This photopolymerization platform allows for the creation of engineered tissues with enhanced control of cell behavior through the spatially and temporally controlled release of plasmid DNA.
A physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model with five tissue groups (lung, liver, fat, richly perfused, and poorly perfused tissues plus venous and arterial blood compartments) has been developed from in vitro data and models of primary cell cultures for naphthalene toxicity in mice and rats. It extends a previous naphthalene PBPK model (Sweeney et al., 1996) and demonstrates a possible approach to a predictive mathematical model that requires minimal animal data. Naphthalene metabolism was examined after four exposure routes (intraperitoneal injection (ip), intravenous injection (iv), ingestion (po), and inhalation). Naphthalene and its primary metabolite, naphthalene oxide, are consumed by enzymes in pulmonary and hepatic tissues (cytochrome P450 monooxygenases, epoxide hydrolase, and glutathione-S-transferase). Additionally, the nonenzymatic reactions of naphthalene oxide in all tissues and in blood are included in the model. Kinetic constants for the model were derived primarily from cell fraction and primary cell culture incubations presented in the literature. The mouse model accurately predicts glutathione (GSH) and covalent naphthalene oxide-protein binding levels after a range of ip doses, and the rat model provides excellent estimates for mercapturate excretion following po doses; but neither model simulates well naphthalene blood concentrations after low iv doses. Good prediction of in vivo response using only in vitro data for parameter estimation (except for epoxide-protein binding rates) suggests that the assumed molecular description is a plausible representation of the underlying mechanisms of toxicity. Mice and rats show significant species differences in response to naphthalene. The model results suggest that species differences in toxicity may be explained, in part, by the lower overall rate of enzyme activities in the rat cells. Lower enzyme activities in the rat result in out-of-phase GSH minima in hepatic and lung compartments, while the simultaneous occurrence of these minima in mice results in higher naphthalene oxide concentrations, thereby allowing formation of more metabolites (e.g., covalent binding to proteins) that may be toxic.
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