A three-generation reproduction study of Ponceau 4R in the rat

Ponceau 4R was fed to three generations of rats, at dietary concentrations to provide 0, 50, 500 or 1250 mg/kg body weight/day. In each generation treated groups consisted of 36 rats of each sex while 60 females served as controls. Apart from the F 0 generation, which started treatment as weanlings,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Food and chemical toxicology 1987, Vol.25 (12), p.963-968
Hauptverfasser: Brantom, P.G., Stevenson, B.I., Ingram, A.J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Ponceau 4R was fed to three generations of rats, at dietary concentrations to provide 0, 50, 500 or 1250 mg/kg body weight/day. In each generation treated groups consisted of 36 rats of each sex while 60 females served as controls. Apart from the F 0 generation, which started treatment as weanlings, treatment was continued throughout the study, providing in utero exposure of all offspring. The F 0 generation was bred twice, on the first occasion to provide animals for the next generation and for a long-term study, and a second time to provide data on in utero and post-partum development. In each generation approximately one third of the females from each group were killed before parturition to provide data on in utero development. The foetuses from these animals were examined for skeletal abnormalities. Remaining animals were allowed to litter and the offspring were monitored for 21 days after birth for survival and development. All animals were killed and subjected to a post-mortem examination which, for a proportion of each group in each generation, included recording of organ weights. Although a few adult rats died during the study these deaths were not associated with treatment. Fur of the treated animals was coloured pink, and faeces and caecal contents of animals from the two highest dose groups were yellow, the faeces also being softer than those of the controls. Treatment had no observed effect on clinical observations, body weight or food and water intake at any stage of the study. Animals fed the two highest doses for prolonged periods had enlarged caeca, but this effect was not seen in weanling animals on the same treatment. Neither the caecal enlargement nor the liver weights seen in the F 2 and F 3 offspring were considered to be an adverse effect of treatment. No treatment-related effects were seen in the uterine contents of females at any generation, but the skeletons of treated foetuses showed a slightly more advanced development than those of the controls. Postnatal development of offspring was not affected by treatment at any stage of the study. Tissues from the F 3 animals were examined by light microscopy and revealed no treatment-related effects. It is concluded that the no-adverse-effect level for Ponceau 4R is 1250 mg/kg body weight/day.
ISSN:0278-6915
1873-6351
DOI:10.1016/0278-6915(87)90290-0