Abstract

Pretreatment of male mice of the inbred strains A2G, BALB c , C57BL 10 , and AKR with iron dextran synergized the action of a single dose of 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo- p-dioxin (TCDD, 75 μg/kg) in causing hepatic porphyria and necrosis 35 days later. There was no effect in DBA 2 mice. Increased porphyrin levels were associated with decreased hepatic activity of uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase. Iron alone had no effect on porphyrin levels or decarboxylase activity. In male BALB c mice given TCDD alone there was a delay in the onset of porphyria. Female BALB c , AKR, and AKR × DBA 2 F 1 mice were more resistant to the porphyrinogenic effect of TCDD than males. Development of porphyria did not correlate with Ah phenotype of the mice. The inheritance of sensitivity to TCDD in crosses of the AKR and DBA 2 strains, both Ah nonresponsive, was studied by a biometrical genetic analysis. The inheritances of increased porphyrin levels and of increased plasma activity of enzymes indicative of hepatic necrosis were both complex. Segregation of alleles at more than one locus was required to explain the data. A lack of correlation of porphyrins with plasma enzyme levels in the F 2 generation suggested that the expression of these traits was determined independently. Genes other than Ah influence the development of TCDD-induced hepatotoxicity in mice.

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