Pigs in Toxicology

Author:

Helke Kristi L.1,Nelson Keith N.2,Sargeant Aaron M.3,Jacob Binod3,McKeag Sean4,Haruna Julius5,Vemireddi Vimala6,Greeley Melanie7,Brocksmith Derek8,Navratil Nicole9,Stricker-Krongrad Alain8,Hollinger Charlotte10

Affiliation:

1. Department of Comparative Medicine, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina, USA

2. MPI Research, Mattawan, Michigan, USA

3. Charles River Laboratories, Spencerville, Ohio, USA

4. Covance Laboratories Limited, Harrogate, UK

5. CiToXLAB North America Inc., Laval, Quebec, Canada

6. Covance Laboratories Inc., Chantilly, Virginia, USA

7. WIL Research, Ashland, Ohio, USA

8. Sinclair Research Center and Sinclair Bio Resources, Auxvasse, Missouri, USA

9. Marshall BioResources, North Rose, New York, USA

10. Zoological Health Program, Wildlife Conservation Society, Bronx, New York, USA

Abstract

Both a rodent and a nonrodent species are required for evaluation in nonclinical safety studies conducted to support human clinical trials. Historically, dogs and nonhuman primates have been the nonrodent species of choice. Swine, especially the miniature swine or minipigs, are increasingly being used in preclinical safety as an alternate nonrodent species. The pig is an appropriate option for these toxicology studies based on metabolic pathways utilized in xenobiotic biotransformation. Both similarities and differences exist in phase I and phase II biotransformation pathways between humans and pigs. There are numerous breeds of pigs, yet only a few of these breeds are characterized with regard to both xenobiotic-metabolizing enzymes and background pathology findings. Some specific differences in these enzymes based on breed and sex are known. Although swine have been used extensively in biomedical research, there is also a paucity of information in the current literature detailing the incidence of background lesions and differences between commonly used breeds. Here, the xenobiotic-metabolizing enzymes are compared between humans and pigs, and minipig background pathology changes are reviewed with emphasis on breed differences.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cell Biology,Toxicology,Molecular Biology,Pathology and Forensic Medicine

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