A human relevance investigation of PPAR alpha-mediated key events in the hepatocarcinogenic mode of action of propaquizafop in rats

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TitreA human relevance investigation of PPAR alpha-mediated key events in the hepatocarcinogenic mode of action of propaquizafop in rats
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2018
AuteursStrupp C, Bomann WH, Spezi F, Gervais F, Forster R, Richert L, Singh P
JournalREGULATORY TOXICOLOGY AND PHARMACOLOGY
Volume95
Pagination348-361
Date PublishedJUN
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN0273-2300
Mots-clésCarcinogenicity, Enzyme induction, Human relevance framework, Liver, Mode of action, Peroxisome proliferators, PPAR alpha, Propaquizafop, rats, Rodent hepatocarcinogenesis
Résumé

Propaquizafop is an herbicide with demonstrated hepatocarcinogenic activity in rodents. A rodent-specific mode of action (MOA) in the liver via activation of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPAR alpha) has been postulated based on existing data. Experience with PPAR alpha-inducing pharmaceuticals indicates a lack of human relevance of this MOA. The objective of the present investigation was to evaluate the dependency of early key events leading to liver tumors on PPAR alpha activation in wildtype (WT) compared to PPAR alpha-knockout (KO) rats following 2 weeks exposure to 75, 500 and 1000 ppm propaquizafop in the diet. In WT rats, both WY-14643 (50 mg/kg bw/day) and propaquizafop (dose-dependently) induced marked increases in liver weights, correlating with liver enlargement and hepatocellular hypertrophy, along with increased CYP4A and acyl-CoA oxidase mRNA expression and enzyme activities versus controls, while in KO rats liver weight was mildly increased only at the high dose with minimal microscopic correlates and without any changes in liver peroxisomal or CYP4A activities. In addition, BrdU labeling resulted in higher numbers and density of positive hepatocytes versus controls in WT but not in KO rats, indicating increased mitotic activity and cell proliferation only in WT rats, thus confirming the PPAR alpha-dependency of the biochemical and histological changes in the liver. Based on an assessment of the results of this investigation, together with existing propaquizafop data according to the MOA-Human Relevance Framework, we conclude that liver tumors observed in rodents after dietary administration of propaquizafop do not pose a relevant health risk to humans.

DOI10.1016/j.yrtph.2018.04.005