Abstract

Di-(2-ethylexyl)phthalate (DEHP) administered to adult lactating rats from delivery to weaning induces age- and organ-specific modifications of the peroxisomal morphometric parameters (VV, NA and D) in the liver and kidney of both rats and their pups. In both tissues, peroxisomal relative volume and catalase biochemical activity show a similar pattern during the development, as well as under DEHP treatment. Morphometric results suggest that two modalities of peroxisomal proliferation exist, involving: a) increases in both number and mean diameter of the organelles; b) a purely numerical increase of the organelles, accompanied by a remarkable decrement in their mean diameter. A peroxisomal population proliferated through the latter model appears unable to return to normal conditions, following treatment withdrawal. These two proliferation systems, the first implying a swelling and the latter a fragmentation of pre-existing peroxisomal profiles, are supposed to be tissue-specific in the adult animal. In particular, in the liver the 'swelling' model appears more suitable to explain peroxisome proliferation, while the kidney this process would follow the 'fragmentation' model. Immature animals might instead show in both organs intermediate features of peroxisomal proliferation modalities.

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