4.5 Article

A transcriptomics-based hepatotoxicity comparison between the zebrafish embryo and established human and rodent in vitro and in vivo models using cyclosporine A, amiodarone and acetaminophen

Journal

TOXICOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 232, Issue 2, Pages 403-412

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.toxlet.2014.11.020

Keywords

Hepatotoxicity; Gene expression; Zebrafish embryo; Mouse in vivo; Mouse in vitro; Rat in vivo; Rat in vitro; Human in vitro

Categories

Funding

  1. Netherlands Genomics Initiative/Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) [050-060-510]

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The zebrafish embryo (ZFE) is a promising alternative, non-rodent model in toxicology, which has an advantage over the traditionally used models as it contains complete biological complexity and provides a medium to high-throughput setting. Here, we assess how the ZFE compares to the traditionally used models for liver toxicity testing, i.e., in vivo mouse and rat liver, in vitro mouse and rat hepatocytes, and primary human hepatocytes. For this comparison, we analyzed gene expression changes induced by three model compounds for cholestasis, steatosis, and necrosis. The three compounds, cyclosporine A, amiodarone, and acetaminophen, were chosen because of their relevance to human toxicity and these compounds displayed hepatotoxic-specific changes in the mouse in vivo data. Compound induced expression changes in the ZFE model shared similarity with both in vivo and in vitro. Comparison on single gene level revealed the presence of model specific changes and no clear concordance across models. However, concordance was identified on the pathway level. Specifically, the pathway regulation of metabolism - bile acids regulation of glucose and lipid metabolism via FXR was affected across all models and compounds. In conclusion, our study with three hepatotoxic model compounds shows that the ZFE model is at least as comparable to traditional models in identifying hepatotoxic activity and has the potential for use as a pre-screen to determine the hepatotoxic potential of compounds. (c) 2014 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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