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The Effect of Exposure Regimen and Duration on Benzene-induced Bone-marrow Damage in Mice. I. Sex Comparison in DBA/2 Mice

Overview
Journal Mutat Res
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty Genetics
Date 1988 Aug 1
PMID 3405235
Citations 10
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Abstract

In the mouse, the concurrent evaluation of micronuclei frequencies in peripheral blood polychromatic erythrocytes (PCE) and normochromatic erythrocytes (NCE) permits an assessment of both recently-induced and chronically-accumulated bone-marrow damage. This assay system was used to evaluate on a weekly basis the effect of exposure duration (1-13 weeks, 6 h per day) and exposure regimen (Regimen 1:5 exposure days per week; Regimen 2:3 exposure days per week) on the ability of 300 ppm benzene to induce genotoxic damage in the bone marrow of male and female DBA/2 mice. In addition, an analysis of the percentage of PCE in peripheral blood was used to evaluate benzene-induced alterations in the rate of erythropoiesis. Exposure to benzene induced a marked increase in the frequency of micronucleated PCE (MN-PCE), an effect which was considerably greater in male mice than in female mice. In both sexes, the induction of MN-PCE was independent of exposure regiment and of exposure duration. Exposure to benzene also resulted in an exposure duration-dependent increase in the frequency of MN-NCE. The frequency of MN-NCE increased more slowly in female than in male mice and, within each sex, more slowly in Regimen 2 animals. Apparent steady-state conditions for MN-NCE frequencies were attained by about the fifth week of exposure in female mice exposed by either regimen and in male mice exposed by Regimen 2. Steady-state conditions for MN-NCE frequencies in male mice exposed to benzene by Regimen 1 did not occur during the duration of the study. An analysis of %PCE data revealed an initial severe depression in the rate of erythropoiesis in both sexes, with the return in the production of PCE to control levels being dependent on both sex and exposure regimen. Suppression of PCE production occurred throughout the course of the study in Regimen 2 males, while the percentage of PCE returned to control levels sporadically after 5 weeks in Regimen 1 males and within 5 weeks in females, regardless of regimen. Thus, while the sex-dependent induction of genotoxic damage by multiple exposures to benzene over a 13-week period was independent of exposure regimen and duration, the induction of cytotoxic damage was both sex- and regimen-dependent. The most severe depression of erythropoiesis occurred in male DBA/2 mice exposed to benzene by the more intermittent regimen (i.e., 3 days/week versus 5 days/week).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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