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Sex-related differences in retinal function in Wistar rats: implications for toxicity and safety studies.

Authors :
Tyszkiewicz C
Hwang SK
Manickam B
Jakubczak B
Walters KM
Bolt MW
Santos R
Liu CN
Source :
Frontiers in toxicology [Front Toxicol] 2023 May 23; Vol. 5, pp. 1176665. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 May 23 (Print Publication: 2023).
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Introduction: Wistar Han rats are a preferred strain of rodents for general toxicology and safety pharmacology studies in drug development. In some of these studies, visual functional tests that assess for retinal toxicity are included as an additional endpoint. Although the influence of gender on human retinal function has been documented for more than 6 decades, preclinically it is still uncertain if there are differences in retinal function between naïve male and female Wistar Han rats. Methods: In this study, sex-related differences in the retinal function were quantified by analyzing electroretinography (ERG) in 7-9-week-old ( n = 52 males and 51 females) and 21-23-week-old Wistar Han rats ( n = 48 males and 51 females). Optokinetic tracking response, brainstem auditory evoked potential, ultrasonic vocalization and histology were tested and evaluated in a subset of animals to investigate the potential compensation mechanisms of spontaneous blindness. Results/Discussion: Absence of scotopic and photopic ERG responses was found in 13% of 7-9-week-old (7/52) and 19% of 21-23-week-old males (9/48), but none of female rats (0/51). The averaged amplitudes of rod- and cone-mediated ERG b -wave responses obtained from males were significantly smaller than the amplitudes of the same responses from age-matched females (-43% and -26%, respectively) at 7-9 weeks of age. There was no difference in the retinal and brain morphology, brainstem auditory responses, or ultrasonic vocalizations between the animals with normal and abnormal ERGs at 21-23 weeks of age. In summary, male Wistar Han rats had altered retinal responses, including a complete lack of responses to test flash stimuli (i.e., blindness), when compared with female rats at 7-9 and 21-23 weeks of age. Therefore, sex differences should be considered when using Wistar Han rats in toxicity and safety pharmacology studies with regards to data interpretation of retinal functional assessments.<br />Competing Interests: All authors were employed by Pfizer at the time of the study.<br /> (Copyright © 2023 Tyszkiewicz, Hwang, Manickam, Jakubczak, Walters, Bolt, Santos and Liu.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2673-3080
Volume :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Frontiers in toxicology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37313214
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/ftox.2023.1176665