نتایج جستجو برای: tce

تعداد نتایج: 1183  

Journal: :Toxicological sciences : an official journal of the Society of Toxicology 2010
Echoleah S Rufer Timothy A Hacker George R Flentke Victoria J Drake Matthew J Brody John Lough Susan M Smith

Trichloroethylene (TCE) is the most frequently reported organic groundwater contaminant in the United States. It is controversial whether gestational TCE exposure causes congenital heart defects. The basis for TCE's proposed cardiac teratogenicity is not well understood. We previously showed that chick embryos exposed to 8 ppb TCE during cardiac morphogenesis have reduced cardiac output and inc...

Journal: :Carcinogenesis 2013
Luoping Zhang Bryan A Bassig Joseph L Mora Roel Vermeulen Yichen Ge John D Curry Wei Hu Min Shen Chuangyi Qiu Zhiying Ji Boris Reiss Cliona M McHale Songwang Liu Weihong Guo Mark P Purdue Fei Yue Laiyu Li Martyn T Smith Hanlin Huang Xiaojiang Tang Nathaniel Rothman Qing Lan

Trichloroethylene (TCE) has been associated with a variety of immunotoxic effects and may be associated with an increased risk of non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). Altered serum immunoglobulin (Ig) levels have been reported in NHL patients and in animals exposed to TCE. Recently, we reported that occupational exposure to TCE is associated with immunosuppressive effects and immune dysfunction, includi...

Journal: :Environmental Health Perspectives 1998
M Gordon N Choe J Duffy G Ekuan P Heilman I Muiznieks M Ruszaj B B Shurtleff S Strand J Wilmoth L A Newman

Axenic tumor cultures of poplar cells, clone H11-11, were grown in the presence of [14C]-trichloroethylene (TCE) (uniformly labeled). The cells were capable of metabolizing TCE to produce trichloroethanol, di- and trichloroacetic acid. Some of the carbon from TCE was found in insoluble, nonextractable cell residue, and small amounts were mineralized to [14C]CO2. Poplar cuttings grown in soil an...

Journal: :Cancer research 1976
B L Van Duuren S Banerjee

Trichloroethylene (TCE), a structural analog of vinyl chloride, is known to induce hepatocellular carcinoma and other tumors in C57BL/6 X C3H/He F1 (hereafter known as B6C3F1) hybrid mice. TCE epoxide, a possible metabolite, is expected to be highly reactive toward cellular nucleophiles, e.g., proteins and nucleic acids. Hence, the microsomal metabolism of TCE and its covalent binding to micros...

2006
Victoria J. Drake Stacy L. Koprowski John Lough Norman Hu Susan M. Smith

It is controversial whether trichloroethylene (TCE) is a cardiac teratogen. We exposed chick embryos to 0, 0.4, 8, or 400 ppb TCE/egg during the period of cardiac valvuloseptal morphogenesis (2-3.3 days' incubation) . Embryo survival, valvuloseptal cellularity, and cardiac hemodynamics were evaluated at times thereafter. TCE at 8 and 400 ppb/egg reduced embryo survival to day 6.25 incubation by...

Journal: :Journal of biochemical and molecular toxicology 1999
L Tao R Ge M Xie P M Kramer M A Pereira

Trichloroethylene (TCE) is a multimedia environmental pollution that is carcinogenic in mouse liver. The ability of TCE to modulate DNA methylation and the expression of immediate-early protooncogenes was evaluated. Female B6C3F1 mice were administered 1000 mg/kg TCE by gavage 5 days/week and killed after 5, 12, or 33 days of exposure. Methylation of DNA as 5-methylcytosine was decreased by 5 d...

Journal: :Journal of occupational health 2013
Yui Hibino Hailan Wang Hisao Naito Na Zhao Dong Wang Xiaofang Jia Hongling Li Xiangrong Song Lili Liu Yongshun Huang Yuki Ito Hanlin Huang Michihiro Kamijima Tamie Nakajima

OBJECTIVES Trichloroethylene (TRI) has the potential to cause generalized dermatitis complicated with hepatitis. The guinea pig maximization test (GPMT) also suggests that both TRI and its metabolite trichloroethanol (TCE) exhibit immunogenicity and possible sex differences in guinea pigs. However, TRI and TCE metabolisms in guinea pigs have not been elucidated in detail. The first issue to cla...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 2010
Oramas Suttinun Rudolf Müller Ekawan Luepromchai

The cometabolic degradation of trichloroethene (TCE) by Rhodococcus sp. L4 was limited by the loss of enzyme activity during TCE transformation. This problem was overcome by repeated addition of inducing substrates, such as cumene, limonene, or cumin aldehyde, to the cells. Alternatively, Rhodococcus sp. L4 was immobilized on plant materials which contain those inducers in their essential oils....

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 1989
L P Wackett G A Brusseau S R Householder R S Hanson

Microorganisms that biosynthesize broad-specificity oxygenases to initiate metabolism of linear and branched-chain alkanes, nitroalkanes, cyclic ketones, alkenoic acids, and chromenes were surveyed for the ability to biodegrade trichloroethylene (TCE). The results indicated that TCE oxidation is not a common property of broad-specificity microbial oxygenases. Bacteria that contained nitropropan...

2012
Shakuntala Kondraganti Rolf König Paul J. Boor Shahnawaz Khan Bhupendra S. Kaphalia M. Firoze Khan

Environmental and occupational exposure to trichloroethene (TCE) is associated with autoimmune diseases (ADs). However, the mechanisms of TCE-mediated ADs are not fully elucidated. Previous investigations showed that chronic low dose exposure of autoimmune-prone female MRL+/+ mice to TCE resulted in development of autoimmune hepatitis-like disease (AIHLD). To elucidate the mechanisms involved i...

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