Strain-dependent acute lung injury after intra-tracheal administration of a ‘refined’ aniline-denatured rapeseed oil: A murine model of the toxic oil syndrome?

Most attempts to reproduce the toxic oil syndrome in animals, either with case-related oils or with refined rapeseed oils, have been unsuccessful. An aniline-denatured rapeseed oil that was subsequently refined according to a protocol yielding relevant markers of “toxic oil” (oil RSO160401) had led...

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Veröffentlicht in:Food and chemical toxicology 2007-12, Vol.45 (12), p.2563-2573
Hauptverfasser: Vanhooren, Hadewijch M., Vanoirbeek, Jeroen A., Xu, Haiyan, Verbeken, Erik, Nemery, Benoit
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Most attempts to reproduce the toxic oil syndrome in animals, either with case-related oils or with refined rapeseed oils, have been unsuccessful. An aniline-denatured rapeseed oil that was subsequently refined according to a protocol yielding relevant markers of “toxic oil” (oil RSO160401) had led to possibly relevant lesions following oral administration in mice. Therefore, in the present study, RSO160401 was subjected to a more extended in vivo testing. To try and maximize the response, BALB/c, DBA/2, A/J, and C57BL/6 mice were administered RSO160401 oil by a single intra-tracheal instillation (1 ml/kg), with sacrifice 2 or 7 days post-exposure. Intra-tracheal administration led to a strain-dependent acute response: acute pulmonary damage in DBA/2 and A/J mice, and increases in blood eosinophilia in DBA/2 mice (6.5% vs 3.1% in controls). The pulmonary lesions regressed with time after exposure, being more complete in A/J than in DBA/2 mice. The observation of strain-dependent effects suggests that genetic susceptibility is an important factor in disease induction by the RSO160401 oil.
ISSN:0278-6915
1873-6351
DOI:10.1016/j.fct.2007.06.032