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Original Articles

Lymphocyte proliferation assays as potential biomarkers for toxicant exposures

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Pages 127-139 | Received 14 Dec 1990, Accepted 27 Mar 1991, Published online: 19 Oct 2009
 

Abstract

Recently there has been interest in developing assays that can be used as indicators (biomarkers) of exposure to toxic agents. We have been exploring the potential utility of three lymphocyte proliferation assays [the responses of B lymphocytes to the mitogen lipopolysaccharide (LPS), the responses of T lymphocytes to the mitogen concanavalin A (ConA), and the responses of T lymphocytes to antigenic stimuli in a mixed lymphocyte culture (MLC) assay] as biomarkers of toxicant exposure. Studies were initiated to assess the applicability and specificity of these assays and to investigate the mechanisms by which toxicants alter lymphocyte proliferation. All studies were performed using cells isolated from Fischer 344 rats. To assess applicability, mitogen assays were performed using in vitro exposures to eight different toxicants: hydroquinone, benzoquinone, Aroclor 1254, styrene oxide, and the salts of mercury, cadmium, chromate, and nickel. In vitro concentrations spanned five orders of magnitude (100 to 0.01 mg/l). At the lowest concentration tested, all eight compounds induced changes in at least one mitogen assay, indicating that these assays may be applicable to a wide range of toxicants. Variations of the ConA and MLC assays were used to test for specificity. In both assays, splenocytes taken from rats exposed in vivo to either chromate or to cadmium responded differently when the cells were co‐cultured with exogenously added chromate or cadmium ions, indicating that it may be possible to detect exposure to a specific toxicant by performing modified lymphocyte proliferation assays. In the mechanistic studies, splenocytes from cadmium and chromate‐treated rats altered the ConA‐induced proliferation of cocultured syngeneic cells. In addition, the antigenicity of splenocytes isolated from cadmium‐treated rats was enhanced when these cells were used as stimulators for allogeneic splenocytes. The results of these studies indicate that lymphocyte proliferation assays may be useful for detecting exposure to a wide range of toxicants and that variations of these assays may be useful for implementing immunologically based tests for detecting exposures to specific chemicals.

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