Abstract
This study was designed to obtain sister-chromatid exchange (SCE) frequencies in bone marrow and spleen cells of mice and Chinese hamsters under in vivo and in vivo/in vitro systems following treatment of animals with varying doses (15–405 μg/kg) of triethylenemelamine (TEM). A dose-related SCE response was found in both species, tissues, and systems analyzed following TEM treatment. In vivo, similar responses were noted for both tissues in both species. However, in vivo/in vitro, the response was lower than in vivo and it varied with the tissue. The spleen cells were more sensitive and gave higher numbers of SCEs than bone marrow of both species at the two highest doses tested (135 and 405 μg/kg). These differences may be attributed to cell-culturing effects, type of cells analyzed, species and tissue specificities, and pharmacokinetic properties of the chemical. This study lends support to recently established in vivo/in vitro cell culture methodologies employing mice and Chinese hamsters for comparative cytogenetic analysis.
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