Chronic 14-day exposure to insecticides or methylmercury modulates neuronal activity in primary rat cortical cultures

Milou Dingemans, Marijke G Schütte, Daphne M M Wiersma, Aart de Groot, Gina van Kleef, Fiona Wijnolts, Remco Westerink

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    Abstract

    There is an increasing demand for in vitro test systems to detect neurotoxicity for use in chemical risk assessment. In this study, we evaluated the applicability of rat primary cortical cultures grown on multi-well micro-electrode arrays (mwMEAs) to detect effects of chronic 14-day exposure to structurally different insecticides or methylmercury on neuronal activity (mean spike rate; MSR). Effects of chronic exposure to α-cypermethrin, endosulfan, carbaryl, chlorpyrifos(-oxon), methylmercury or solvent control [14days exposure, initiated after baseline recording at day in vitro (DIV)7] were studied in five successive recordings between DIV10 and DIV21. The results were compared to effects of acute exposure to these same compounds (activity recorded immediately after the start of exposure after baseline recording at DIV10-11). Chronic 14-day exposure to methylmercury, chlorpyrifos and α-cypermethrin inhibited MSR, all with a lowest-observed effect concentration (LOEC) of 0.1μM, while exposure to endosulfan increased MSR [LOEC: 1μM]. No significant effects were observed for chlorpyrifos-oxon and carbaryl. Similar to the observations in the chronic 14-day exposure studies, MSR was inhibited by acute 30-min exposure to methylmercury, chlorpyrifos, and α-cypermethrin [LOECs: 1μM, 10μM, and 1μM, respectively], whereas endosulfan increased MSR [LOEC: 0.3μM]. While not observed in the chronic 14-day exposure study, acute exposure to chlorpyrifos-oxon and carbaryl resulted in inhibition of MSR [LOECs: 10μM, and100 μM, respectively]. Effects on median interspike intervals (mISI; a measure for neuronal firing pattern) were not detected following chronic 14-day or acute 30-min exposure, except for increased mISI at acute chlorpyrifos and α-cypermethrin exposures at concentrations that also inhibited MSR. These data indicate that the effects of chronic 14-day exposures to methylmercury and insecticides at low concentrations on spontaneous neuronal activity in vitro can be predicted in rapid acute screening studies using mwMEAs.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)194-202
    Number of pages9
    JournalNeuroToxicology
    Volume57
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Dec 2016

    Keywords

    • In vitro neurotoxicology
    • Micro-electrode array (MEA)
    • Primary rat cortical cultures
    • Methylmercury
    • Insecticides
    • Neurotoxicity screening

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