 ng/kg with a 95% lower bound of 2.02 ng/kg. The corresponding ED(01) was 0.30 ng/kg with a 95% lower bound of 0.20 ng/kg. These values fall close to, but below, current estimates of human body burdens of 13 ng/kg, based on TCDD toxic equivalents. 2002-03 /pmc/articles/PMC1240764/ /pubmed/11882475 Text en |
spellingShingle | Research Article Hojo, Rieko Stern, Sander Zareba, Grazyna Markowski, Vincent P Cox, Christopher Kost, James T Weiss, Bernard Sexually dimorphic behavioral responses to prenatal dioxin exposure. |
title | Sexually dimorphic behavioral responses to prenatal dioxin exposure. |
title_full | Sexually dimorphic behavioral responses to prenatal dioxin exposure. |
title_fullStr | Sexually dimorphic behavioral responses to prenatal dioxin exposure. |
title_full_unstemmed | Sexually dimorphic behavioral responses to prenatal dioxin exposure. |
title_short | Sexually dimorphic behavioral responses to prenatal dioxin exposure. |
title_sort | sexually dimorphic behavioral responses to prenatal dioxin exposure. |
topic | Research Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1240764/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11882475 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT hojorieko sexuallydimorphicbehavioralresponsestoprenataldioxinexposure AT sternsander sexuallydimorphicbehavioralresponsestoprenataldioxinexposure AT zarebagrazyna sexuallydimorphicbehavioralresponsestoprenataldioxinexposure AT markowskivincentp sexuallydimorphicbehavioralresponsestoprenataldioxinexposure AT coxchristopher sexuallydimorphicbehavioralresponsestoprenataldioxinexposure AT kostjamest sexuallydimorphicbehavioralresponsestoprenataldioxinexposure AT weissbernard sexuallydimorphicbehavioralresponsestoprenataldioxinexposure |