Research Topics
| Anne S KienhuisSummaryAffiliation: National Institute for Public Health and the Environment Country: The Netherlands Publications
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Detail Information
Publications
Parallelogram approach using rat-human in vitro and rat in vivo toxicogenomics predicts acetaminophen-induced hepatotoxicity in humansAnne S Kienhuis
Department of Health Risk Analysis and Toxicology, Maastricht University, Maastricht, The Netherlands
Toxicol Sci 107:544-52. 2009..The present study is the first that used a toxicogenomics-based parallelogram approach, extrapolating in vitro to in vivo and interspecies, to reveal relevant mechanisms indicative of APAP-induced liver toxicity in humans in vivo...
A toxicogenomics-based parallelogram approach to evaluate the relevance of coumarin-induced responses in primary human hepatocytes in vitro for humans in vivoAnne S Kienhuis
Department of Health Risk Analysis and Toxicology, Maastricht University, Maastricht, The Netherlands
Toxicol In Vitro 23:1163-9. 2009....
Application of toxicogenomics in hepatic systems toxicology for risk assessment: acetaminophen as a case studyAnne S Kienhuis
Laboratory for Health Protection Research, National Institute of Public Health and the Environment RIVM, PO Box 1, 3720 BA Bilthoven, The Netherlands
Toxicol Appl Pharmacol 250:96-107. 2011..The challenge herein is to assess which toxicogenomic responses are relevant for induction of the apical effect and whether perturbations are sufficient for the induction of downstream events, eventually causing toxicity...
Assessing the metabolic competence of sandwich-cultured mouse primary hepatocytesKaren Mathijs
Department of Health Risk Analyses and Toxicology, Maastricht University, Maastricht, The Netherlands
Drug Metab Dispos 37:1305-11. 2009..These results indicate that the sandwich-cultured primary mouse hepatocyte system is robust and seems to maintain its metabolic competence better than that of the rat hepatocyte system...
Vegetables affect the expression of genes involved in anticarcinogenic processes in the colonic mucosa of C57BL/6 female miceSimone G J van Breda
Department of Health Risk Analysis and Toxicology, Maastricht University, The Netherlands
J Nutr 135:1879-88. 2005..These genes are of particular interest because they were consistently affected and could be involved in the prevention of CRC by vegetable consumption...
