Blain R B, Reeves R, Ewald K A, Leonard D, Calabrese E J
Northeast Regional Environmental Public Health Center, University of Massachusetts, Amherst 01003, USA.
Toxicol Sci. 1999 Aug;50(2):280-6. doi: 10.1093/toxsci/50.2.280.
The present paper examines the susceptibility to chlordecone (Kepone, CD) and carbon tetrachloride across different ages (35, 45, and 63-days-old) in male and female Sprague-Dawley rats using different lengths of time on a CD diet (10 ppm). The principal findings are that the hepatotoxicity and mortality associated with CD-CCl4 interaction is highly age-dependent for both sexes. There was marked hepatotoxicity occurring in both sexes as they reached 45 days-of-age and females were considerably more susceptible than males to both CD-CCl4-induced hepatotoxicity and lethality. While 63-day-old females are more susceptible to the CD-CCl4 interaction than their male counterparts, the magnitude of the sex difference is diminished from that observed in 45-day-old rats. These findings challenge the hypothesis of Mehendale (1990, Med. Hypotheses 33, 289-299) that chlordecone (CD) pretreatment eliminates the well-established sex difference in CCl4-treated rats. In contrast to the CD-CCl4 findings, the sex difference in CCl4-induced hepatotoxicity was not age-dependent and was consistent over the three ages studied. The findings that CD-CCl4 interaction is highly age-dependent (within the 3 ages tested) but that CCl4-induced hepatotoxicity is not, suggest that the CD-CCl4 interaction acts via a mechanism that does not primarily involve CCl4 potentiation.