A comparison of 24 chemicals in the six-well bacterial reverse mutation assay to the standard 100-mm Petri plate bacterial reverse mutation assay in two laboratories
Autor: | John Nicolette, Alison Kondratiuk, G. Jayakumar, Paul Sonders, Meredith Crosby, A. Patel, Emily Dakoulas, Joel Murray, Kamala Pant, R. Vicente, K. Datta, M. Mathur, Rohan Kulkarni, Kyle L. Kolaja |
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Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Salmonella typhimurium Chromatography Mutagenicity Tests Petri dish Positive control Reproducibility of Results General Medicine Biology Toxicology Reverse mutation Ames test law.invention 03 medical and health sciences 030104 developmental biology 0302 clinical medicine law 030220 oncology & carcinogenesis Evaluation methods Mutation Escherichia coli Biological Assay Laboratories Mutagens |
Zdroj: | Regulatory toxicology and pharmacology : RTP. 100 |
ISSN: | 1096-0295 |
Popis: | The bacterial reverse mutation assay (Ames) is a fundamental genetic toxicology test, and efforts to miniaturize the regulatory GLP version are essential in assessing genotoxic liabilities earlier in the drug development pipeline. Two versions of the Ames were compared: the six-well (miniaturized) plate and the standard 100-mm plate test at two different laboratories. Of twenty-four chemicals tested, a subset of six chemicals was tested in the six-well test only and the remaining eighteen were evaluated in both versions of the test. The plate incorporation procedure was used with one Escherichia coli and four different Salmonella strains. The six-well test uses the same plating procedure and evaluation methods as the standard Ames assay in 100-mm plates, but the smaller format requires 20% of the test chemical. Additionally, the six-well test uses a limit concentration of 1000 μg/well versus the standard Petri plate test limit concentration of 5000 μg/plate. Testing across the two formats resulted in 100% concordance in overall mutagenicity judgement and 94% concordance across all tester strains and conditions. Known mutagenic positive control chemicals were correctly detected as positive in both formats. The overall conclusion is that the six-well assay results are concordant with the standard assay format in this evaluation and could be a reliable alternative. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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