4.0 Article

First Steps Towards an Understanding of a Mode of Carcinogenic Action for Vanadium Pentoxide

Journal

JOURNAL OF TOXICOLOGIC PATHOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 3, Pages 149-162

Publisher

JAPANESE SOC TOXICOLOGIC PATHOLOGY
DOI: 10.1293/tox.24.149

Keywords

comet assay; DNA lesions; mouse inhalation; oxidative stress; vanadium pentoxide

Funding

  1. Advanced Technology Institute, Charleston, USA [SC 29418]
  2. U.S. Army Research Laboratory [DAAD 19-03-2-0036]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Inhalation of vanadium pentoxide clearly increases the incidence of alveolar/bronchiolar neoplasms in male and female B6C3F1 mice at all concentrations tested (I, 2 or 4 mg/m(3)), whereas responses in F344/N rats was, at most, ambiguous. While vanadium pentoxide is mutagenic in vitro and possibly in vivo in mice, this does not explain the species or site specificity of the neoplastic response. A nose-only inhalation study was conducted in female B6C3F1 mice (0, 0.25, 1 and 4 mg/m3, 6 h/day for 16 days) to explore histopathological, biochemical (alpha-tocopherol, glutathione and F2-isoprostane) and genetic (comet assays and 9 specific DNA-oxo-adducts) changes in the lungs. No treatment related histopathology was observed at 0.25 mg/m(3). At 1 and 4 mg/m3, exposure-dependent increases were observed in lung weight, alveolar histiocytosis, sub-acute alveolitis and/or granulocytic infiltration and a generally time-dependent increased cell proliferation rate of histiocytes. Glutathione was slightly increased, whereas there were no consistent changes in alpha-tocopherol or 8-isoprostane F2 alpha. There was no evidence for DNA strand breakage in lung or BA L cells, but there was an increase in 8-oxodGuo DNA lesions that could have been due to vanadium pentoxide induction of the lesions or inhibition of repair of spontaneous lesions. Thus, earlier reports of histopathological changes in the lungs after inhalation of vanadium pentoxide were confirmed, but no evidence has yet emerged for a genotoxic mode of action. Evidence is weak for oxidative stress playing any role in lung carcinogenesis at the lowest effective concentrations of vanadium pentoxide. (DOI: 10.1293/tox.24.149; J Toxicol Pathol 2011; 24: 149-162)

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.0
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available