Toxicity Assays in Nanodrops Combining Bioassay and Morphometric Endpoints

Improved chemical hazard management such as REACH policy objective as well as drug ADMETOX prediction, while limiting the extent of animal testing, requires the development of increasingly high throughput as well as highly pertinent in vitro toxicity assays. Methodology This report describes a new i...

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Published inPloS one Vol. 2; no. 1
Main Authors Lemaire, Frederic, Mandon, Celine A, Reboud, Julien, Papine, Alexandre, Angulo, Jesus, Pointu, Herve, Diaz-Latoud, Chantal, Lajaunie, Christian, Chatelain, Francois, Arrigo, Andre-Patrick, Schaack, Beatrice
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.01.2007
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Summary:Improved chemical hazard management such as REACH policy objective as well as drug ADMETOX prediction, while limiting the extent of animal testing, requires the development of increasingly high throughput as well as highly pertinent in vitro toxicity assays. Methodology This report describes a new in vitro method for toxicity testing, combining cell-based assays in nanodrop Cell-on-Chip format with the use of a genetically engineered stress sensitive hepatic cell line. We tested the behavior of a stress inducible fluorescent HepG2 model in which Heat Shock Protein promoters controlled Enhanced-Green Fluorescent Protein expression upon exposure to Cadmium Chloride (CdCl sub(2)), Sodium Arsenate (NaAsO sub(2)) and Paraquat. In agreement with previous studies based on a micro-well format, we could observe a chemical- specific response, identified through differences in dynamics and amplitude. We especially determined IC50 values for CdCl sub(2) and NaAsO sub(2), in agreement with published data. Individual cell identification via image-based screening allowed us to perform multiparametric analyses. Conclusions Using pre/sub lethal cell stress instead of cell mortality, we highlighted the high significance and the superior sensitivity of both stress promoter activation reporting and cell morphology parameters in measuring the cell response to a toxicant. These results demonstrate the first generation of high-throughput and high-content assays, capable of assessing chemical hazards in vitro within the REACH policy framework.
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ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0000163.