Cargando…

Clofibrate-induced gene expression changes in rat liver: a cross-laboratory analysis using membrane cDNA arrays.

Microarrays have the potential to significantly impact our ability to identify toxic hazards by the identification of mechanistically relevant markers of toxicity. To be useful for risk assessment, however, microarray data must be challenged to determine reliability and interlaboratory reproducibili...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Baker, Valerie A, Harries, Helen M, Waring, Jeff F, Duggan, Colette M, Ni, Hong A, Jolly, Robert A, Yoon, Lawrence W, De Souza, Angus T, Schmid, Judith E, Brown, Roger H, Ulrich, Roger G, Rockett, John C
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2004
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1241896/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15033592
_version_ 1782125533696360448
author Baker, Valerie A
Harries, Helen M
Waring, Jeff F
Duggan, Colette M
Ni, Hong A
Jolly, Robert A
Yoon, Lawrence W
De Souza, Angus T
Schmid, Judith E
Brown, Roger H
Ulrich, Roger G
Rockett, John C
author_facet Baker, Valerie A
Harries, Helen M
Waring, Jeff F
Duggan, Colette M
Ni, Hong A
Jolly, Robert A
Yoon, Lawrence W
De Souza, Angus T
Schmid, Judith E
Brown, Roger H
Ulrich, Roger G
Rockett, John C
author_sort Baker, Valerie A
collection PubMed
description Microarrays have the potential to significantly impact our ability to identify toxic hazards by the identification of mechanistically relevant markers of toxicity. To be useful for risk assessment, however, microarray data must be challenged to determine reliability and interlaboratory reproducibility. As part of a series of studies conducted by the International Life Sciences Institute Health and Environmental Science Institute Technical Committee on the Application of Genomics to Mechanism-Based Risk Assessment, the biological response in rats to the hepatotoxin clofibrate was investigated. Animals were treated with high (250 mg/kg/day) or low (25 mg/kg/day) doses for 1, 3, or 7 days in two laboratories. Clinical chemistry parameters were measured, livers removed for histopathological assessment, and gene expression analysis was conducted using cDNA arrays. Expression changes in genes involved in fatty acid metabolism (e.g., acyl-CoA oxidase), cell proliferation (e.g., topoisomerase II-Alpha), and fatty acid oxidation (e.g., cytochrome P450 4A1), consistent with the mechanism of clofibrate hepatotoxicity, were detected. Observed differences in gene expression levels correlated with the level of biological response induced in the two in vivo studies. Generally, there was a high level of concordance between the gene expression profiles generated from pooled and individual RNA samples. Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction was used to confirm modulations for a number of peroxisome proliferator marker genes. Though the results indicate some variability in the quantitative nature of the microarray data, this appears due largely to differences in experimental and data analysis procedures used within each laboratory. In summary, this study demonstrates the potential for gene expression profiling to identify toxic hazards by the identification of mechanistically relevant markers of toxicity.
format Text
id pubmed-1241896
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2004
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-12418962005-11-08 Clofibrate-induced gene expression changes in rat liver: a cross-laboratory analysis using membrane cDNA arrays. Baker, Valerie A Harries, Helen M Waring, Jeff F Duggan, Colette M Ni, Hong A Jolly, Robert A Yoon, Lawrence W De Souza, Angus T Schmid, Judith E Brown, Roger H Ulrich, Roger G Rockett, John C Environ Health Perspect Research Article Microarrays have the potential to significantly impact our ability to identify toxic hazards by the identification of mechanistically relevant markers of toxicity. To be useful for risk assessment, however, microarray data must be challenged to determine reliability and interlaboratory reproducibility. As part of a series of studies conducted by the International Life Sciences Institute Health and Environmental Science Institute Technical Committee on the Application of Genomics to Mechanism-Based Risk Assessment, the biological response in rats to the hepatotoxin clofibrate was investigated. Animals were treated with high (250 mg/kg/day) or low (25 mg/kg/day) doses for 1, 3, or 7 days in two laboratories. Clinical chemistry parameters were measured, livers removed for histopathological assessment, and gene expression analysis was conducted using cDNA arrays. Expression changes in genes involved in fatty acid metabolism (e.g., acyl-CoA oxidase), cell proliferation (e.g., topoisomerase II-Alpha), and fatty acid oxidation (e.g., cytochrome P450 4A1), consistent with the mechanism of clofibrate hepatotoxicity, were detected. Observed differences in gene expression levels correlated with the level of biological response induced in the two in vivo studies. Generally, there was a high level of concordance between the gene expression profiles generated from pooled and individual RNA samples. Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction was used to confirm modulations for a number of peroxisome proliferator marker genes. Though the results indicate some variability in the quantitative nature of the microarray data, this appears due largely to differences in experimental and data analysis procedures used within each laboratory. In summary, this study demonstrates the potential for gene expression profiling to identify toxic hazards by the identification of mechanistically relevant markers of toxicity. 2004-03 /pmc/articles/PMC1241896/ /pubmed/15033592 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Baker, Valerie A
Harries, Helen M
Waring, Jeff F
Duggan, Colette M
Ni, Hong A
Jolly, Robert A
Yoon, Lawrence W
De Souza, Angus T
Schmid, Judith E
Brown, Roger H
Ulrich, Roger G
Rockett, John C
Clofibrate-induced gene expression changes in rat liver: a cross-laboratory analysis using membrane cDNA arrays.
title Clofibrate-induced gene expression changes in rat liver: a cross-laboratory analysis using membrane cDNA arrays.
title_full Clofibrate-induced gene expression changes in rat liver: a cross-laboratory analysis using membrane cDNA arrays.
title_fullStr Clofibrate-induced gene expression changes in rat liver: a cross-laboratory analysis using membrane cDNA arrays.
title_full_unstemmed Clofibrate-induced gene expression changes in rat liver: a cross-laboratory analysis using membrane cDNA arrays.
title_short Clofibrate-induced gene expression changes in rat liver: a cross-laboratory analysis using membrane cDNA arrays.
title_sort clofibrate-induced gene expression changes in rat liver: a cross-laboratory analysis using membrane cdna arrays.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1241896/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15033592
work_keys_str_mv AT bakervaleriea clofibrateinducedgeneexpressionchangesinratliveracrosslaboratoryanalysisusingmembranecdnaarrays
AT harrieshelenm clofibrateinducedgeneexpressionchangesinratliveracrosslaboratoryanalysisusingmembranecdnaarrays
AT waringjefff clofibrateinducedgeneexpressionchangesinratliveracrosslaboratoryanalysisusingmembranecdnaarrays
AT duggancolettem clofibrateinducedgeneexpressionchangesinratliveracrosslaboratoryanalysisusingmembranecdnaarrays
AT nihonga clofibrateinducedgeneexpressionchangesinratliveracrosslaboratoryanalysisusingmembranecdnaarrays
AT jollyroberta clofibrateinducedgeneexpressionchangesinratliveracrosslaboratoryanalysisusingmembranecdnaarrays
AT yoonlawrencew clofibrateinducedgeneexpressionchangesinratliveracrosslaboratoryanalysisusingmembranecdnaarrays
AT desouzaangust clofibrateinducedgeneexpressionchangesinratliveracrosslaboratoryanalysisusingmembranecdnaarrays
AT schmidjudithe clofibrateinducedgeneexpressionchangesinratliveracrosslaboratoryanalysisusingmembranecdnaarrays
AT brownrogerh clofibrateinducedgeneexpressionchangesinratliveracrosslaboratoryanalysisusingmembranecdnaarrays
AT ulrichrogerg clofibrateinducedgeneexpressionchangesinratliveracrosslaboratoryanalysisusingmembranecdnaarrays
AT rockettjohnc clofibrateinducedgeneexpressionchangesinratliveracrosslaboratoryanalysisusingmembranecdnaarrays