Validation of the 3D reconstructed human skin micronucleus (RSMN) assay: an animal-free alternative for following-up positive results from standard in vitro genotoxicity assays

Author:

Pfuhler Stefan1,Downs Thomas R1,Hewitt Nicola J2,Hoffmann Sebastian3,Mun Greg C4,Ouedraogo Gladys5,Roy Shambhu6,Curren Rodger D4,Aardema Marilyn J7

Affiliation:

1. Procter & Gamble Co., Mason, OH, USA

2. Cosmetics Europe, Brussels, Belgium

3. seh consulting + services, Paderborn, Germany

4. Institute for In Vitro Sciences, Inc., Gaithersburg, MD, USA

5. L’Oreal Research & Innovation, Aulnay-sous-Bois, France

6. MilliporeSigma, Rockville, MD, USA

7. Marilyn Aardema Consulting LLC, Fairfield, OH, USA

Abstract

Abstract In vitro test batteries have become the standard approach to determine the genotoxic potential of substances of interest across industry sectors. While useful for hazard identification, standard in vitro genotoxicity assays in 2D cell cultures have limited capability to predict in vivo outcomes and may trigger unnecessary follow-up animal studies or the loss of promising substances where animal tests are prohibited or not desired. To address this problem, a team of regulatory, academia and industry scientists was established to develop and validate 3D in vitro human skin-based genotoxicity assays for use in testing substances with primarily topical exposure. Validation of the reconstructed human skin micronucleus (RSMN) assay in MatTek Epi-200™ skin models involved testing 43 coded chemicals selected by independent experts, in four US/European laboratories. The results were analysed by an independent statistician according to predefined criteria. The RSMN assay showed a reproducibly low background micronucleus frequency and exhibited sufficient capacity to metabolise pro-mutagens. The overall RSMN accuracy when compared to in vivo genotoxicity outcomes was 80%, with a sensitivity of 75% and a specificity of 84%, and the between- and within-laboratory reproducibility was 77 and 84%, respectively. A protocol involving a 72-h exposure showed increased sensitivity in detecting true positive chemicals compared to a 48-h exposure. An analysis of a test strategy using the RSMN assay as a follow-up test for substances positive in standard in vitro clastogenicity/aneugenicity assays and a reconstructed skin Comet assay for substances with positive results in standard gene mutation assays results in a sensitivity of 89%. Based on these results, the RSMN assay is considered sufficiently validated to establish it as a ‘tier 2’ assay for dermally exposed compounds and was recently accepted into the OECD’s test guideline development program.

Funder

Cosmetics Europe—The Personal Care Association

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Genetics(clinical),Toxicology,Genetics

Reference66 articles.

1. Validation of the 3D reconstructed human skin Comet assay, an animal-free alternative for following-up positive results from standard in vitro genotoxicity assays;Pfuhler;Mutagenesis,2020

2. European Union 2009. Regulation (EC) No 1223/2009 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 30 November 2009 on cosmetic products (recast);EU;Official J. EU,2009

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