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Table of Contents
Information Table of Contents Information 4 Venue Map 4 Welcome Address5 Acknowledgements8 Sponsors 9 Host & Organising Committees12 General Information14 Social Programme19 Business Meetings21 Scientific Programme Overview 22 Sunday, September 1st26 Monday, September 2nd33 Tuesday, September 3rd46 Wednesday, September 4th56 Sponsor / Exhibitor-hosted Sessions Posters 62 67 Author Index125 Exhibitors Booth 151 Exhibitors151 Exhibitors Booth Map179 Eurotox Congress Awards 180 3 Information Venue Map BRÜNIG 1–3 AUDITORIUM FIRST FLOOR CONGRESS HALL THEATRE ROOM COVERED PARKING RONDELL CLUB CASINO SPYCHER BALL ROOM CONCERT HALL GROUND FLOOR RUGEN HARDER 1 HARDER 2 GRIMSEL 1 GRIMSEL 2 SUSTEN 4 Information Welcome Address Dear Colleagues and Friends, On behalf of EUROTOX and the Swiss Society of Toxicology, it is our privilege and honour to welcome you to the 49th EUROTOX Congress in Interlaken. The EUROTOX meeting offers a unique opportunity for toxicologists with different backgrounds, coming from a variety of countries, to meet and network with friends, colleagues and leaders in the different disciplines. Thomas Weiser We are proud to present a scientific programme created with input from toxicologists from all parts of Europe. This congress under the theme: “New Frontiers in Safety Sciences” represents our discipline’s novel scientific and regulatory discoveries in symposia and workshops framed by key note lectures, continuing education courses and poster sessions. In addition, please take advantage of communication, discussion and information exchange with the representatives at the business exhibition. Interlaken is nicely situated in the heart of Switzerland between the lakes of Brienz and Thun and at the foot of the famous Swiss Alps trio known as the Eiger, Moench and Jungfrau offering spectacular views from ‘Jungfraujoch – Top of Europe’. The Congress Centre is centrally located in the small city of Interlaken with hotels, restaurants, shops and cultural attractions all within walking distance. We have organized for a very attractive social programme and a multitude of activities to explore the breathtaking area around Interlaken with its many attractions. We strongly hope that all this will make the EUROTOX 2013 Congress an event for you to remember. Thomas Weiser DVM, PhD, DABT Prof. Friedlieb Pfannkuch MD President of the EUROTOX 2013 Organizing Committee, Vice-President of the Swiss Society of Toxicology President of the Swiss Society of Toxicology 5 Welcome Address Dear Colleagues On behalf of EUROTOX, the federation of European Societies of Toxicology, I extend a warm welcome to all participants in this 49th Congress of EUROTOX hosted by the Swiss Society of Toxicology. We are delighted that so many of you have chosen to join us here in Interlaken, between the lakes of Brienz and Thun and at the foot of the impressive Jungfrau. Ruth Roberts The annual meeting of EUROTOX is an opportunity to showcase the very best in novel science around mechanistic toxicology and its application to the health and welfare of humans, animals and our environment. With a theme of ‘New Frontiers in Safety Science’, this programme offers many opportunities for us all to come together and learn in an atmosphere of exchange and collaboration. Your participation in this congress will make it a unique and successful event. Whether you are a speaker, a student, a postdoc, an organizer, an exhibitor, a panelist, a session chair, a poster presenter or an expert working in the field you will meet and share your knowledge and experience with colleagues from around the world within this rich environment for networking and building of future collaborations. This 49th Congress features many important and relevant topics in the field, covering the diverse fields of environmental, industrial, regulatory and clinical toxicology. With 18 workshops, 18 symposia and numerous poster sessions there is indeed plenty to interest everybody. We are also featuring several short oral sessions selected from submitted poster abstracts; these sessions give great opportunities for scientists to present their work in a supportive environment. 6 Information I would like to extend my special thanks to everybody who has contributed to this meeting via their tireless work, especially within the Scientific and Local Organizing Committees. In addition, I would like to extend my sincere thanks for the support we received with the scientific sessions, with many excellent ideas coming from the National Societies, the individual members (IMs), Speciality Sections and the many International organisations such as ECHA, EFSA, EPA and HESI ILSI that support our scientific mission. The quality and impact of our science improves year on year thanks to the great ideas coming from you, the membership. I urge you to join us in Interlaken and bring your challenges, thoughts and ideas to enrich our meeting. You will see that alongside the exciting scientific sessions, there are multiple social events for you to enjoy. We hope you will return home with new friends, inspired by new ideas and enthused with possibilities for collaborations. Please let us know if there is anyway in which we can enrich your stay and we will endeavour to address your needs. Best regards Ruth Roberts PhD, FRCPath, ATS, FBTS, ERT President of EUROTOX 7 Acknowledgements The Local Organizing Committee of the EUROTOX 2013 Congress gratefully acknowledges support: Management of Roche Ltd., Pharma – Early Research and Development (pRED) for generously supporting members of Non-Clinical Safety to contribute to the congress organisation over many months. Our thanks particularly go to Thomas Singer, Senior Vice President Global Non-Clinical Safety. Management of Novartis Pharma Ltd. for generously supporting that staff members of their Pre-Clinical Safety Department have contributed to the congress organisation over many months. Substitutional for all of them we want to thank Page Bouchard, Vice President at Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research (NIBR). For scientific review of poster abstract submissions, in addition to members of the local Scientific Programme Committee: Rex FitzGerald, Andrea Greiter-Wilke, Heather Hinton, Manfred Kansy and Marielle Odin. Matthias Festag for supervision and organisation of the local support by students. Angela Kuenzi for comprehensive administrative support and accounting services. Front row: Elisabeth Rosner, Heinrich Urwyler, Ellen Paehler, Friedlieb Pfannkuch. Back row: Martin Wilks, Michael Arand, Hans-Joerg Martus, Juerg Seiler. 8 Information Sponsors Platinum European Centre for Ecotoxicology and Toxicology of Chemicals European Crop Protection Association F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd. Pharma Early Research and Development (pRED) Gold Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research (NIBR) Silver 9 Silver (continued) Sanofi-Aventis Deutschland GmbH Bronze 10 Information Bundesamt für Gesundheit – BAG Consumer Health Novartis Consumer Health Swiss Centre for Applied Ecoxicology – SCAET (EAWAG Aquatic Research) Institut de Recherches Internationales Servier RCC India Swiss Centre for Applied Human Toxicology – SCAHT 11 Host & Organising Committees EUROTOX Executive Committee Ruth Roberts, President Nancy Claude, Past President Aristidis Tsatsakis, President Elect Felix Carvalho, Secretary-General Werner Kobel, Treasurer Nursen Basaran Christina Rudén Eva Bonefeld-Jorgensen, Mojmir Mach Swiss Society of Toxicology – Board Friedlieb Pfannkuch, President Thomas Weiser, Vice-President Elisabeth Rosner, Secretary-General Lothar Meister, Treasurer Michael Arand Martin Bopst Pierre Crettaz Ellen Paehler Martin Wilks Local Organising Committee – EUROTOX 2013 Thomas Weiser, President Michael Arand, Poster Sessions Hans-Joerg Martus, Sponsoring Friedlieb Pfannkuch, Budgeting – Accounting Elisabeth Rosner, Public Relations – Social Events Juerg Seiler, Liaison with Congress Centre Heinrich Urwyler, Exhibition Martin Wilks, Continuing Education Courses 12 Information Scientific Programme Committee – EUROTOX 2013 Ruth Roberts, EUROTOX President, Chair Thomas Weiser, EUROTOX 2013 Local Scientific Programme Committee Michael Arand, EUROTOX 2013 Local Scientific Programame Committee Giuseppe Malinverno, EUROTOX Executive Committee Member Dieter Schrenk, EUROTOX Carcinogenesis Speciality Section David Bell, EUROTOX Risk Assessment Speciality Section Raymond Pieters, EUROTOX Immunotoxicology & Chemical Allergy Speciality Section Jean-Lou Dorne, EUROTOX Molecular Toxicology Speciality Section Kevin Chipman, EUROTOX 2014 Congress representative Local Scientific Programme Committee – EUROTOX 2013 Thomas Weiser, Chair Michael Arand Elisabeth Klenke Jonathan Moggs Francois Pognan Benoit Schilter Josef Schlatter Jennifer Sims Shana Sturla Inge Werner Continuing Education Courses – EUROTOX 2013 Martin Wilks, Chair Lothar Aicher Rex FitzGerald Georg Geisler Adrian B. Roth 13 General Information Badges The participant’s name badge will be provided at the registration desk. All participants are required to wear the badge throughout the conference. Only badge holders will be admitted to the sessions and the exhibition. Banking Hours Banks are generally open from Monday to Friday 09.00 – 12.00 and 13.30 – 17.00. There are also many ATMs all over Interlaken where money can be withdrawn with credit cards. Cellular Phones Cellular phones must be switched off in the conference rooms. Check-in/-out Hotel check-in time is generally from 14.00 onwards and check-out time is usually 12.00. Climate and Clothing The climate in Interlaken at the beginning of September is generally mild, with average temperatures during the day of about 16°C and maxima of about 20°C, while the nights may already be rather cold. It is advisable to bring some light clothes for daytime and some warm clothes for the evening. Clothing for all social events should be smart casual. Coffee Breaks Coffee and tea will be served during coffee breaks on Sunday in the Congress Hall and from Monday to Wednesday in the Congress Hall and at the Food & Beverage areas of the Concert Hall (Exhibition). Credit Cards Commonly accepted credit cards in hotels, restaurants and shops are American Express, Diners Club, Visa and MasterCard. Restaurants and shops generally display signs indicating what cards they accept. The registration desk accepts Visa and MasterCard, only. Currency The currency used in Switzerland is the Swiss Franc (CHF). Prices are usually also indicated in Euros, and most stores, shops and restaurants accept Euros (change will be given in Swiss Francs. The exchange rate will not be the official one, and it may be somewhat less advantageous). 14 Information Disabled Access and Special Assistance Access for disabled persons is guaranteed, and special assistance can be provided upon request. Entry Formalities Switzerland belongs to the European Schengen area and the corresponding requirements apply. Participants needing a visa for entry to Switzerland are strongly advised to apply to the Swiss Embassy or a Swiss Consulate in their home country well in advance. For information on passport/visa requirements for entry into Switzerland, contact the Swiss Embassy or Consulate in your country, or obtain the relevant information from your travel agency. Should you need to apply for a visa, the congress organizers will – upon request – send you a “Letter of Invitation” to support your application. Please note that such a letter is not a commitment on the part of the conference to provide financial support. Exhibition Opening hours: 19.30 – 21.30 Sunday, September 1st: Monday, September 2nd: 9.30 – 18.30 8.30 – 18.00 Tuesday, September 3rd: Wednesday, September 4th:8.30 – 11.00 Health and Travel Insurance/Liability Delegates are advised to take out appropriate health and travel insurance. Neither the conference organisers nor the conference secretariat accept any liability for personal injuries sustained, or for loss or damage to property belonging to conference participants, either during or as a result of the conference or during all tours and events. Internet Access The Congress Centre is equipped with a Swisscom HotSpot for WLAN Internet Access. Also, most hotels provide internet access via Ethernet and/or WLAN in the rooms, as well as WLAN access in the lobby (see hotel descriptions for details). Language The official language of the congress is English. There will be no simultaneous translation. Interlaken belongs to the German-speaking part of Switzerland, but people in stores, restaurants and hotels are mostly fluent in English and French. Shop signs are also frequently displayed in Japanese. 15 Local Transport Upon arrival at your hotel you will receive a “Interlaken Guest Card” which will allow unlimited free travel with public transport within the “Bödeli” area (i.e. within the communities of Interlaken, Unterseen, Bönigen and Matten). Lunches Buffet lunches will be available in the Congress Hall on: Sunday, September 1st: 12.00 – 13.00 Monday, September 2nd: 12.00 – 14.00 Tuesday, September 3rd: 12.00 – 13.30 On-Site Registration On-site registrations will be possible. When registering on-site, however, participants should be aware that the availability of accommodation (and possibilities for participation in the social events) may be limited. Poster Areas Poster areas are located in 3 areas: Monday, September 2nd, 2013 Auditorium Foyer: P01/01 – P03/14; P06/01 – P09/25; P11/01 – P11/16 Concert Hall: P04-01 – P04/14; P10/01 – P10/24; P15/01 – P17/18 Club Casino: P05/01 – P05/23 Tuesday, September 3rd, 2013 Auditorium Foyer: P12/01 – P14/28, P20/01 – P21/03 Concert Hall: P18/01 – P18/27, P23/01 – P25/28 Club Casino: P19/01 – P19/18; P22/01 – P22/05 Poster set up time is 08:00 – 09:00. Each poster will be displayed for one day only. The presenting author (or one of the co-authors) is asked to stand by their posters at least during lunch time and coffee breaks to answer questions from viewers. Authors have to dismantle their posters before 18:00 on the day of the poster session. 16 Information Registration Desk Opening hours: Saturday, August 31st, 2013: Sunday, September 1st, 2013: Monday, September 2nd, 2013: Tuesday, September 3rd, 2013: 16.00 – 18.00 07.00 – 10.15 and 15.00 – 18.30 07.00 – 18.30 07.00 – 18.30 Wednesday, September 4th, 2013: 07.00 – 09.00 Shopping Hours In summer time, shops vary in their opening hours. Many souvenir shops are open daily from 08.00 until evening (19.00 or even until 21.30). Smoking Policy Smoking is forbidden in the conference venue and the evening venues. Smoking is banned in Switzerland in public places, on public transport, in stores, restaurants and pubs; some restaurants and pubs may have so-called “Fumoirs”, where smoking is permitted. Hotels may offer special smoking rooms. Please indicate your request on the registration form, when you make your hotel reservation. 17 A piece of quality of life More benefits with fewer side effects. This molecule may hold the key to better treatment of many diseases. Our innovations help millions of people by alleviating their suffering and improving their quality of life. We give them hope. We Innovate Healthcare 18 Information Social Programme The focus of the social programme is to provide you with opportunities to network with your colleagues from all over the world. EUROTOX 2013 in Interlaken will provide numerous opportunities for discussions and interactions between participants. Key events will be the Welcome Reception on Sunday evening, the EUROTOX 2013 Party on Monday evening and the Congress Dinner on Tuesday evening. Welcome Reception – Sunday The Welcome Reception at the Interlaken Congress Centre on Sunday (starting at 19.30) is the first networking opportunity to meet colleagues and friends and make new contacts. It will take place in the ‘Concert Hall’ (exhibition area allowing interaction with the exhibitors), in the ‘Ball Room’and the ‘Club Casino’. EUROTOX 2013 Party – Monday On Monday evening (starting at 19.00) a get-together party will be organized in a relaxed setting in “DAS ZELT”, a large marquee next to the Congress Centre. Depending on the weather, please remember: it is a tent! Simple drinks and light food will be served at no costs. Additional drinks may be purchased on your own expense. Our colleague Armin Wolf and his band “Just For Fun” will take care of the entertainment. Congress Dinner – Tuesday On Tuesday evening (starting at 19.30) the Congress Dinner will be held in the ‘Congress Hall’ of the Congress Centre. The renowned kitchen of the ‘Congress Centre Kursaal Interlaken’ will do its utmost to satisfy your palate. Coffee Breaks and Lunches Coffee and lunches will be served, normally in the ‘Congress Hall’, in close proximity to and within the exhibition area. Pre- and Post-Congress Programme September is an ideal time to visit Interlaken and the Bernese Oberland area, so you will have the opportunity to combine work and pleasure before or after your stay, especially when you bring your family along. Accompanying persons will be invited to participate in a sight-seeing walk through Interlaken on Monday morning, during which the expert guide will point out places of (historic) interest. 19 Skill: Advanced technologies in synthesis and analysis from small to large scale synthesis (micro Ci-Ci) Quality: In accordance with ISO-9001 system We offer custom synthesis of C-14 and H-3-labelled compounds with customer's satisfaction. Successful business relations with customers in EU, US, Japan, South America, Australia. 20 Information Business Meetings Saturday, August 31st, 2013 08.30 – 10.30 Rugen EUROTOX Core Executive Committee 11.00 – 18.00 Rugen EUROTOX Executive Committee Monday, September 2nd, 2013 12.00 – 13.00 Theatre Room Communication Sub-Committee 12.00 – 13.00 Grimsel 1+2 Education Sub-Committee 12.00 – 13.00 Brünig 1–3 EUROTOX Individual Members 12.00 – 13.00 Harder 1+2 Registration Sub-Committee 12.00 – 13.00 Ball Room Moleular Toxicology Sub-Committee 12.00 – 13.00 Susten EUROTOX 2014 Scientific Programme Committee 16.30 – 17.30 Grimsel 1+2 Exhibitors Meeting Tuesday, September 3rd, 2013 12.00 – 13.00 Theatre Room Carcinogenesis Sub-Committee 12.00 – 13.00 Ball Room ERAS Risk Assessment Sub-Committee 12.00 – 13.00 Grimsel 1+2 ITCASS Immunotoxicology Sub-Committee 12.00 – 13.00 Harder 1+2 EUROTOX Business Council Luncheon 13.00 – 15.30 Harder 1+2 EUROTOX Business Council Meeting 16.00 – 18.00 Grimsel 1+2 YSA / BH Poster Award Evaluation Meeting Wednesday, September 4th, 2013 08.30 – 09.30 Rugen EUROTOX Executive Committee Meeting 09.30 – 10.30 Harder 1+2 Corporate Program Sub-Committee 14.15 – 15.15 Harder 1+2 Swiss Society of Toxicology – General Assembly 21 22 Theatre Room Coffee Break CEC 1 (–16.40) 14.30 – 15.00 15.00 – 15.30 18.00 – 19.30 16.30 – 17.00 15.30 – 16.30 CEC 1 13.00 – 14.30 CEC 5 Statistical evaluation in toxicology Susten BHMF Symposium Coffee Break CEC 5 BHMF Symposium CEC 5 Lunch 12.00 – 13.00 Coffee Break CEC: Registration BHMF Symposium and Coffee Congress Hall CEC 1 BHMF Symposium Dietary exposure assessments – current scenario and emerging issues Opening Ceremony Auditorium 10.30 – 12.00 10.00 – 10.30 09.30 – 10.00 09.00 – 09.30 Room Sunday, September 1st, 2013 CEC 4 CEC 4 CEC 4 3d cell models in drug safety: with better tools to better drugs? Harder 1+2 Scientific Programme Overview CEC 3 (–16.00) CEC 3 CEC 3 Alternative test methods: challenges and regulatory application Brünig 1–3 CEC 2 CEC 2 CEC 2 New methods to assess contact sensitizing potential of chemicals Grimsel 1+2 23 Symposium 6 Challenges with immunogenicity of biologics Symposium 7 RISK21: Novel thinking for 21st century risk assessment 16.30 – 18.30 Symposium 5 Renal toxicology – epidemiology, mechanisms and risk assessment Coffee Break Symposium 4 Stem cell derived tissues in safety assessment ILSI / HESI Lecture Lunch and Poster Viewing Keynote Lecture 2 16.00 – 16.30 14.00 – 16.00 13.00 – 14.00 12.00 – 13.00 11.00 – 12.00 Symposium 2 Recent developments in risk assessment of nanomaterials and nano safety science 10.00 – 11.00 Workshop 2 Pesticide exposure and risk assessment by field measurements and model approaches Coffee Break Keynote Lecture 1 08.30 – 09.30 Congress Hall 09.30 – 10.00 Auditorium Room Monday, September 2nd, 2013 Symposium 8 New challenges for risk assessment: how innovation can make the difference Workshop 5 Closing the gap between academic research and regulatory risk assessment of chemicals Symposium 3 Profiling the toxicity of new drugs: a non animal-based approach integrating toxicodynamics and biokinetics Theatre Room Workshop 6 Preclinical safety assessment: evolution of sciencebased decision making Workshop 4 Advances in the application of the Threshold of Toxicological Concern (TTC) as a pragmatic risk assessment tool for cosmetics Symposium 1 Early Safety assessment: considerations and strategies in drug discovery Ball Room Workshop 7 Connexin-based cellular signaling and its relevance to toxicology Oral Session 2 Models for assessing organ toxicity Workshop 3 Carcinogenicity testing for pharmaceuticals Roundtable Discussion Risk versus hazard in Europe Informative Session WHO Workshop 1 Immunotoxicants: modes of action and pathways to toxicity Brünig 1–3 Exhibitor-hosted Session AnaPath Oral Session 1 Computational toxicology & Endocrine disruption Harder 1+2 Sponsor-hosted Session EBT Exhibitor Hosted Session MPI Grimsel 1+2 Overview Concert Hall and Club Casino: Business Exhibition Concert Hall, Club Casino and Auditiorium Foyer: Scientific Posters 24 16.00 – 18.00 Symposium 13 Toxic injury to the lung: mechanisms and consequences Symposium 11 The Extended One Generation Reproductive Toxicity (EOGRT) assay- scientific challenges and regulatory implementation 13.30 – 15.30 15.30 – 16.00 12.15 – 13.15 EUROTOX – SOT Debate 12.00 – 13.30 11.00 – 12.00 Coffee Break Lunch and Poster Viewing Symposium 14 Cardiovascular toxicity in drug dicovery and development Symposium 12 Integration of human and environmental risk assessment – is it the future? Workshop 10 Symposium 10 Genetic Suscepti- Mechanism-based bility: relevance to safety biomarkers toxicology Symposium 9 Assessment and control of genotoxic drug impurities 10.00 – 11.00 Theatre Room Coffee Break BHMF Lecture 08.30 – 09.30 Congress Hall 09.30 – 10.00 Auditorium Room Tuesday, September 3rd, 2013 Workshop 13 miRNAs: mechanisms and safety issues Workshop 11 New approaches to unravel toxicities based on compound activity observed in zebrafish Workshop 9 The toxicology of drug delivery systems Ball Room Oral Session 5 Genotoxicity, Carcinogenicity & Mechanisms in Toxicology Oral Session 4 Environmental toxicology, Food toxicology & Novel analytical techniques Oral Session 3 Nanotoxicology, Immunotoxicology & Dermatoxicology Harder 1+2 Workshop 14 Addressing safety in the immature organism: about children’s safety and risk-assessment Workshop 12 Identifying, assessing and managing allergens in food Exhibitor Hosted Session Huntingdon (–13:00) Workshop 8 Risk perception and communication Brünig 1–3 Exhibitor Hosted Session ACEA (in consistency with other exhibitor hosted sessions) Grimsel 1+2 Concert Hall and Club Casino: Business Exhibition Concert Hall, Club Casino and Auditiorium Foyer: Scientific Posters 25 Symposium 15 Tiered approaches to assess complex mixtures 08.30 – 10.30 Symposium 17 Reactive metabolites and drug toxicity: contribution, mechanisms and novel approaches Closing Ceremony 11.00 – 13.00 13.10 – 14.10 10.30 – 11.00 Auditorium Room Congress Hall Symposium 18 Nuclear receptors integrate metabolic and environmental signals to regulate cell fate Symposium 16 New developments in “omics” for use in risk assessment Theatre Room Wednesday, September 4th, 2013 Ball Room Workshop 17 Assessment of azo dyes and aromatic amines in food additives, cosmetics and consumer products Harder 1+2 Workshop 18 Ecological risk assessment in the 21st century: taking into account mechanistic data Oral Session 6 Neurotoxicology, Developmental Toxicology & miRNAs Business Exhibition Workshop 16 Predicting chronic toxicity to establish level of safety concern in absence of toxicological data Workshop 15 Translational imaging in nonclinical safety applications Overview Coffee Break Concert Hall, Club Casino Grimsel 1+2 Brünig 1–3 Sunday, September 1st, 2013 09.00 – 17.00 Satellite Symposium on “New Advances in Risk Assessment” Chair: Herman Autrup, Denmark Room: Theatre Room Sponsored and organised by the Bo Helmstedt Memorial Foundation – BHMF The symposium will integrate the latest scientific knowledge and methodology into the development of a new paradigm of human health risk assessment from hazard to exposure driven. This work is currently ongoing in both the US (EPA) and EU (DG Sanco). The symposium will be based upon two sessions, one focusing on exposure assessment and the second one focusing on hazard assessment supplemented by a lecture on integration of non-chemical stressors into chemical risk assessment. A panel discussion with representatives from EPA, DG Sanco, academia and industrial stakeholders will conclude the symposium. 09.00 – 09.10 Welcome: Herman Autrup, Denmark 09.10 – 09.40 System biology – exposure assessment: John Wambough, USA 09.40 – 10.10 Exposomes: Paolo Vineis, UK 10.30 – 11.00 GIS-based monitoring and chip technologies: Dennis Sargiannis, Greece 11.00 – 11.30 Toxicokinetics – internal dose and in vitro vs in vivo: Emanuela Testai, Italy 11.30 – 12.00 Identifying important life stages for monitoring and assessing risks from exposures to environmental contaminants: results of a World Health Organization review: Thea de Wet, South Africa 13.00 – 13.30 Mode of action: Alan Boobis, UK 13.30 – 14.00 Incorporating new technologies into toxicity testing and chemical risk assessment: moving from 21st Century vision to a data-driven framework: Rusty Thomas, USA 14.00 – 14.30 Computational toxicology – read across: Chihae Yang, USA 14.30 – 15.00 Probabilistic risk assessment: Wout Slob, The Netherlands 15.20 – 17.00 Panel discussion: DGSANCO, ECHA, US EPA, (ICCA), RISK21 (academia) 26 10.00 – 16.40 Chair: David Tennant, UK Room: Congress Hall Organised and supported by the International Life Sciences Institute (ILSI Europe) Dietary exposure assessment is a key component of any risk-benefit assessment, yet it is clear that there is a lack of reliable methodology in this area for assessing consumer exposures to both food constituents and non-food products. Dietary exposure assessment is needed for substance groups of varying chemistries, functions and concentration levels in foods. Assessment guidance is available for individual types of substances, but guidance and practicalities of assessment vary among substance types. This course aims to raise awareness on key aspects of dietary exposure assessment across different substance types, including emerging issues in methodology, availability of food consumption data, and EU-wide efforts to compile harmonised food consumption data. Modelling of dietary exposure will be demonstrated using case studies on deterministic and probabilistic assessment as well as acute and chronic dietary exposure, for different types of chemicals. Uncertainties in this modelling will be discussed and methods to quantify uncertainty will be lined out. Participants will finally be introduced to the GUIDEA website as a tool to find up-to-date guidance on dietary exposure assessments. GUIDEA uses a Wikimedia platform which will be an important reference source for stakeholders, providing concise guidance on the planning, conduct, reporting and interpretation of exposure assessments. 1 Session background and overview: Diána Bánáti, ILSI Europe, Belgium 2 Emerging/developing issues in conducting dietary exposure/intake assessment: Jürgen Koenig, Austria 3 Dietary exposure modelling of chemicals: Polly Boon, The Netherlands 4 Refinement of dietary assessment methods: Davide Arcella, Italy 5 Quantification of uncertainties: Marc Kennedy, UK 6 Assessing uncertainties in dietary exposure analysis – improving confidence in results: Susanne Kettler, Belgium 7GUIDEA – guidance for dietary intake exposure assessment – e-learning tool: David Tennant, UK 27 Sunday September 1st CEC 1: Dietary exposure assessments – current scenario and emerging issues 09.30 – 16.30 CEC 2: New methods to assess contact sensitizing potential of chemicals Chairs: Emanuela Corsini, Italy and Raymond Pieters, The Netherlands Room: Grimsel 1+2 Organized by the EUROTOX Immunotoxicology and Chemical Allergens Specialty Section Allergic contact dermatitis (ACD) is to a considerable extent a preventable disease. A correct detection of skin sensitizers, the characterization of potency, the understanding of human skin exposure, and the application of adequate risk assessment and management strategies can all contribute to a reduction of ACD. From March 2013 onward the ban on animal use to assess repeated dose toxicity, including sensitizing potential, of cosmetic ingredients is definitive. Due to the new European policy on chemicals (REACH), in vitro methods are also likely to play a major role in the near future. Growing political and practical resistance to toxicity testing in animals has driven the development of animal-free methods for screening and prioritization of toxicants, including those causing allergic hypersensitivity. Over the last decade, incredible progress has been achieved and several in vitro methods have been proposed both from academia and industries to identify the potential of chemicals to induce skin sensitization. The SENS-IT-IV project is one of the important projects sponsored by the EU to promote the development of alternative testing to animals. The SENS-IT-IV project has provided many mechanism-based assays, which together may provide a strategy to address the issue of contact sensitization. This CEC aims to provide the up-to-date status to inform all stakeholders interested in this subject. Course introduction: Raymond Pieters, The Netherlands 1 Pathogenesis of contact sensitization induction: Erwin Roggen, Denmark 2 QSAR and peptide binding assay: Jean Pierre Lepoittevin, France 3 Skin absorption and keratinocyte models: Emanuela Corsini, Italy 4 Skin models and DC migration: Sue Gibbs, The Netherlands 5 T cell priming assays for contact sensitization: Stefan Martin, Germany 6 Tiered approach to test contact sensitizers: Marc Teunis, Netherlands 7 Colipa (Cosmetics Europe) strategy to assess contact sensitizing potential of chemicals: Kerstin Reisinger, Germany 28 10.00 – 16.00 Chair: David Bell, Finland Room: Brünig 1–3 Organised and supported by the European Chemicals Agency Alternative test methods to traditional animal testing, and non-test methods, offer the prospect of numerous potential benefits, including reduced costs, increased coverage of chemical space, higher throughput and ethical benefits. These test methods are also of growing interest to regulators, for example with the cosmetics directive. However, it is important to be able to understand the scientific basis for these tests, and the application of that science within specific regulatory frameworks. This course aims to elucidate key scientific and regulatory principles underlying the application of these test methods. The session will open with examining the challenges for regulatory acceptance and recognition of test methods, and explaining how recently developed policies are aimed at dealing with these challenges. The following three presentations set out scientific areas which have regulatory applications. The fifth presentation will provide a status report of areas where testing is and is not feasible, and explain future prospects for their development. Finally, the last speaker will explain with the example of ‘read-across’ how an alternative method is applied in a regulatory setting. Students will have the opportunity to interact with speakers through a question and answer session. At the end of the session, participants will have developed an understanding of the status quo for alternative methods, the scientific concepts and constraints that underpin alternative test methods, the concepts associated with acceptance and recognition of test methods, and the application of these test methods within a regulatory context. Course introduction: David Bell, Finland 1 EURL ECVAM recommendations – a new tool towards regulatory acceptance of alternative test methods: Claudius Griesinger, Italy 2 The application of QSARs in regulatory toxicology: Mark Cronin, UK 3 In vitro- in vivo extrapolation for toxicity and use in PBPK: Amin Rostami, UK 4 In vitro tests for irritation and corrosion – a continuing success story: Laura Rossi, Finland 5 The EC report on “Alternative (non-animal) methods for cosmetics testing: current status and future prospects – 2010”: Valerie Zuang, Italy 6 Regulatory application of non-test methods; the example of read-across in REACH: Karel de Raat, Netherlands Panel discussion; Questions & Answers 29 Sunday September 1st CEC 3: Alternative test methods: challenges and regulatory application 09.30 – 16.30 CEC 4: 3d cell models in drug safety: with better tools to better drugs? Chairs: David Kaplan, USA and Linda Griffith, USA Room: Harder 1+2 Sponsored by the Bo Holmstedt Memorial Foundation (BHMF) Selection of drug candidates early on in development has become increasingly important to minimize use of animals and to avoid costly failures of drugs later on. In vitro systems to predict and assess organ toxicity have been of limited value so far due to difficulties in recapitulating in vivo-relevant toxicity on a cell culture level. To overcome the limitations of single cell type monolayer cultures and short-lived primary cell preparations, researchers have created novel 3-dimensional culture systems which appear to more closely resemble in vivo biology. These may become key for drug industry in the evaluation of drug candidates, yet, the value and acceptance of those new models in standard drug safety applications needs to be demonstrated. The sessions aims to give an overview of different approaches undertaken in the field of pre-clinical safety assessment and in particular organ toxicity. Opening remarks & introduction to the course: Session Chairs 1 Development of advanced tissue models for in vitro toxicity testing: ZhanFeng Cui, UK 2 Kidney injury and disease modelling in silk based 3d in vitro systems: David Kaplan, USA 3 3d cardiac models: Jens Kelm, Switzerland 4 Long-term 3d culture systems to detect human-specific liver toxicants Adrian Roth: Switzerland 5 Human organo-typical (HOT) co-cultures for functional substance screening Manfred Schmolz: Germany 6 Human 3d tissue cultures to assess metabolism of drugs: Tommy Andersson, Sweden 7Integration of systems biology and tissue engineering for drug development: Linda Griffith, USA 30 9.30 – 16.30 CEC 5: Statistical evaluation in toxicology This practical course is designed for toxicologists who have the need to generate or interpret data in toxicology. Special emphasis is placed on hands-on application using R-software and real data without use of complex mathematical formulae. In the first session the principles for multiple comparisons are explained for the analysis of normally distributed as well as skewed endpoints. In part ii) the related evaluation of mutagenicity assays is explained: count or proportions as endpoints, using a k-fold relevance criteria, and taking possible downturn effect at high doses into account. In part iii), the basic concepts of dose-response modelling are introduced: commonly used models (e.g., log-logistic /Hillslope model) and their toxicological interpretation. The principles of ECxx and benchmark dose estimation are explained. The second session starts with exercises using R for the first session. A number of case studies using the R packages bmd and drc demonstrate how to carry out dose-response analysis for standard assays. In part ii), we will discuss the estimation of the AUC in sparse sampling situations, discuss the role of the AUC in toxicokinetic studies and illustrate the use of the R package PK for that purpose. In the third session, the proof-of-safety approach “significant toxicity” (Denton et al. Environ. Tox. Chem, 2011,30,1117-1126) will be discussed. Finally, practical exercise sessions will allow you perform the analysis of real toxicity data using the R packages multcomp, mratios, MCPAN, nparcomp, PK and drc. The data examples (as xls and txt files), the program code and a short user guide to R will be provided in advance of the course. We recommend that participants bring their own notebook – with installed R and selected packages – to the course. 1 Principles and analysis of repeated toxicity studies: Ludwig A. Hothorn, Germany 2 Evaluation of mutagenicity assays: Ludwig A. Hothorn, Germany 3 Dose-response modeling: Christian Ritz, Denmark 4 Exercise I using R 5 Toxicokinetics: Thomas Jaki, UK 6 Exercise II using R 7 Signicant toxicity approach: Ludwig A. Hothorn, Germany Final discussion 31 Sunday September 1st Chairs: Ludwig A. Hothorn, Germany, Christian Ritz, Denmark and Thomas Jaki, UK Room: Susten EUROTOX 2013 – Opening Ceremony Chair: Ruth Roberts, President of EUROTOX, UK Room: Auditorium 18.00 – 18.45 Opening Ceremony • Welcome address by Thomas Weiser President of the EUROTOX 2013 congress, Basel, Switzerland • Welcome address by Pascal Strupler Director of the Federal Office of Public Health, Bern, Switzerland • Welcome address by Urs Graf Mayor of the city of Interlaken, Switzerland • Opening of EUROTOX 2013 by Ruth Roberts President of EUROTOX, Macclesfield, United Kingdom 18.45 – 19.00 EUROTOX Merit Award Ceremony • Awarded Scientist (tbd) Chair: Ruth Roberts President of EUROTOX, Macclesfield, United Kingdom 19.00 – 19.30 Keynote Lecture • „From room odorizers, bath salts and plant food – New psychoactive substances on the rise“ Thomas Kraemer Institute of Legal Medicine, University of Zürich, Switzerland 32 Monday, September 2nd, 2013 08.30 – 09.30 Keynote Lecture 1: Public health impact of food; quantity, quality, supplements and appetites Monday September 2nd Prof. Sir Colin Berry, Prof. Emeritus of Pathology, Queen Mary University of London, UK Chair: Werner Kobel, Switzerland Room: Auditorium 10.00 – 12.00 Symposium 1: Early safety assessment: considerations and strategies in drug discovery Chair: Thomas Hartung, USA Room: Ball Room 10.00 – 10.20 Fail early and learn fast – how early safety testing impacts drug attrition: Susanne Mohr, Switzerland 10.25 – 10.45 Early off-target assessments for the prediction of safety liabilities – case studies: Andreas Hartmann, Switzerland 10.50 – 11.10 Structure-based assessment of potentially mutagenic impurities – processes aligned to ICH M7 step 2 document at Bayer HealthCare: Andreas Sutter, Germany 11.15 – 11.35 Leveraging early pharmacology studies and animal models of human disease to learn about toxicity: Eckart Krupp, Germany 11.40 – 12.00 Early safety assessment of biologicals: Jennifer Sims, Switzerland 33 10.00 – 12.00 Symposium 2: Recent developments in risk assessment of nanomaterials and nano safety science Chairs: Yasuo Yoshioka, Japan and Akihiko Hirose, Japan Room: Congress Hall This Symposium is sponsored by the Bo Holmstedt Memorial Foundation (BHMF). 10.00 – 10.20 Nanomaterials as a potential cause of lung disease: James C. Bonner, USA 10.25 – 10.45 Safety consideration of nanomaterials for biomedical applications: Chunying Chen, China 10.50 – 11.10 Nanoparticles as an emerging environmental and occupational hazard: Anna A. Shvedova, USA 11.15 – 11.35 Dosimetry of nanomaterials after different routes of exposure: Wolfgang Kreyling, Germany 11.40 – 12.00 Nanotoxicity and nano safety science in various exposure scenarios: Akihiko Hirose, Japan 10.00 – 12.00 Symposium 3: Profiling the toxicity of new drugs: a non animal-based approach integrating toxicodynamics and biokinetics Chairs: Armin Wolf, Switzerland and Stefan Müller, Germany Room: Theatre Room This Symposium is sponsored by ACEA Bio. 10.00 – 10.20 Predict-IV project overview (EU grant 202222): non animal-based toxicity profiling by integrating toxico-dynamics and biokinetics: Armin Wolf, Switzerland 10.25 – 10.45 An integrated ‘omics’ approach to characterise nephrotoxin induced stress responses in renal epithelial cells: Paul Jennings, Austria 10.50 – 11.10 The relevance of toxicokinetics in in vitro studies: Emanuela Testai, Italy 34 11.15 – 11.35 Integrating Toxicokinetics and Toxicodynamics to predict toxic responses in vivo: Frédéric Bois, France 11.40 – 12.00 The virtual liver: possibilities to simulate mechanisms of toxicity and predict drug targets: Jan Hengstler, Germany 10.00 – 12.00 Monday September 2nd Workshop 1: Immunotoxicants: modes of action and pathways to toxicity Chair: Raymond Pieters, The Netherlands Room: Brünig 1–3 10.00 – 10.25 Application of ‘omics’ to immunotoxicology: from mechanisms of action to alternative methods: Oscar Volger, The Netherlands 10.30 – 10.55 Aryl hydrocarbon receptor activation: new insides on TCDD immunotoxicity: Raymond Pieters, The Netherlands 11.00 – 11.25 Signal transduction pathways activated by contact allergens: in vitro opportunities for the identification of chemical allergens: Andreas Natsch, Switzerland 11.30 – 11.55 Glucocorticoid receptor and signal transduction pathway associated with immune cell activation: Marco Racchi, Italy 10.00 – 12.00 Workshop 2: Pesticide exposure and risk assessment by field measurements and model approaches Chairs: Claudio Colosio, Italy and Aristidis Tsatsakis, Greece Room: Auditorium 10.00 – 10.20 Pesticide exposure of agricultural workers in Greece. Biomarkers diversity and variability: Aristidis Tsatsakis, Greece 10.25 – 10.45 Typical exposure levels in Europe and in tropical countries: Francisco Javier Egea González, Spain & Richard Glass, UK 35 10.50 – 11.10 Definition of AOEL-based provisional BEIs for pesticide exposure monitoring: a proposed approach for the protection of farmer’s health: Claudio Colosio, Italy 11.15 – 11.35 Pesticide and biocide exposures in the UK: John Cocker, UK 11.40 – 12.00 The PESTEXPO program: results of pesticide measurements in vinegrowing and development of exposure algorithms: Isabelle Baldi, France 10.00 – 12.00 Oral Session 1: Computational toxicology & Endocrine disruption Chair: Alex Odermatt, Switzerland Room: Harder 1+2 10.00 – 10.15 Generalized workflow for generating high quality in-silico models for off-target mediated toxicity: Lennart T. Anger, Germany 10.15 – 10.30 Multi-scale modeling for individualized spatiotemporal prediction of drug effects: Juan G. Diaz-Ochoa, Germany 10.30 – 10.45 Pharmacophore-based virtual screening as a prioritization tool to assess mechanism-based cardiotoxic effects of small organic molecules: Daniela Schuster, Austria 10.45 – 11.00 Pharmacophore-based virtual screening in the search for endocrine disrupting chemicals – successful case studies: Anna Vuorinen, Austria 11.00 – 11.15 Endocrine modulatory effects of cadmium and the molecular mechanism of action: Ali Imran, Sweden 11.15 – 11.30 Overview of the existing regulations and testing programs for endocrine active chemicals: Simon Warren, USA 11.30 – 11.45 Determination of Bisphenol A exposure in rural and urban area populations in Mersin City: Turkey: Dilek Battal, Turkey 11.45 – 12.00 A case study of risk assessment in Malaysia: Letchumi Thannimalay, Malaysia 36 10.00 – 11.00 Exhibitor-hosted Session Room: Grimsel 1+2 How do I get into Phase 1 Trials with my compound? Scott Boley, MPI Research, USA For details see page 62 12.00 – 13.00 Monday September 2nd ILSI/HESI Lecture Emerging needs for chemical safety and risk assessment in Europe David R. Bell, European Chemicals Agency, Finland Chair: Syril D. Pettit, HESI Executive Director, USA Room: Auditorium 13.00 – 14.00 Keynote Lecture 2: Reliability of toxicology without experimental animals? Possibilities and limitations since the ban of animal experiments with cosmetics Prof. Franz Oesch, University of Mainz, Germany Chair: Michael Arand, Switzerland Room: Auditorium 13.00 – 14.00 Sponsor-hosted Session Room: Grimsel 1+2 Evidence-based Toxicology Collaboration Chair: Thomas Hartung, USA For details see page 62 37 13.00 – 13.45 Informative Session Room: Brünig 1–3 The WHO chemical risk assessment network: A new global collaborative approach to human health risk assessment Chair: Carolyn Vickers, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland 13.00 – 13.15 Background and rationale for a global chemical risk assessment network: Martin Wilks, Switzerland 13.15 – 13.30 Objectives, setup and ways of working for the WHO Chemical Risk Assessment Network: Carolyn Vickers, Switzerland 13.30 – 13.45 Current and planned projects of the WHO Chemical Risk Assessment Network: Alan Boobis, UK 13.00 – 14.00 Exhibitor-hosted Session Room: Harder 1+2 Pathology evaluation involved in the development of ATMPs Klaus Weber and colleagues, AnaPath GmbH, BSL Bioservices Scientific Laboratories GmbH and collaboration groups For details see page 63 14.00 – 16.00 Symposium 4: Stem cell derived tissues in safety assessment Chair: Kyle Kolaja, USA Room: Auditorium 14.00 – 14.20 Safety issues in human pluripotent stem cells: Nissim Benvenisty, Israel 14.25 – 14.45 The use of stem cells in discovery and toxicology: Heinz Ruffner, Switzerland 14.50 – 15.10 Realizing the potential of IPS cells and derived tissues – from banking to improved safety assessment to microphysiological systems: Kyle Kolaja, USA 38 15.15 – 15.35 Stem cell derived cardiomyocytes – application review: Stefan Braam, The Netherlands 15.40 – 16.00 Novel iPSC-derived hepatic model systems for investigating mechanisms of idiosyncratic Drug-Induced Liver Injury (DILI): Ed LeCluyse, USA Symposium 5: Renal toxicology – epidemiology, mechanisms and risk assessment Chairs: Angelika Tritscher, Switzerland and Felix Carvalho, Spain Room: Congress Hall 14.00 – 14.20 Epidemiology and causation of human renal disease; the case of aristolochic acid nephropathy: Volker Arlt, UK 14.25 – 14.45 Nephrotoxicity of melamine, cyanuric acid, and their combination: Gonçalo Gamboa, USA 14.50 – 15.10 Mechanisms of renal disease – Ochratoxin A: Angela Mally, Germany 15.15 – 15.35 Renal toxicology in drug attrition: Magnus Söderberg, Sweden 15.40 – 16.00 Integration of epidemiological and toxicological information into risk assessment – the melamine example: Angelika Tritscher, Switzerland 14.00 – 16.00 Workshop 3: Carcinogenicity testing for pharmaceuticals Chairs: Paul Baldrick, UK and Peter Heining, Switzerland Room: Harder 1+2 14.00 – 14.25 Carcinogenicity testing for pharmaceuticals – an update: Paul Baldrick, UK 14.30 – 14.55 Practical considerations when setting up and conducting a carcinogenicity study: Guy Healing, UK 39 Monday September 2nd 14.00 – 16.00 15.00 – 15.25 Transgenic versus conventional carcinogenicity testing: David Jones, UK 15.30 – 15.55 Case studies or how to deal with ‘difficult’ results: Martin Bopst, Switzerland 14.00 – 16.00 Workshop 4: Advances in the application of the Threshold of Toxicological Concern (TTC) as a pragmatic risk assessment tool for cosmetics Chair: Alan Boobis, UK and Co-Chair: Heli Hollnagel, Switzerland Room: Ball Room This Symposium is sponsored by ILSI EUROPE. 14.00 – 14.20 Chemical risk assessment in absence of adequate toxicological data: Benoît Schilter, Switzerland 14.25 – 14.45 TTC Task Force: Development of a cosmetics database to support application of TTC to cosmetic ingredients (EU Cosmos project): Heli Hollnagel, Switzerland 14.50 – 15.10 Threshold of toxicological concern (TTC) task force: a strategy to support application of TTC to dermally applied cosmetic ingredients: Faith M. Williams, UK 15.15 – 15.35 Risk assessment of genotoxic carcinogens task force. Use of TTC for contaminants with potential genotoxic hazard: Alan Boobis, UK 15.40 – 16.00 Future directions for TTC: Heli Hollnagel, Switzerland 14.00 – 16.00 Workshop 5: Closing the gap between academic research and regulatory risk assessment of chemicals Chairs: Christina Ruden, Sweden and Marlene Agerstrand, Sweden Room: Theatre Room 14.00 – 14.20 Risk to all or none? The Bisphenol A risk controversy: Anna Beronius, Sweden 40 14.25 – 14.45 Ensuring reliability and relevance of academic research for regulatory assessments – some practical considerations: Sharon Munn, Italy 14.50 – 15.10 How is new science used in regulatory approaches for dealing with endocrine disrupters? Andreas Kortenkamp, UK 15.15 – 15.35 Editors’ and Reviewers’ roles in promoting quality publications: James Kehrer, Canada Monday September 2nd 15.40 – 16.00 Discussion: What is needed to close the gap between science and regulatory risk assessment? All speakers 14.00 – 16.00 Oral Session 2: Models for assessing organ toxicity Chair: Jan G. Hengstler, Germany and Co-Chair: Dieter Schrenk, Germany Room: Brünig 1–3 14.00 – 14.15 Determination of liver specific toxicities in rat hepatocytes by High Content Imaging during 2-week multiple treatment: Davide Germano, Switzerland 14.15 – 14.30 3d hepatocyte cultures: a useful tool in the study of Nevirapine bioactivation and toxicity: Joana P. Miranda, Portugal 14.30 – 14.45 A physiologically relevant HepG2 cell based 3D cell culture model for high throughput toxicity studies: Sreenivasa Ramaiahgari, The Netherlands 14.45 – 15.00 A 4D lung multi-culture system mimicking alveolar cellular organization to study the toxic potential of airborne particles: Tommaso Serchi, Luxemburg 15.00 – 15.15 Predictive human kidney-specific in vitro models: Yao Li, Singapore 15.15 – 15.30 An in vitro model of the renal proximal tubule composed of small intestinal submucosa (SIS) and human kidney-derived cells (hKDCs): Anke Hoppensack, Germany 15.30 – 15.45 Microgravity spheroids as a reliable, long-term tool for predictive toxicology: Stephen Fey, Denmark 15.45 – 16.00 A novel zebrafish model to predict organ toxicities in mammals: Philip Ingham, Singapore 41 16.30 – 18.30 Symposium 6: Challenges with immunogenicity of biologics Chair: Valerie Quarmby, USA Room: Congress Hall 16.30 – 16.50 Challenges with immunogenicity of biologics: Cecilia Tami, USA 16.55 – 17.15 Update on new regulatory guidelines on immunogenicity: Gaby Reichmann, Germany 17.20 – 17.40 IMI project ABIRISK: Anti-biopharmaceutical immunization: prediction and analysis of clinical relevance to minimize the risk: Marc Pallardy, France 17.45 – 18.05 Drug hypersensitivity and stimulation of the immune system: beyond the hapten concept: Werner Pichler, Switzerland 18.10 – 18.30 Assessing immunogenicity of therapeutic antibodies in transgenic mice: Antonio Iglesias, Switzerland 16.30 – 18.30 Symposium 7: RISK21: Novel thinking for 21st century risk assessment Chair: Alan Boobis, UK Room: Auditorium This Symposium is sponsored by ILSI / HESI USA. 16.30 – 16.50 The HESI RISK21 project: Alan Boobis, UK 16.55 – 17.15 Optimizing the use of exposure information: Herman Autrup, Denmark 17.20 – 17.40 Incorporation of mode-of-action information into dose-response assessment: the Quantitative Key Events / Dose-Response Framework (Q-KEDRF): Richard Currie, UK 17.45 – 18.05 In vitro to in vivo extrapolation (IVIVE) for human health risk assessment: Rory B. Conolly, USA 18.10 – 18.30 Assessing cumulative risk to multiple stressors: Angelo Moretto, Italy 42 16.30 – 18.30 Symposium 8: New challenges for risk assessment: how innovation can make the difference Chair: Tuomo Karjalainen, Belgium Room: Theatre Room This Symposium is sponsored by European Commission, Research and Innovation Directorate-General, Environment Directorate. 16.40 – 17.00 Challenges in risk assessment of chemicals: DG Environment point of view: Peter Korytar, Belgium 17.00 – 17.25 Advances in toxigenomics: use for risk assessment: Jos Kleinjans, The Netherlands 17.25 – 17.45 Developmental origins of diseases: Challenge for risk assessment of chemicals: Philippe Grandjean, Denmark 17.45 – 18.10 Biomarkers of exposure and effect, where are we going? Greet Schoeters, Belgium 18.10 – 18.30 Questions and comments from the audience 16.30 – 18.30 Workshop 6: Preclinical safety assessment: evolution of science-based decision making Chair: Ruth Roberts, UK Room: Ball Room This Symposium is sponsored by NC3R (UK). 16.30 – 16.50 Strategies in preclinical safety: target organ toxicities, recovery assessment and significance for clinical development: Ruth Roberts, UK 16.55 – 17.15 Assessment of dependence potential and suicidality liabilities: how non–clinical data help: Andreas Hartmann, Switzerland 43 Monday September 2nd 16.30 – 16.40 Introductory remarks: Tuomo Karjalainen, Belgium 17.20 – 17.40 Science-based approaches to carcinogenicity risk assessment for large molecules: Ron Steigerwalt, USA 17.45 – 18.05 Significance of species and study design in pre-clinical testing of biologics: challenges and opportunities: Kathryn Chapman, UK 18.10 – 18.30 A prospective view towards investigative safety assessment: Richard Weaver, France A Culture of Collaboration At Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research (NIBR), the global research organization of Novartis, our ambition is to transform drug discovery and develop breakthrough medicines that change patient treatment. Our culture of science is open and entrepreneurial; we are focused on clearly sharing our views and opinions while listening to the views of others. By hiring the best academic, biotech, and pharmaceutical-trained scientists, we have fostered an atmosphere for drug discovery where creativity thrives. Our research is driven by rigorous science and unmet medical need, not the market size. We have created a dynamic and flexible culture that values each associate’s diverse background, unique style and wealth of experience. 44 16.30 – 18.30 Workshop 7: Connexin-based cellular signaling and its relevance to toxicology Chair: Mathieu Vinken, Belgium Room: Brünig 1–3 16.30 – 16.55 The role of connexins and their channels in toxicity: Mathieu Vinken, Belgium Monday September 2nd 17.00 – 17.25 Mechanisms underlying connexin-mediated bystander cell death: Elke Decrock, Belgium 17.30 – 17.55 The role of connexins and their channels in carcinogenesis: Marc Mesnil, France 18.00 – 18.25 Connexins and benzene toxicity: Edgar Rivedal, Norway 16.30 – 18.30 Roundtable Discussion: Risk versus hazard in Europe Chairs: Christine Lorez and Martin Wilks, Switzerland Room: Harder 1+2 This Symposium is sponsored by ECPA. 16.30 – 16.50 Hazard-based regulation in Europe: status of impact in risk assessments: Albert Bergmann, Austria 16.50 – 17.10 Hazard classification or risk assessment: Ulla Hass, Denmark 17.10 – 17.30 Using hazard characterization in chemical classification. Potency as a key discriminator: Dick Lewis, Belgium 17.30 – 17.50 Risk and hazard: perspective of a regulatory agency: Roland Solecki, Germany 17.50 – 18.30 Discussion, all speakers 45 Tuesday, September 3rd, 2013 08.30 – 09.30 Bo Holmstedt Memorial Foundation (BHMF) lecture: The developing brain: Neurotoxic insults and their long term impact Sandra Ceccatelli, Sweden Chair: Herman Autrup, Denmark Room: Auditorium 10.00 – 12.00 Symposium 9: Assessment and control of genotoxic drug impurities Chairs: Lutz Müller, Switzerland and Dieter Schrenk, Germany Room: Auditorium 10.00 – 10.20 Development of genotoxic impurities guidelines and their impact on regulatory review: Elisabeth Klenke, Switzerland 10.25 – 10.45 The staged TTC concept in the evaluation of genotoxic impurities in drugs: Lutz Müller, Switzerland 10.50 – 11.10 Genotoxic impurities in drugs – ‘paper chemistry’ or analytical data? Alexander Amberg, Germany 11.15 – 11.35 Genotoxic impurities – a quality perspective on analysis and control: Rolf Schulte Oestrich, Switzerland 11.40 – 12.00 How to apply impurity control procedures to complex mixtures such as herbal medicines: Olavi Pelkonen, Finland 46 10.00 – 12.00 Symposium 10: Genetic susceptibility: relevance to toxicology Chairs: Hans Ketelslegers, Belgium and Ruth Roberts, UK Room: Congress Hall 10.00 – 10.25 Genetic susceptibility: relevance to toxicology: Hans Ketelslegers, Belgium 10.30 – 10.55 Epigenome changes induced by environmental factors and cancer: Zdenko Herceg, France 11.00 – 11.25 In vitro screening for population variability in chemical toxicity: Ivan Rusyn, USA Tuesday September 3rd 11.30 – 11.55 Genetic susceptibly: relevance to adverse drug reactions: Ruth Roberts, UK 10.00 – 12.00 Workshop 8: Risk perception and communication Chairs: Hanspeter Naegeli, Switzerland and Mojmir Mach, Slovakia Room: Brünig 1–3 10.00 – 10.20 Proper communication of compound-inherent risks: the scientists dilemma: Michael Arand, Switzerland 10.25 – 10.45 Human functioning in the context of risk: Heinz Gutscher, Switzerland 10.50 – 11.10 Quality criteria in professional risk communication – the editors view: Jan Georg Hengstler, Germany 11.15 – 11.35 Risk assessment – the needs of an expert panel: Andrea Hartwig, Germany 11.40 – 12.00 Round table discussion 47 10.00 – 12.00 Workshop 9: The toxicology of drug delivery systems Chairs: Heather Wallace, UK and Nursen Basaran, Turkey Room: Ball Room 10.00 – 10.20 Modifying the risk-benefit ratio using drug delivery systems: Peter Newham, UK 10.25 – 10.45 Drug delivery using endogenous transport systems: Heather Wallace, UK 10.50 – 11.10 Understanding the behavior of nanoparticulate drug delivery systems in vivo: particle disposition patterns, toxicologic implications and effective drug development: Richard Kirsh, UK 11.15 – 11.35 Pharmacokinetics and toxicology of nanoparticles in drug delivery: Raymond Yang, USA 11.40 – 12.00 Safety of therapeutic monoclonal antibody conjugates: Nicholas Buss, UK 10.00 – 12.00 Workshop 10: Mechanism-based safety biomarkers Chair: Dominique Brees, Switzerland Room: Theatre Room 10.00 – 10.20 Emerging trends in hemostasis biomarkers: David Ledieu, Switzerland 10.25 – 10.45 Current status and future perspectives of renal safety biomarkers: Mark Pinches, UK 10.50 – 11.10 Preclinical (epi)genomics – identifying safety biomarkers for the prediction of non-genotoxic carcinogenesis: Remi Terranova, Switzerland 11.15 – 11.35 Clinical utility of novel mechanistic biomarkers of drug-induced liver injury: Daniel Antoine, UK 11.40 – 12.00 Roundtable discussion: Using non-validated safety biomarkers in clinical studies Moderated by session chairs 48 10.00 – 11.45 Oral Session 3: Nanotoxicology, Immunotoxicology & Dermatoxicology Chair: Ioannis Trantakis, Switzerland Room: Harder 1+2 10.00 –10.15 Transfer of engineered nanoparticles across the human placenta: Stefanie Grafmüller, Switzerland 10.30 – 10.45 HLA haplotype determines hapten or p-i T cell reactivity to flucloxacillin: Werner J. Pichler, Switzerland 10.45 – 11.00 Use of cytotoxicity-based assays in the in vitro diagnosis of patients with Sevens-Johnson syndrome: Tatjana Pecaric Pekovic, Switzerland 11.00 – 11.15 A modified oral UV-LLNA in Balb/c mice to investigate phototoxicity mechanisms and pharmacokinetic properties in skin: Stéphanie Boudon, Switzerland 11.15 – 11.30 Relevance of in-vitro methods for the evaluation of eye and skin irritation/corrosion potential of aliphatic tertiary amines: Qiang Li, Germany 11.30 – 11.45 Animal-free studies in cosmetic ingredient industry: Perspective and strategy after a 10-year experience: Herve Ficheux, UK 10.00 – 11.00 Exhibitor-hosted Session Room: Grimsel 1+2 Using the xCELLigence RTCA Cardio System for Assessment of Preclinical Cardiac Safety Assessment Yama Abassi, ACEA Biosciences, Inc., USA For details see page 64 49 Tuesday September 3rd 10.15 – 10.30 Use of ‘same donor’ endothelial cells and PBMC in co-culture to detect cytokine storm reactions to a TGN1412-like anti-CD28 antibody: A novel assay for biologic drug safety screening: Daniel Reed, UK 12.00 – 13.00 Exhibitor-hosted Session Room: Brünig 1–3 3Rs: refinement techniques for Primates and their effect on data quality Helen Palmer, Huntington Life Sciences, UK For details see page 65 12.15 – 13.15 EUROTOX – SOT Debate: In the near foreseeable future, much of toxicity testing can be replaced by computational approaches EUROTOX Debater: George Loizou, UK SOT Debater: Rory B. Conolly, USA Chair: Aristidis Tsatsakis, Greece, President Elect EUROTOX and Co-chair: Norbert E. Kaminski, USA, President Elect SOT Room: Auditorium 13.30 – 15.30 Symposium 11: The Extended One Generation Reproductive Toxicity (EOGRT) assay – scientific challenges and regulatory implementation Chairs: Helen Håkansson, Sweden and Richard Vogel, Germany Room: Auditorium 13.30 – 13.50 Practical experience of the EOGRTS protocol in use: Steffen Schneider, Germany 13.55 – 14.15 Analysis of immune toxicity in the extended one-generation reproduction toxicity study: Aldert Piersma, The Netherlands 14.20 – 14.40 Analysis of developmental neurotoxicity: Sandra Allen, UK 14.45 – 15.05 Developmental toxicity in reproductive organs: Geertje Lewin, Germany 15.10 – 15.30 Epigenetics: how genes and environment interact: Randy Jirtle, USA 50 13.30 – 15.30 Symposium 12: Integration of human and environmental risk assessment – is it the future? Chairs: Inge Werner, Switzerland and Lothar Aicher, Switzerland Room: Theatre Room This Symposium is sponsered by the Swiss Centre for Applied Human Toxicology and the Swiss Centre for Applied Ecotoxicology. 13.30 – 13.50 HEROIC – an integrated European approach to the coordination of human and environmental risk assessment: Martin Wilks, Switzerland 14.20 – 14.40 Human risk assessment of drinking water residues from pharmaceuticals: environmental pathways, pharmacological potency and toxicity: Reinhard Länge, Germany 14.45 – 15.05 Decision-making in human and environmental risk assessment using a weight of evidence approach: Philippe Ciffroy, France 15.10 – 15.30 Application of probabilistic modelling techniques in human and environmental risk assessment: Ad Ragas, The Netherlands 13.30 – 15.30 Workshop 11: New approaches to unravel toxicities based on compound activity observed in zebrafish Chair: Carles Callol, Spain Room: Ball Room 13.30 – 13.50 Locomotor activity in zebrafish embryo and larva: alternative assays to evaluate the developmental neurotoxic potential of chemicals and drugs: Hilda Witters, Belgium 13.55 – 14.15 Resolving the neuropharmacology of zebrafish sleep: Jason Rihel, UK 14.20 – 14.40 The utility of the zebrafish for drug safety assessment: an industry perspective: Matthew Winter, UK 51 Tuesday September 3rd 13.55 – 14.15 Environmental and drinking water risk assessment of substances which are toxic to humans or aquatic organisms – examples and options: Robert Kase, Switzerland 14.45 – 15.05 Predicting drug-induced hepatotoxicity in zebrafish larvae: Natalie Mesens, Belgium 15.10 – 15.30 New approach to a predictive toxicity evaluation with a zebrafish assay: Ainhoa Alzualde, Spain 13.30 – 15.30 Workshop 12: Identifying, assessing and managing allergens in food Chair: Yong Joo Chung, Switzerland Room: Brünig 1–3 13.30 – 13.50 Trends in food allergy and impact on public health: Jonathan Hourihane, Ireland 13.55 – 14.15 A regulator’s approach to risk assessment of food allergens: Sue Hattersley, UK 14.20 – 14.40 Identification of new food allergens of public health relevance: Geert Houben, The Netherlands 14.45 – 15.05 Experimental approaches to predict allergenic potential of novel food: Charlotte Madsen, Denmark 15.10 – 15.30 Impact of processing on the allergenic potential of food: Clare Mills, UK 13.30 – 15.15 Oral Session 4: Environmental toxicology, Food toxicology & Novel analytical techniques Chair: Rex FitzGerald, Switzerland Room: Harder 1+2 13.30 – 13.45 Toxicogenomics to group environmental chemicals in vitro? Alessa Ignarski, Switzerland 13.45 – 14.00 Toxicity of microcystin-deficient Planktothrix strains due to chlorine and sulfate containing aeruginosins: Esther Kohler, Switzerland 52 14.00 – 14.15 Toxicological risk assessment in carbon capture and storage technology: Marcus Hillebrand, Germany 14.15 – 14.30 Evidence for lipid signaling molecules in glycated protein preparations being responsible for the stimulation of inflammatory signaling in RAGE expressing cells – potential role of lysophosphatidic acid: Timo Buetler, Switzerland 14.30 – 14.45 Liquid chromatographic determination of histamine in traditionally salted, smoked and frozen fish with relation to microbial load: Mohamed Mahmoud Deabes, Egypt 14.45 – 15.00 A refined surgical technique for telemetry in group housed macaques (M. fascicularis): Jörg Luft, Germany Tuesday September 3rd 15.00 – 15.15 Less is more: Better toxicity data from fewer rodents using plasma microsampling: Anne Eichinger-Chapelon, Switzerland 16.00 – 18.00 Symposium 13: Toxic injury to the lung: mechanisms and consequences Chairs: Martin Wilks, Switzerland and Daniela Pelclová, Czech Republic Room: Auditorium 16.00 – 16.20 Toxic lung injury associated with fever: mechanisms and outcome: Daniela Pelclová, Czech Republic 16.25 – 16.45 Emerging occupational lung disorders caused by inhaled chemical agents: Benoit Nemery, Belgium 16.50 – 17.10 Pulmonary consequences of drug use: Bruno Mégarbane, France 17.15 – 17.35 Pulmonary consequences of chemical warfare agent: Sulphur Mustard: Reza Afshari, Iran 17.40 – 18.00 New insights in the management of toxic acute lung injury: Dylan de Lange, The Netherlands 53 16.00 – 18.00 Symposium 14: Cardiovascular toxicity in drug discovery and development Chair: Jean-Pierre Valentin, UK Room: Theatre Room 16.00 – 16.20 Cardiovascular toxicity: understanding the issues, challenges and opportunities: Rashmi R. Shah, UK 16.25 – 16.45 Hazard identification and elimination: designing safe medicines: Laszlo Urban, USA 16.50 – 17.10 Integrated cardiovascular risk assessment: a balancing act between risks and benefits: Tim Hammond, UK 17.15 – 17.35 Mitigating and managing clinical cardiovascular risks: preserving effective medicines: Paul Volders, The Netherlands 17.40 – 18.00 Translational cardiovascular toxicity: from animal to man and back: Jean-Pierre Valentin, UK 16.00 – 18.00 Workshop 13: miRNAs: mechanisms and safety issues Chairs: Nancy Claude, France and Catherine de la Moureyre-Spire, France Room: Ball Room 16.00 – 16.20 Non-coding RNA mechanisms and biomarkers of toxicity: from tissue to circulation: Jonathan Moggs, Switzerland 16.25 – 16.45 Analysis of the expression, maturation and functioning of microRNAs in cancer: Jörg Hoheisel, Germany 16.50 – 17.10 MicroRNAs as markers of drug-induced tissue perturbation and adaptation: Christopher Goldring, UK 17.15 – 17.35 The role of microRNAs in the response to toxic insult: Martin Bushell, UK 17.40 – 18.00 The HESI inter-laboratory miRNA Project: Catherine de la Moureyre-Spire, France 54 16.00 – 18.00 Workshop 14: Addressing safety in the immature organism: about children’s safety and risk-assessment Chairs: Jacqueline Carleer, Belgium and Georg Schmitt, Switzerland Room: Brünig 1–3 This Workshop is co-sponsered by Sequani Limited, UK. 16.00 – 16.25 Introduction to the immature organism: Georg Schmitt, Switzerland 16.30 – 16.55 Non-clinical safety in paediatric drug development: Jim Ridings, UK 17.00 – 17.25 Juvenile safety testing for chemicals and pesticides: Aldert Piersma, The Netherlands Tuesday September 3rd 17.30 – 17.55 Value of studies in juvenile animals for human risk assessment: John DeSesso, USA 16.00 – 17.30 Oral Session 5: Genotoxicity, Carcinogenicity & Mechanisms in Toxicology Chair: Shana Sturla, Switzerland Room: Harder 1+2 16.00 – 16.15 Dose-response of alkylation-induced colorectal carcinogenesis in MGMT-proficient and -deficient mice: Jörg Fahrer, Germany 16.15 – 16.30 Breast cancer in danish women: A prospective case-control study on breast cancer risk upon exposure to perfluorinated compounds: Eva Cecilie Bonefeld-Jorgensen, Denmark 16.30 – 16.45 The ToxTracker assay: Unveiling the carcinogenic properties of chemicals: Giel Hendriks, The Netherlands 16.45 – 17.00 Noncanonical activation of ATR-p53 axis by DNA-protein crosslinks controls cell death responses to formaldehyde: Anatoly Zhitkovich, USA 17.00 – 17.15 The role of rat and human CYP enzymes in okadaic acid-associated toxicity: Franziska Kolrep, Germany 17.15 – 17.30 FRET-based analysis of the interaction between mEH and CYP: Anette Orjuela, Switzerland 55 Wednesday, September 4th, 2013 08.30 – 10.30 Symposium 15: Tiered approaches to assess complex mixtures Chairs: Heli Hollnagel, Switzerland and Martin van den Berg, The Netherlands Room: Auditorium This Symposium is sponsored by ECETOC. 08.30 – 08.50 Current concepts in mixture toxicology and risk assessment: Herman Autrup, Denmark 08.55 – 09.15 Testing mixtures in vivo at human-relevant exposure levels: Steffen Schneider, Germany 09.20 – 09.40 Application of the combined decision tree to surface water data from Switzerland, UK, and other EU countries: Marion Junghans, Switzerland 09.45 – 10.05 Application of the decision tree methodology to human health endpoints for multi-constituent chemical formulations: Heli Hollnagel, Switzerland 10.10 – 10.30 Grouping approaches and the development of mechanism of action information for use in the decision tree: Angelo Moretto, Italy 8.30 – 10.30 Symposium 16: New developments in “omics” for use in risk assessment Chairs: Michael Schwarz, Germany and Bennard van Ravenzwaay, Germany Room: Theatre Room This Symposium is sponsored by ECETOC and ECPA. 08.30 – 08.50 The challenges and opportunities to identify modes of action using toxicogenomics: Richard Currie, UK 08.55 – 09.15 Integrating genomics into the AOP framework: Chris Corton, USA 09.20 – 09.40 The use of toxicogenomics for cancer risk identification and assessment, Jos Kleinjans, The Netherlands 56 09.45 – 10.05 Metabolomics & REACH: quantitative biological activity relationships: Bennard van Ravenzwaay, Germany 10.10 – 10.30 Qualitative and quantitative aspects of omics data: can we improve our risk assessment using these technologies ? Saskia van der Vies, The Netherlands 8.30 – 10.30 Workshop 15: Translational imaging in non-clinical safety applications Chair: Markus Stephan-Gueldner, Switzerland Room: Brünig 1–3 08.30 – 08.50 Magnetic resonance histology: Cool images – but who cares? Allan Johnson, USA 09.20 – 09.40 Echocardiography in non-clinical safety studies: adding value, and increasing acceptance and application: Robert W. Coatney, USA 09.45 – 10.05 Potential of in-vivo imaging for DART assessment in primates: Gerhard Weinbauer, Germany 10.10 – 10.30 Revolutionizing biomedical optical imaging with multispectral optoacoustic tomography (MSOT): Vasilis Ntziachristos, Germany 8.30 – 10.30 Workshop 16: Predicting chronic toxicity to establish level of safety concern in absence of toxicological data Chairs: Elena Lo Piparo, Switzerland and Benoît Schilter, Switzerland Room: Grimsel 1+2 08.30 – 08.50 Integration of in silico models to establish safety concern of food chemicals: the ILSI-Europe proposal: Benoît Schilter, Switzerland 57 Wednesday September 4th 08.55 – 09.15 Towards PET imaging of Kupffer cell activity: Erik de Vries, The Netherlands 08.55 – 09.15 Applying read-across for quantitative chronic toxicity prediction: Mark Cronin, UK 09.20 – 09.40 QSAR approach to predict chronic toxicity and carcinogenicity potency: state of the art: Elena Lo Piparo, Switzerland 09.45 – 10.05 VirtualToxLab – In silico prediction of the toxic potential of drugs and chemicals: Angelo Vedani, Switzerland 10.10 – 10.30 Potential of short-term biological assays to quantitatively predict chronic toxicity: Alexander Tropsha, USA 11.00 – 13.00 Symposium 17: Reactive metabolites and drug toxicity: contribution, mechanisms and novel approaches Chairs: Nico Vermeulen, The Netherlands and Hilmi Orhan, Turkey Room: Auditorium 11.00 – 11.25 Target organs and cellular reactivity of drug metabolites: Hilmi Orhan, Turkey 11.30 – 11.55 Reactive metabolites in drug discovery and development: approaches to risk mitigation: Thomas Baillie, USA 12.00 – 12.25 Translational strategies for identifying chemically reactive metabolites as cause for Adverse Drug Reactions: Nico Vermeulen, The Netherlands 12.30 – 12.55 Clinical relevance of drug bioactivation: Kevin Park, UK 58 11.00 – 13.00 Symposium 18: Nuclear receptors integrate metabolic and environmental signals to regulate cell fate Chairs: Ronald Tjalkens, USA and Eva Cecilie Bonefeld-Jørgensen, Denmark Room: Theatre Room 11.00 – 11.25 Aryl Hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) regulation of inflammation and cancer: Michael Platten, Germany 11.30 – 11.55 The orphan receptor NR4A1 (TR3/Nur77) as a drug target for cancer chemotherapy: Stephen Safe, USA 12.00 – 12.25 Non-genomic responses of nuclear receptors to environmental signals: Xiao-kun Zhang, China 12.30 – 12.55 Neuroinflammatory injury and NR4A receptors: Ronald Tjalkens, USA 11.00 – 13.00 Wednesday September 4th Workshop 17: Assessment of azo dyes and aromatic amines in food additives, cosmetics and consumer products Chairs: Thomas Platzek, Germany and Rex FitzGerald, Switzerland Room: Harder 1+2 11.00 – 11.20 Overview on toxicity and exposure to azo dyes and aromatic amines: Thomas Platzek, Germany 11.25 – 11.45 Re-evaluation of azo dyes as food additives: problems encountered: Iona Pratt, Ireland 11.50 – 12.10 Allergies and hair dyes: Wolfgang Uter, Germany 12.15 – 12.35 Metabolism of oxidative hair dyes in the skin and the organism: Gerhard Nohynek, France 12.40 – 13.00 Toxicity of non-regulated aromatic amines from azo dyes in textiles: knowns and unknowns: Beat Brüschweiler, Switzerland 59 11.00 – 13.00 Workshop 18: Ecological risk assessment in the 21st century: taking into account mechanistic data Chairs: Claus Svendsen, UK and Jean-Lou Dorne, Italy Room: Brünig 1–3 11.00 – 11.20 Using OMICS in ecological risk assessment: where do we stand? Peter Kille, UK 11.25 – 11.45 The promise of ecotoxicogenomics for detecting adverse contaminant effects in non-model species: Inge Werner, Switzerland 11.50 – 12.10 Functional toxicogenomics in bees: recent advances towards mechanism-based risk assessment: Reed M. Johnson, USA 12.15 – 12.35 Using OMICS technologies to unravel mechanisms of toxicity from endocrine disruptors in aquatic species: Nancy Denslow, USA 12.40 – 13.00 Toxicokinetic interactions of chemical mixtures in ecotoxicology: critical issues: Jean-Lou Dorne, Italy 11.00 – 13.00 Oral Session 6: Neurotoxicology, Developmental Toxicology & miRNAs Chair: Michael Arand, Switzerland Room: Grimsel 1+2 11.00 – 11.15 Enhanced intranasal delivery of Gemcitabine to the central nervous system: Mansi Krishan, USA 11.15 – 11.30 “Ecstasy” impairs mitochondrial trafficking in hippocampal neurons by a Tau phosphorylation-dependent mechanism involving GSK3ß: Félix Carvalho, Portugal 11.30 – 11.45 Effects of neurotoxic compounds on functional three-dimensional neural tissues derived from hESCs: Luc Stoppini, Switzerland 60 11.45 – 12.00 miRNomics, metabolomics and 3D neuronal differentiation of LUHMES progenitor cells as an in vitro model for DNT studies, Lena Smirnova, USA 12.00 – 12.15 MiRNA-210 modulates nickel-induced hypoxic responses by repressing the iron-sulfur cluster assembly proteins ISCU1/2: Min-Di He, China 12.15 – 12.30 miRNA profiling as a tool for developmental neurotoxicity pathway analysis in human in vitro model: Anna Price, Italy 12.30 – 12.45 Using adverse outcome pathway genes to assess developmental toxicity of compounds in a mouse stem cell system: Marc Teunis, The Netherlands 13.10 – 14.10 Closing Ceremony Chair: Ruth Roberts, President of EUROTOX, UK Room: Auditorium Wednesday September 4th Farewell address Thomas Weiser, President of the EUROTOX 2013 Congress, Switzerland Award ceremony Ruth Roberts, President of EUROTOX, UK Presentation of the EUROTOX 2014 Congress in Edinburgh, UK Heather Wallace, President of the EUROTOX 2014 Congress, UK Closing of the EUROTOX 2013 Congress Ruth Roberts, President of EUROTOX, UK 61 Sponsor / Exhibitor-hosted Sessions Monday, September 2nd, 2013 10.00 – 11.00 Exhibitor-hosted Session MPI Research Room: Grimsel 1+2 How Do I Get Into Phase 1 Trials With My Compound? Scott Boley, USA Once a company has selected their lead compound, the next phase is determining which nonclinical studies need to be conducted to support taking the lead compound into the first clinical trials. Unfortunately this question does not have a straightforward answer since the approach taken is entirely dependent on the test article type (small molecule, biopharmaceutical, device), clinical indication (life threatening, non-life threatening), and planned Phase I trial design (route and regimen). This presentation outlines the nonclinical studies that should be considered in designing a strategy to support your initial IND application. Examples from small molecules to biopharmaceuticals to botanicals, oncology to pediatric indications, will be covered. This information will provide a solid basis for understanding the numerous factors influencing the nonclinical approach needed to progress into the clinic. 13.00 – 14.00 Sponsor-hosted Session Evidence-based Toxicology Collaboration Room: Grimsel 1+2 Chair: Thomas Hartung, USA Evidence-based approaches, which were pioneered in medicine, provide the means to transparently, objectively, and consistently assess the evidence bearing on questions in medicine or other fields of science. The Evidence-based Toxicology Collaboration (EBTC) was formed to translate the principles and approaches of Evidence-based Medicine/Health Care to toxicology. The EBTC comprises stakeholders in academia, industry, and government seeking to strengthen decision-making in safety sciences, and thereby enhance confidence in the process by which scientific evidence is assessed. The EBTC is primarily interested in assessing the performance of the toxicological test methods and addressing 62 questions about the safety of substances to human health and the environment. The EBTC’s efforts are timely, as there is growing interest in applying systematic reviews in toxicology, which would be facilitated by a toxicology ontology, be as well as a growing recognition that new test assessment approaches are needed, for example in the context of composing and assessing integrated testing strategies. 13.00 – 13.20 Evidence-based Toxicology (EBT) and the EBT Collaboration: Sebastian Hoffmann, Germany 13.20 – 13.40 EBT and Integrated Testing Strategy: Thomas Hartung, USA Sponsored Sessions 13.40 – 14.00 Toxicology Ontology Development supporting Evidence-based Approaches in Predictive Toxicology: Barry Hardy, Switzerland 13.00 – 14.00 Exhibitor-hosted Session AnaPath and collaborating groups Room: Harder 1+2 Pathology Evaluation involved in the Development of ATMPs K. Weber, AnaPath GmbH, Oberbuchsiten, Switzerland J. Füner, preclinics GmbH, Potsdam, Germany S. Gähler, AnaPath GmbH, Oberbuchsiten, Switzerland H. Hofman-Hüter, BSL Bioservice Scientific Laboratories GmbH, Planegg, Germany O. Janke, preclinics GmbH, Potsdam, Germany J. Lehmann, Fraunhofer Institute for Cell Therapy and Immunology, Germany W. Riedel, BSL Bioservice Scientific Laboratories GmbH, Planegg, Germany K. Weidemann, BSL Bioservice Scientific Laboratories GmbH, Planegg, Germany ATMPs (Advanced Therapy Medicinal Products) consist of three major therapeutical groups including gen therapeutics, somatic cell therapeutics, and engineered tissues. A number of ATMPs are classified and listed under the ‘Summaries of scientific recommendations on classification of advanced-therapy medicinal products’ by the EMA. All ATMPs contain partially or consist fully of living cells or tissues. A further option is the combination of ATMPs with medical devices. Therefore, ATMPs are complex, and the preclinical testing differs in many aspects from ‘classical’ testing strategies. The use of many different species including diseases models as well as the complex application of molecular biology approaches and the usage of an extended armamentarium to trace ATMPs in vivo not alone cause changes in the way of classical pathology evaluation. The presentation will show examples on strategies of pathology evaluation during the development of ATMPs. 63 Tuesday, September 3rd, 2013 10.00 – 11.00 Exhibitor-hosted Session ACEA Biosciences, Inc. Room: Grimsel 1+2 Using the xCELLigence RTCA Cardio System for Assessment of Preclinical Cardiac Safety Assessment Yama Abassi, USA Here for you. for your HealtH. Medical knowledge is our fascination. Together with our associates in research, science and education we help millions of people all over the world. We are committed to improving medical treatment. Because health matters! www.sanofi.de 64 AVS 903 12 013a Cardiac toxicity is a major concern in drug development and it is imperative that clinical candidates are thoroughly tested for adverse effects earlier in the drug discovery process. In this presentation we will discuss the utility of ACEA Biosciences xCELLigence RTCA Cardio System in conjunction with stem cell derived cardiomyocytes for assessment of compound risk in the drug discovery process. The system was validated using stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes and primary cardiomycytes and by dose-response profiling of pharmacological compounds, including ion channel modulators, chronotropic/ionotropic agents, hERG trafficking inhibitors and drugs withdrawn due to TdP arrhythmia. Our results show this system can sensitively and quantitatively detect modulators of cardiac function, including compounds missed by electrophysiology. Our key finding is that pro-arrhythmic compounds produce signature profiles that reflect arrhythmia and can be used for identification of other pro-arrhythmic compounds. The time series data can be used to identify compounds which induce arrhythmia by complex mechanisms such as hERG trafficking inhibition. Microelectronic monitoring of stem cell derived cardiomyocyte beating provides a high throughput, quantitative and predictive assay system that can be used for assessment of cardiac liability earlier in the drug discovery process. 12.00 – 13.00 Sponsored Sessions Exhibitor-hosted Session Huntington Life Sciences Room: Brünig 1–3 3Rs: refinement techniques for Primates and their effect on data quality Helen Palmer, UK There is no doubt that over the last 20 years the state of housing and husbandry for primates in research premises has improved enormously throughout Europe. In our attempts to improve the welfare and wellbeing of our animals we must constantly remind ourselves that fulfilling the scientific objectives of the study is paramount, otherwise there is no justification for use of the primate at all. In this session we will review techniques and equipment originally implemented as welfare improvements, and show how the data produced is of higher quality because of these changes. The effect of some of these welfare improvements, including group housing, positive reinforcement training, restraint free measurement techniques and microsampling will be examined with regards to safety pharmacology and toxicology studies. The state of animal welfare in laboratories is in a state of continual improvement; in this session we will discuss just how worthwhile these improvements are. 65 A new direction for European crop protection The European Crop Protection Association is hungry for change. ECPA acts as the ambassador of the crop protection industry in Europe and represents the industry’s European regional network. Extensive critical evaluation of the performance and contribution of the pesticide industry has given rise to an initiative that aims to deliver measurable results in the safeguarding of water resources, the enhancement of biodiversity, the protection of health, and the provision of safe, healthy and affordable food. Our future Our plan Our impact An industry that listens to and engages with stakeholders; a trusted partner in society delivering essential services, and addressing public and scientific concerns. To work together with stakeholders on projects over the coming years, covering the four thematic streams of water, food, biodiversity and health. Measured with key performance indicators, and open to public scrutiny, our initiatives will have measurable impact on key issues of public concern. Learn more, engage: hungry4change.eu facebook.com/cropprotection twitter.com/cropprotection ecpa.eu ecotox_conference_advertorial.indd 1 01/07/2013 15:52:36 Posters Monday, September 2nd, 2013 Location: Auditorium Foyer: P01/01 – P03/14; P06/01 – P09/25; P11/01 – P11/16 Concert Hall: P04-01 – P04/14; P10/01 – P10/24; P15/01 – P17/18 Club Casino: P05/01 – P05/23 Auditorium Foyer P01: Biologics P01-01 Elaeocarpus Petiolatus Ethanol Extract Inhibits Asthmatic Activity on OVA-Induced Mouse Model of Airway Inflammation Cho, Eun-Sang, Lee, Kyoung-Youl, Lee, Mee-Young, Son, Hwa-Young P01-02 Implication of HSF1-mediated heat stress response in adaptive induction of metallothioneins in mammalian cells contacting with toxic heavy metal ions Demidkina, Anna; Kabakov, Alexander P01-03 Non-clinical safety evaluation of AAV5-PBGD in mice and cynomolgus macaques Gloria González-Aseguinolaza, Astrid Pañed, Esperanza López-Franco, Cristina Olagüe, Antonio Fontanellas, Carmen Unzu, Ana Sampedro, María Eugenia Cornet, María del Mar Municio, Paul Heal, Harald Petry, Marc Sonnemans, Lisa Spronck, Florence Salmon Bart A Nijmeijer, PhD, Harald Petry, PhD, Marc A Sonnemans, Stuart G Beattie PhD, Lisa Spronck Florence Salmon, PhD, Hans Preusting, PhD, Arie Van Oorschot, PhD and Jaap Twisk, PhD P01-05 The sub-lethal toxic effects and bioconcentration of the human pharmaceutical atenolol in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) Christoph Steinbach, Viktoriia Burkinaa, Ganna Federovav, Katerina Grabicova, Josef Velisek, Vladimir Zlabek, Tomas Randak, Heike Schmidt-Posthaus, Roman Grabic, Hana Koccour Kroupova P01-06 Risk of mood disorders in subjects who began smoking in adulthood versus early adolescence Aziez Chettoum, Rachid Mosbah, Hacene Frih 67 Posters P01-04 Safe and efficacious delivery of the human clotting factor IX gene to non human primates using a recombinant AAV vector produced in a fully-scalable GMP-compliant production system. P02: Biomarkers P02-01 28 Days oral exposure to moniliformin does not influence on 8-OHdG levels in SD-rat urine Pertti Koivisto, Martina Jonsson, Alexis Nathanail, Marika Jestoi, Kimmo Peltonen P02-02 Assessment of genotoxic and oxidative effects in workers of a fibreglass reinforced plastic industry exposed to styrene Cavallo, Delia; Tranfo, Giovanna; Ursini, Cinzia L.; Fresegna, Anna Maria; Ciervo, Aureliano; Maiello, Raffaele; Gherardi, Monica; Paci, Enrico; Iavicoli, Sergio P02-03 Association between Inflammatory Marker, Environmental Lead Exposure, and Glutathione S-Transferase gene Jintana Sirivarasai, Winai Wananukul, Sming Kaojarern, Suwannee Chanprasertyothin, Nisakron Thongmung, Wipa Ratanachaiwong, Thunyachai Sura, and Piyamit Sritara P02-04 Changes in Blood Antioxidant Status in Humans during Occupational Exposure to Coal Fly Ash (CFA) Lulzim Zeneli, Majlinda Ajvazi, Martina Piasek, Jasna Jurasović, Leonard Kurti, Hidajet Paçarizi, Nexhat Daci P02-05 Comparative study between apoptotic and proliferative markers in dexamethasonedependent and physiological thymic atrophy in cattle. G.B.Richelmi, C.Maurella, M. Pezzolato, D. Longo, S. Meistro, E. Bozzetta P02-06 Comparison of Two Commonly Used Rat Strains for Preclinical Toxicity Testing on Predictive Biomarkers for Nephrotoxicity after Cisplatin Treatment Kunze M, Weber K, Schuster I, Meier S, Leoni AL P02-07 Contamination of white cheese with aflatoxin M1 Ortiz-Martinez, Raul; Valdivia-Flores, Arturo; Quezada-Tristan, Teodulo; De Luna-López, Carolina P02-08 Cytogenetic alterations in Formaldehyde exposed workers measured in a target and distal tissue. Solange Costa, Carla Costa, Susana Silva, Patrícia Coelho, Beatriz Porto, João Paulo Teixeira P02-09 Determination of n-hexane metabolite 2, 5-hexanedione in human urines by on-line solid-phase extraction coupled with LC-APCI-MS/MS Shi-Nian Uang, Kuen-Yuh Wu P02-10 Determination of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHS) in Fish and Shellfish Samples. Risk Assessment for the Consumers. Gil F, Olmedo P, Hernández AF, Pla A, Molina-Villalba I P02-11 Determination of Toxic Elements (Hg, Cd, Pb, Sn and As) in Fish and Shellfish Samples. Gil F, Olmedo P, Pla A, Hernández AF, Molina-Villalba I 68 P02-12 Discovery of biomarkers of dioxin intoxication in human urine: analysis by metabolomics and biologically-driven strategy Julien Boccard, Fabienne Jeanneret, Olivier Sorg, Jean-Hilaire Saurat, Stepanka Vlckova, Daniela Pelclova, Douglas N. Rutledge, Denis Hochstrasser, Serge Rudaz P02-13 Diurnal levels of the Type II collagen neopitope (TIINE) biomarker for collagen breakdown in dogs Kai Schaefer, Helga Lorenz, Nils Boehm, Stephanie Fischmann, Candace Graff, and Katja Hempel P02-14 Evaluation of certain oxidative stress, endothelial dysfunction and inflammation parameters in Alzheimer disease patients under conventional treatment Gubandru, Miriana; Margina, Denisa; Tsitsimpikou, Christina; Ilie, Mihaela; Tsatsakis, Aristidis Michael; Kouretas, Demetrios P02-15 Hair arsenic concentrations of residents living in Nevsehir province, Turkey Beril Altun, Nusret Ertas, Usama Alshana, N. Deniz Hisarli, Elif Asik, Gonca Cakmak Demircigil Ela Kadioglu, Celalettin R. Celebi, Esref Atabey, O. Yavuz Ataman, Hakan Serce, Nazmi Bilir, A. Murat Tuncer, Sema Burgaz P02-16 Multi-laboratory assessment of best practices for quantification of microRNAs associated with isoproterenol-induced myocardial injury in the urine and plasma of rats KL Thompson, T Chen, P Couttet, H Ellinger-Ziegelbauer, M Kanki, J Kelsall, E Boitier, R Nassirpour, G Searfoss, T Sharapova, C de la Moureyre-Spire, P Yuen, and R O’Lone P02-17 Pharmacogenomic Studies and Quantification of Tramadol and M1 in Human Post Mortem Samples Isabel Costa, Ana Oliveira, Paula Guedes de Pinho, Félix Carvalho, Ricardo Jorge Dinis-Oliveira P02-18 Plasma lactate level may be an insufficient monitoring tool in critically ill patient: A case of ischemia modified albumin in acute glyphosate poisoning Posters Choi, Byungho; Sohn, Changhwan; Ryoo, SeungMok; Ha, Sangwook; Jung, Rubi; Lim, Kyoungsoo; Oh, Bumjin P02-19 Probing the in vitro antiatherosclerotic outcome of some polyphenols Margina, Denisa; Bacanu, Claudia; Gradinaru, Daniela; Ilie, Mihaela; Neagoe, Ionela; Manda, Gina P02-20 Serum pregnancy-associated plasma protein A (PAPP-A) levels in type 2 diabetes mellitus patients with normoalbuminuria and microalbuminuria Ali Mohammadi Karakani P02-21 Synthetic glucocorticoids in bovine urine: from targeted to untargeted detection Elena Bozzetta, Danilo Pitardi, Barbara Cini, Maurizio Paleologo, Abram Brouwer, Peter Behnisch, Marco Vincenti, Pierluigi Capra, Marilena Gili, Marzia Pezzolato, Daniela Meloni 69 P02-22 The impact of xenobiotic metabolizing enzyme polymorphisms on cytogenetic biomarkers in Turkish coke oven workers exposed to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons Iscan, Mumtaz; Ada, Ahmet O.; Demiroglu, Canan; Yilmazer, Meltem; Suzen, Sinan H; Demirbag, Ali E.; Efe, Sibel; Alemdar, Yilmaz; Burgaz, Sema P02-23 Trace determination of 13 antineoplastic drugs in urine: a new ultra-performance liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry method for assessing exposure of hospital personnel Giovanni Fabrizi, Marzia Fioretti, Lucia Mainero Rocca P02-24 Use of cytotoxicity-based assays in the in vitro diagnosis of patients with Sevens-Johnson syndrome Pecaric Pekovic, Tatjana; Porebski, Gregory; Bosak, Marek; Kawabata, Tom; Pichler, Werner J. P02-25 Use of lung gene expression profiles to determine exposure to oxidative stress-related constituents during cigarette smoke exposure in rodents Fariss, Marc; Guo, Yin; Scian, Mariano; Edmiston, Jeffery P03: Carcinogenesis P03-01 5-Demethyltangeretin (5-DTAN) is more effective than tangeretin in 7, 12-dimethylbenz[a] anthracene (DMBA)/12-O-Tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA)-induced mouse skin carcinogenesis Min-Hsiung Pan, Chieh-Han Chung, and Chi-Tang Ho P03-02 Breast Cancer in Danish women: A prospective case-control study on breast cancer risk upon exposure to perfluorinated compounds Eva Cecilie Bonefeld-Jorgensen, Manhai Long, Stine F. Overvad, Jørn Olsen P03-03 Carcinogenicity testing of Eliglustat in the mouse and rat Dagher, Rafif; Marquis, Judith; Watzinger, Malene; Forster, Roy P03-04 Cigarette sidestream smoke is a source of environmental estrogen Lih-Ann Li, Lun-Cheng Kuo, Chun-Ju Lin, and Pei-Rung Wu P03-05 Combined effect of the SOD mimic MnTnHex-2-PyP5+ and doxorubicin on the migration and invasiveness of breast cancer cells A.S. Fernandes, A. Flórido, M. Cipriano, I. Batinic-Haberle, J. Miranda, N. Saraiva, P.S. Guerreiro, M. Castro, N.G. Oliveira P03-06 Deregulation of benzo[a]pyrene metabolism in lung epithelial cells under inflammatory conditions Vondracek, Jan; Smerdova, Lenka; Neca, Jiri; Svobodova, Jana; Topinka, Jan; Schmuczerova, Jana; Kozubik, Alois; Machala, Miroslav 70 P03-07 Dose-response of alkylation-induced colorectal carcinogenesis in MGMT-proficient and -deficient mice Fahrer, Jörg; Frisch, Janina; Nagel, Georg; Reißig, Sonja; Waisman, Ari; Samson, Leona D.; Kaina, Bernd P03-08 Human breast cancer cell metastasis is attenuated by lysyl oxidase inhibitors through down-regulation of hydrogen-peroxide mediated focal adhesion kinase and the paxillin signaling pathway Li-Ching Chen, Chih-Hsiung Wu, Wen-Sen Lee, and Yuan-Soon Ho P03-09 Inhibition of canonical Wnt signaling deregulates expression of CYP1A1 in colon cancer cells Kabatkova, Marketa; Machala, Miroslav; Topinka, Jan; Kozubik, Alois; Vondrácek, Jan P03-10 Oxidation of carcinogenic benzo[a]pyrene by human and rat CYP1A1 and its influencing by cytochrome b5 – a comparative study Indra, Radek; Moserova, Michaela; Sulc, Miroslav; Stiborova, Marie P03-11 P38 kinase regulates cytochrome P450 1B1 under inflammatory conditions Šmerdová, Lenka; Kohoutek, Jirí; Machala, Miroslav; Vondrácek, Jan P03-12 Prooxidant and anticarcinogenic effect of non-pigmented and pigmented rice bran extracts on human colon cancer cell line Chunhabundit, Rodjana; Kongkachuichai, Ratchanee; Srisala, Supanart; Jittorntrum, Bunyada; Visetpanit, Yupin P03-13 Quantitative Analysis on HeLa Engrafting Ability in NOG Mice Urano, Koji; Machida, Kazuhiko; Kusakawa, Shinji; Sawada, Rumi; Yasuda Satoshi, Ito, Mamoru; Tsutsumi, Hideki; Sato, Yoji Adiguzel, Zelal; Baykal, Tarik; Cetin, Yuksel; Kacar, Omer; Serhatli, Muge; Polat, Hivda; Ulukaya, Engin; Yilmaz, Veysel T.; Acilan, Ceyda P06: Consumer’s Protection P06-01 Acute and short term impact of active and passive tobacco and electronic cigarette smoking on inflammatory markers Manolis N. Tzatzarakis, Kyriakos I. Tsitoglou, Maria S. Chorti, Konstantina P. Poulianiti, Athanasios Z. Jamurtas, Yiannis Koutedakis, Andreas D. Flouris, Kyriakakis Michalis, Tsatsakis Aristidis P06-02 Applicability of a Clinical Protocol Security to assess the Ocular Irritation of rinse-off children’s cosmetics. Paes, Cintia; Queiroz, Diana; Fragoso, Meire; Martin, Fabiana; Azevedo, Keller; Mosca, Mariane; Guerra, Lucas; Rosa, Vivian; Rocha, Bianca 71 Posters P03-14 In vitro and in vivo evaluation of the toxicological and molecular effects of a novel Pd(II) complex P06-03 Obese and normal mice differ in enzyme activities of cytochromes P450 after administration of green tea extract Anzenbacher, Pavel; Jourová, Lenka; Kolárová, Veronika; Bártiková, Hana; Bousová, Iva; Anzenbacherová, Eva P06-04 Quantitative risk assessment for skin sensitization: a simplified approach for hair dye ingredients? Carsten Goebel, Thomas Diepgen, Maya Krasteva, Harald Schlatter, Jean-Francois Nicolas, Brunhilde Blömeke, Pieter Jan Coenraads, Axel Schnuch, James S. Taylor, Jacquemine Pungier, Rolf Fautz, Anne Fuchs, Werner Schuh, G. Frank Gerberick, Ian Kimber P07: Drug oriented Toxicological Research P07-01 7-Hydroxydehydronuciferine induces human melanoma A375.S2 cell death via autophagy and apoptosis in vitro and in vivo investigations Hui-Min Wang and Pei-Fang Wu P07-02 A modified oral UV-LLNA in Balb/c mice to investigate phototoxicity mechanisms and pharmacokinetic properties in skin Stéphanie Boudon, Martin Schneider, Gregory Morandi, Ursula Junker, Ulla Plappert, Alex Odermatt, Daniel Bauer. P07-03 A New Organotypic 3-D Small Intestinal Tissue Model Reconstructed from Primary Human Cells Ayehunie, Seyoum; Stevens, Zachary; Landry, Timothy; Armento, Alexander; Klausner, Mitchell; Hayden, Patrick P07-04 Acetaminophen-glutathione conjugate: a possible role in acetaminophen toxicity Rousar, Tomas; Nydlova, Erika; Kucera, Otto; Cesla, Petr; Vrbova, Martina; Cervinkova, Zuzana P07-05 Acute and repeated dose toxicity studies of novel pyridazine substituted s-triazin-2-imine/ one/thione derivatives as new class of antihypertensive agent Ravinesh Mishraa, Anees A Siddiquib, Asif Husainb, Mohd Rashidb, Sameya Anjumc P07-06 Antidiabetic and antioxidant activity of pheophorbide a from Capsosiphon fulvescens extract in streptozotocin-induced diabetes in rats Kwang-Won Lee, Ji Sun Oh, Chung-Oui Hong, Mi-Hyun Nam P07-07 Antinociceptive Effects of Avocado Leaf Extracts (Persea americana) on Rats Abubakar, M. G. and Adamu, L P07-08 Aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR)-mediated induction of CYP1A1 in human hepatocytes by furanochromones visnagin and khellin Radim Vrzala, Thomas Haarmann-Stemmannb, Katrin Frauensteinb, Zdenek Dvoraka 72 P07-09 Cardiac Lesions Induced by Testosterone in Rats Melik Seyrek, Eda Emer, Bulent Kurt, Oguzhan Yildiz, Enis Macit, Ahmet Sayal P07-10 Cardiotoxic Effect of Concomitant versus Sequential Trastuzumab with Thoracic Radiotherapy: An Echocardiographic Study in Rats Oguzhan Yildiz, Melik Seyrek, Sait Demirkol, Guler Yavas, Melis Gultekin, Ferah Yildiz P07-11 Cardiotoxic Effect of Subacute High Dose Testosterone and Dehidroepiandrosterone Administration: An Echocardiographic Study in Rats Eda Emer, Sait Demirkol, Oguzhan Yildiz, Melik Seyrek, Enis Macit, Ahmet Sayal P07-12 Comparison of Antioxidant Activities of Newly Synthesized Melatonin Analogues Senem Ozcan, Duysal Uslu, Çigdem Karaaslan, Hanif Shrinzadeh, Sibel Suzen, Hande Gurer-Orhan P07-13 Determination of antibodies to cocaine metabolites in serum of cocaine users Elena Vakonaki, Vitalia S. Morozova, Svetlana N. Petrochenko, Oksana Yu. Polyvanaya, Marina A. Myagkova, Matthaios Kavvalakis, Kovatsi Leda, Manolis N. Tzatzarakis, Aristidis M. Tsatsakis P07-14 Effect of Acetic Zinc on Phospholipid Composition of Rat Liver Cell Plasmatic Membranes under Chronic Alcohol Intoxication Kharchenko, Olga; Bogun, Larisa; Ostapchenko, Lyudmyla P07-15 Effect of APE1 Inhibitors on the Cytotoxicity and Genotoxicity of Doxorubicin in MDA-MB-231 Cells P.S. Guerreiro, J.P. Miranda, A.S. Fernandes, J.G. Costa, M. Castro, and N.G. Oliveira P07-16 Encapsulation of cisplatin by cucurbit[7]uril decreases the neurotoxic and cardiotoxic side effects of cisplatin. Rabbab Oun, Jane Plumb, Edward Rowan and Nial Wheate Mansi Krishan, Gary Gudelsky, Pankaj Desai, Mary Beth Genter P07-18 Evaluation of Hydroxypropyl-Beta-Cyclodextrin (HPβCD) as formulation vehicle for use in general toxicity studies in mice Glojnaric, Ines; Cuzic, Snjezana; Markovic, Darko P07-19 Hair analysis of sedative-hypnotics drugs involved in crime suspected cases in Greece Manolis N. Tzatzarakis, Christina Tsitsimpikou, Xenofon Mandakas, Elena Vakonaki, Matthaios P. Kavvalakis, Theodoropoulou Eleutheria, Katerina Kanaki, Leda Kovatsi, Aristidis M. Tsatsakis P07-20 Integrin receptor seeking bio-engineered “smart” magnetic nanomaterials in Lewis lung carcinoma toxicity studies Monika A. Cywinska, Ireneusz P. Grudzinski, Anita Kosmider, Magdalena Poplawska, Michal Bystrzejewski, Andrzej Cieszanowski, Zbigniew Fijalek, Agnieszka Ostrowska 73 Posters P07-17 Enhanced Intranasal Delivery of Gemcitabine to the Central Nervous System P07-21 Iron sucrose nanoparticles: effects on tissue iron levels and hepatic gene expression in the rat Forster, Roy; Bouchard, Johanne; Jaillet, Léonore; Rogue, Alexandra; Pearson, Nick; Elford, Peter P07-22 Phytochemical and Acute Toxicity Studies on Salvadora Oleoides Decne Manu Arora, Anees A Siddiqui, Sarvesh Paliwal, Manav Malhotra, Manbir Kaur P07-23 Promising Effects of Intravenous Lipid Emulsion as an Antidote in Acute Tramadol Poisoning Maryam Vahabzadeh and Hosein Hoseinzadeh P07-24 Quantification Of Impurities In Commercial Drug Products Containing Montelukast And Evaluation Of The Impurities’ Cytotoxic Effects Emerce, Esra; Cok, Ismet; Degim, Ismail Tuncer P07-25 Rapid Toxicity and Drug Delivery Screening in an In Vitro Human Airway Model Jackson, George; Armento, Alexander; Letasiova, Silvia; Klausner, Mitchell; Hayden, Patrick P07-26 Stereospecific cardiotoxicity evaluation of local anesthetics using their discriminable interactions with biomimetic chiral membranes Hironori Tsuchiya, Maki Mizogami P07-27 Synthesis of benzimidazoles bearing oxadiazole and triazolo-thiadiazoles nucleous: As new anticancer agents Mohd Rashid, Asif Husain, Ravinesh Mishra, Sameya Anjum P07-28 The effects of selected cytostatics and their mixtures on aquatic primary producers Polona Brezovšek, Tina Eleršek, Metka Filipič P07-29 The Mutagenic Potential Assessment of the Major Impurity of Hypertension Drug Hydrochlorothiazide Cok, Ismet; Emerce, Esra; Sari, Sibel; Bostanci, Omur P07-30 The Occurence of Risk Variant Alleles TPMT in the Czech and Slovak Population Kolorz, Michal; Bartosova, Ladislava; Wroblova, Katerina; Bartos, Milan; Ulicny, Boris P07-31 Toxicological effect of dexamethasone treatment on the transport of both amino-acids, Tyrosine and Tryptophan, across the blood brain barrier (BBB) Aouichri, Mohamed P07-32 What Would Genetic Polymorphisms in the Dopamine-2-Receptor (DRD2) and Serotonin Transporter Gene (SERT) Tell us about Vulnerability to Comorbid Drug Abuse and Cardiovascular Risks among Egyptian Population? Taalab, Yasmeen; Puls, Imke; Heinz, Andreas; El-Haggar, Mohamed; Ghanem, Abdel-Aziz; Abdel-Wahab, Doaa; Gad, Seham 74 P07-33 Zebrafish as a complementary model in toxicology Simon Folkertsma, Cyrille Krul, André Wolterbeek, Anna Beker, Cor Snel, Aswin Menke and Didima de Groot P07-34 Effect on QT interval after treatment with moxifloxacin in 2 and 8 week old juvenile Beagle dogs Maaike Peschar, Ph.D., Nicky Lourens, M.Sc., Kevin Scase, M.Sc., Dick Schoutsen, M.Sc., Han Tielemans, Harry Emmen, M.Sc. P08: Environmental Toxicology P08-01 Acute and Chronic Metal (Cd, Pb) Exposures Alter Red Blood Cell ATPase activity in Freshwater Fish (Oreochromis niloticus) Gülüzar Atli, Ali Eroğlu, Zehra Doğan, Esin G. Kanak, Kadir Kocalar, Mustafa Canli P08-02 Acute Cu Effects on Antioxidant System Response in the hepatopancreas of Freshwater Snail Lymnaea stagnalis Gülüzar Atli, Martin Grosell P08-03 Administration of very low doses of water pharmaceutical contaminants in lean and obese mice disturbs the hepatic expression of genes involved in circadian rhythm Sébastien Anthérieu, Dounia Menouer, Karima Begriche, Cédric Coulouarn, Marie-Anne Robin, Bernard Fromenty P08-04 Age Dependent and Brain Region Specific Perturbations in Mitochondrial Enzymes Following Exposure to Lead and Manganese in Rats D. Chand Basha, V. Kavitha, and G. Rajarami Reddy Polichetti, Giuliano; Capone, Domenico; De Sio, Alessandra; Polichetti, Raffaele; Attianese, Carolina; Gentile, Antonio P08-06 Different adverse health effects and seasonal variations of particulate matter. Polichetti, Giuliano; De Sio, Alessandra; Gentile, Antonio; Polichetti, Raffaele; Capone, Domenico P08-07 Biological effects of nanoparticles of silver, gold, TiO2 and nanoporous silica to selected invertebrate species and bacteria: FP7 project NanoValid. Olesja Bondarenko, Angela Ivask, Aleksandr Käkinen, Villem Aruoja, Irina Blinova, Katre Juganson, Kaja Kasemets, Kai Künnis-Beres, Imbi Kurvet, Monika Mortimer, Mariliis Sihtmäe and Anne Kahru P08-08 Cadmium exposure, inter-cellular adhesion molecule-1 and peripheral artery disease in a longitudinal study of elderly women. A cohort and an experimental study. Barregard, Lars; Bergstrom, Goran; Boren, Jan; Fagerberg, Bjorn 75 Posters P08-05 Ambient air pollution (AAP) and mental disorders: future perspectives. P08-09 Can Zn supplementation mitigate Cd-induced bioelements disturbances in liver and kidneys? Bulat, Zorica; Ðukic-Cosic, Danijela; Buha, Aleksandra; Bulat, Petar; Matovic, Vesna P08-10 Chronic cytotoxicity and genotoxicity of low doses of environmental contaminants in human HepaRG hepatocytes. Karine Rondel, Carine Lambert, Sophie Martinais, Vincent Caumette, Rémy Le Guevel, Marie-Anne Robin. P08-11 Combined effects of microbial toxins and structural components on the expression of proinflammatory cytokines TNFα and IL-1β in vitro Merja Korkalainen, Arja Moilanen, Hannu Komulainen, Matti Viluksela, P08-12 Combined exposure of Japanese quails to cyanotoxins, Newcastle virus and lead: metallothioneins, accumulation and distribution of toxins Kovacova V., Osickova J., Adamovsky O., Bandouchova H., Hilsherova K., Sedlackova J., Vitula F., Machat J., Mlcakova V., Kizek R., Adam V., Pikula J. P08-13 Cytotoxicity evaluation of environmental chemicals via free radical detection using newly technique immuno-spin trapping, In-Cell Western and confocal microscopy Yuya Horinouchi, Fiona A. Summers, Marilyn Ehrenshaft, Hitoshi Houchi, Toshiaki Tamaki, Kazuo Minakuchi, and Ronald P. Mason P08-14 Cytotoxicity, oxidative stress and inflammatory responses induced by fly ash particles in human lung epithelial cells A. Forgiarini and M. Carrara P08-15 Determination of Bisphenol A exposure in rural and urban area populations in Mersin City, Turkey Battal D, Cok I, Unlusayin I, Aktas A, Tunctan B P08-16 Determination of Ni, Cr, Fe and Mn in hair from orthodontics patients by Atomic Absorption Spectrometry. Cameán AM, Martín-Cameán A, Molina-Villalba I, Jos A, Iglesias A, Solano JE, Gil F P08-17 Effects of a Depuration Period on the Biochemical Alterations Induced by Repeated Doses of A. Ovalisporum Cells in Tilapias (O. Niloticius) Cameán AM, Ríos V, Guzmán-Guillén RS, Moreno I, Prieto AI, Vasconcelos V, P08-18 Validation of a Method to Quantify in Ni, Cr, Co and Cu in Oral Mucosa Cells by Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry Cameán AM, Martín-Cameán A, Jos A, Calleja A, Gil F, Iglesias A, Solano E. P08-19 Development of a method for Titanium, Vanadium and Zirconium determination in oral mucosal cells by ICP-MS: intra-laboratory assessment of its accuracy by using validation standards Jos A, Martín-Cameán A, Calleja A, Iglesias A, Solano E, Gil F, Cameán AM 76 P08-20 Development of an alternative testing strategy for the fish early life stage test for predicting chronic toxicity Lucia Vergauwen, Ronny Blust, Hilda Witters, Sandra Verstraelen, Daniel L. Villeneuve, Gerald T. Ankley, Dries Knapen P08-21 Effect of fluoroquinolones on the avian embryonic development and hatchability of chicks Skochova Hana, Osickova Jitka, Pikula Jiri, Bandouchová Hana, Kral Jiri, Ondracek Karel, Kovacova Veronika P08-22 Effect of magnesium pretreatment on cadmium-induced oxidative stress in mice Ðukic-Cosic, Danijela; Bulat, Zorica; Buha, Aleksandra; Matovic, Vesna P08-23 Effects of di(2-ethylhexyl)-phthalate alone or in combination with 17β-estradiol on expression of RXRalpha and RXRbeta retinoid X receptor subtypes in the MCF-7 breast cancer cell line Macejová D., Bialešová L., Havránek T., Brtko J., Ficková M. P08-24 Effects of Different Endocrine Disruptor (EDC) Mixtures on Gene Expression in Neonatal Rat Brain Regions: Focus on Developing Excitatory Synapses Lichtensteiger, Walter; Bassetti-Gaille, Catherine; Faass, Oliver; Boberg, Julie; Christiansen, Sofie; Hass, Ulla; Kortenkamp, Andreas; Schlumpf, Margret P08-25 Effects of endocrine disruptors Bisphenol A and di(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate in a combination with 17 β-estradiol on apoptosis-related genes in the MCF-7 breast cancer cell line Mlynarcikova, Alzbeta; Havranek, Tomas; Fickova, Maria P08-26 Effects of Formaldehyde exposure on human epithelial cells all along the respiratory tract Gaëlle Bardet, Charles Persoz, Thomas Loret, Isabelle Momas, Sophie Achard, Nathalie Seta Lee, Kyoung-youl; Choi, Eun-young P08-28 Ellagic acid protects against cyclophosphamide induced acute lung injury in Wistar rats by inhibiting oxidative stress, NF-kB activation and inflammatory cell production. Saba (author) and Sheikh Raisuddin co-author P08-29 Endocrine disruptor Bisphenol A toxicity study in testicular mitochondria of Swiss albino mice Sameya Anjum and Sheikh Raisuddin P08-30 Heavy metal burdens of public primary school children in Ibadan north-west local government area, Nigeria related to playground soils and classroom dusts Ademuyiwa O., Akinwunmi F., Atobatele Z., Adewole O., Odekunle K., Arogundade L. and Odukoya O.O. 77 Posters P08-27 Effects of maternal exposure to di(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate (DEHP) during pregnancy on neonatal asthma susceptibility P08-31 Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis activity is modified by perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) exposure in adult male rat Lafuente, Anunciacion; Pereiro, Natividad; Gomez-Limia, Lucia P08-32 In vitro particulate matter toxicity relates to seasonal variability in chemical composition. Osornio Vargas, Alvaro; Manzano-Leon, Natalia; Quintana-Belmares, Raul; Sanchez, Brisa; Sitarik, Alexandra; Serrano, Jesus; Vega, Elizabeth; Vazquez-Lopez, Ines; Rojas-Bracho, Leonora; Lopez-Villegas, Tania; Vadillo-Ortega, Felipe; De Vizcaya-Ruiz, Andrea; Rosas, Irma; Moran-Pineda, Marina; O’Neill, Marie P08-33 Influence of media and N:P ratios on growth, microcystin production and gene expression of a Microcystis aeruginosa strain Bortoli, Stella; de Oliveira Silva, Diogo; A. Volmer, Dietrich; Pinto, Ernani P08-34 (Cancelled) P08-35 Lack of Association Between Serum Prolactin and Lead Exposure Aysegul Bacaksiz, Meside Gunduzoz, Sedat Abusoglu, Engin Tutkun, Hinc Yilmaz, Nilgun Giynas, Emine Gul Aydin P08-36 Mercury Levels in Placentas from Non-Exposed Mothers Tülin Söylemezoğlu, Zeliha Kayaaltı, Seda Kaya, Vugar Ali Türksoy P08-37 Mercury-Resistant Bacteria from Tagus Estuary – Characterization and Mercury Reduction Potential Neusa L. L. Figueiredo, João Canário, Aida Duarte and Cristina Carvalho P08-38 Neurobehavioral Effects of Exposure to Environmental Chemicals and Caesium in Developing Offspring Mice Isabel Llovet, Daisy Lafuente, Sergio Gonzalo, Montserrat Bellés, José Luís Domingo, Victòria Linares P08-39 NOEC versus EC10, reloaded on a recent show case Jung, Eunsoo; Wess, Ralf Arno; Schmidt, Thomas P08-40 Oatp Expression profile in Danio rerio upon Microcystin-exposure Steiner, Konstanze; Karner, Tim; Dietrich, Daniel P08-41 Oxidative stress in birds: Effects of heavy metals and pharmaceuticals Osickova J., Kovacova V., Pikula J., Bandouchova H., Kral J., Skochova H., Pohanka M., Novotny L. P08-42 Particulate matter emissions from cigarettes under real life condition Marik Gerecht, Daniel Müller, Johannes Schulze, David A Groneberg P08-43 Protective effects of N-acetyl cysteine with zinc and selenium on chronic mercury induced oxidative stress and DNA damage evaluation in rats. Deepmala Joshi and Deepak Kumar Mittal 78 P08-44 Pulmonary cytotoxic in vitro studies of selected short-chain monocarboxylic acids present in indoor environments D. Lipsa, C. Cacho, P. Leva, J. Barrero-Moreno P08-45 Reconstituted human airway epithelium 3D-model to assess the impact of indoor air pollutants on the inflammatory response. Grellet, Sophie; Momas, Isabelle; Seta, Nathalie; Bardet, Gaëlle; Achard, Sophie P08-46 Reduced expression of genes for nuclear receptors RXRalpha and RXRbeta by bisphenol A in human mammary cancer cells (MCF7). Fickova M., Havranek T., Brtko J., Macejova D. P08-47 Selected organotin halides: Toxicity versus nuclear retinoic acid/retinoid X receptors and their co-regulators expression in breast cancer and leukemia cell lines Brtko, Julius; Macejova, Dana; Bialesova, Lucia; Fickova, Maria; Bohacova, Viera; Sulova, Zdena; Breier, Albert; Hunakova, Luba P08-48 Studies on the red grape extract supplementation against mercuric chloride induced toxicity in rat erythrocytes Kanti Bhooshan Pandey and Syed Ibrahim Rizvi P08-49 Study of platinum group metals effects on lettuce plants (Lactuca sativa) Mikulaskova, H., Nemcova, B., Beklova, M. P08-50 Study of the impact of platinum and palladium on representatives of soil fauna (Folsomia candida) Nemcova B., Bednarova I., Mikulaskova H., Beklova M. P08-51 The effect of green tea extract on a-amanitin induced hepatotoxicity in a murine model P08-52 The Importance of the Ecotoxicological Assessment for the Risk Management of Cosmetic Ingredients Hauaji Zacarias, Cyro; Assanome, Karen; Queiroz, Diana P08-53 The influence of methionine on the selected biochemical parameters and morphological picture of the liver of rats intoxicated with sodium fluoride Stawiarska-Pieta, Barbara; Helis, Agnieszka; Matelska, Sara; Grzegorzak, Natalia; Zalejska-Fiolka, Jolanta; Birkner, Ewa; Wyszynska, Magdalena P08-54 The organotin tributyltin and TNF-α induce 17β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 3 expression Cornelia Fürstenberger, Roger Engeli and Alex Odermatt 79 Posters Park, Yong Jin P08-55 The Regulation of 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone-Induced Lung Tumor Promotion by Estradiol in Female A/J Mice Ying-Jan Wang, Rong-Jane Chen, Louis W. Chang, Yuan-Soon Ho, Chih-Hsiung Wu, Pinpin Lin P08-56 Toxicity and genotoxicity of the air polluted with compounds produced by heavy industry H. Sezimová, K. Malachová, Z. Rybková P08-57 Toxicity of microcystin-deficient Planktothrix strains due to chlorine and sulfate containing aeruginosins Kohler, Esther; Blom, Judith; Grundler, Verena; Häussinger, Daniel; Kurmayer, Rainer; Gademann, Karl; Pernthaler, Jakob P08-58 Toxicological Risk Assessment in Carbon Capture and Storage Technology Hillebrand, Marcus; Pflugmacher, Stephan; Hahn, Axel P08-59 Xenoestrogenic and dioxin-like activity in blood of East Greenland polar bears (Ursus maritimus) Simon E. Erdmann, Rune Dietz, Christian Sonne, Thea Ø. Bechshøft, Katrin Vorkamp, Robert J. Letcher, Manhai Long, Eva C. Bonefeld-Jørgensen P09: Food Safety P09-01 A preliminary assessment of dietary exposure to sulphites in Greek population through wine consumption Ioannis N. Tsakiris, Manolis N. Tzatzarakis, Athanasios K. Alegakis, Paraskevi Mitlianga, Kyriakakis Michalis, Polychronis Stivaktakis, Mathaios Kavvalakis, Vlachou Maria, Aristidis M. Tsatsakis P09-02 Activation of AhR and CYP1A1 induction by pelargonidin in primary human hepatocytes and human cancer cell lines Alzbeta Kamenickova, Zdenek Dvorak, Eva Anzenbacherova, Pavel Anzenbacher P09-03 Activity and Genetic Expression of Antioxidant Enzymes in Liver and Kidney of Rats exposed to a Modified Clay and Its Migration Extract Jos A, Maisanaba S, Llana Ruíz-Cabello M, Gutiérrez-Praena D, Puerto M, Mate A, Pichardo S, Jordá M, Aucejo S, Cameán A. P09-04 Cytotoxicity Study in the Human Cell Line Caco-2 of Dipropyl Sulfide and Dipropyl Disulfide from Garlic Essential Oil Jos A, Llana Ruiz-Cabello M, Gutiérrez-Praena D, Pichardo S, Bermúdez JM, Aucejo S, Cameán AM P09-05 Cytotoxicity, Oxidative Stress and Genotoxicity of Two Novel Modified Clays Intended to Food Packaging applications in the Human Cell Line HepG2 Jos A, Maisanaba S, Houtman J, Puerto M, Jordá M, Aucejo S, Pichardo, S. 80 P09-06 Histological and Biochemical Study in Rats Subchronically Exposed to an Organomodified Clay and its Migration Extract Jos A, Maisanaba S, Puerto M, Gutiérrez-Praena D, Moyano R, Blanco A, Pichardo S, Jordá M, Aucejo S, Cameán A. P09-07 Study of the Basal Cytotoxicity and the Oxidative Stress Induction of Carvarcrol, Thymol, and their Mixture in the Human Cell Line Caco-2 Cameán AM, Llana Ruiz-Cabello M, Gutiérrez-Praena D, Pichardo S, Jos A, Puerto M, Bermúdez JM, Aucejo S P09-08 Aflatoxins and Fumonisins Contamination of Home-Made Food (Weanimix) from Cerel-Legume Blends for Children in Ghana Kumi, Justice; Nicole, Mitchell; A. Asare, George; Dotse, Eunice; Kwaa, Freda; Phillips, Timothy; Ankrah, Nii-Ayi P09-09 Are house dust mite or shellfish allergic patients at risk when consuming food containing mealworm proteins. Verhoeckx, KCM, van Broekhoven, S., Broekman, HCHP, den Hartog Jager, CF, Gaspari, M, de Jong, Govardus AH., Wichers, H, van Hoffen, E, Houben, GF, Knulst, AC P09-10 Cadmium and Lead Levels Consumed by Patients with Oral Hospital Diets Prescriptions Julia S. Manzoli de Sá; Isabela C Fernandes; Daniele C. F. Moreira; Marcelo A. Morgano; Késia D. Quintaes. P09-11 Trace elements in tea leaves commercialized in Brazil Raquel F. Milani; Marcelo A. Morgano; Elisabete S. Saron; Fábio F. Silva; Solange Cadore P09-12 Determination of Primary Aromatic Amines in Cold Water Extract of Colour Paper Napkin Samples by Liquid Chromatography-Tandem Mass Spectrometry P09-13 Evidence for lipid signaling molecules in glycated protein preparations being responsible for the stimulation of inflammatory signaling in RAGE expressing cells – potential role of lysophosphatidic acid Timo Buetler, Hélia Latado, and Gabriele Scholz P09-14 Hepatotoxic pyrrolizidine alkaloids – Molecular effects on the transcriptome in human primary hepatocytes Luckert, Claudia; Hessel, Stefanie; Lenze, Dido; Lampen, Alfonso P09-15 Induction of micronuclei and cytotoxic effects of ochratoxin A in Vero cells JG Costa; AS Fernandes; PS Guerreiro; E Filipe, JP Miranda, M Castro and NG Oliveira P09-16 Influence of the making and cooking pasta on enniatins contents Font G., Serrano A.B., Tolosa J. and Ferrer E. 81 Posters Oguzhan Yavuz, Sandro Valzacchi, Eddo Hoekstra and Catherine Simoneau P09-17 Monitoring Alternaria mycotoxins and pesticide residues in tomato by dispersive liquidliquid microextraction coupled to gas chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry Font G., Rodríguez-Carrasco, Y., Moltó J.C., Berrada, H. P09-18 Influence of the Process Conditions on the Formation of 3-MCPD Esters in Palm Oil Klicia A. Sampaio, Adriana P. Arisseto, Jose V. Ayala, Christian Stevens, Roberta Ceriani, Roland Verhé, Antonio J.A. Meirelles P09-19 Liquid Chromatographic determination of histamine in traditionally salted, smoked and frozen fish with Relation to Microbial Load M.M. Deabes, S.A. Ahmed, Hayam A. Mansour, Laila A. Mohamed, and Doha A. Salah El din P09-20 Mutagenicity studies of processed food items and ready-to-eat snacks in Finland Iyekhoetin Matthew Omoruyi and Raimo Pohjanvirta P09-21 Nutritional and toxicological analyses of leaves and fruits of Solanum macrocarpon Linn (Solanaceae) in Cotonou (Benin) Dougnon Victorien, Bankolé Honoré, Dougnon Jacques, Klotoé Jean-Robert, Edorh Patrick, Loko Frédéric, Boko Michel P09-22 Safety Testing of New Ingredients in Infant Formula using Piglet as an Animal Model Ali S. Faqi, Adam D. Aulbach and Bjorn A. Thorsrud P09-23 The scaling of allergenic products for the hazard characterisation of new proteins Kruizinga, AG; Klein Entink, RH; Blom, WM; Houben, GF; van Bilsen, JHM P09-24 Toxicological, genotoxicological, antigenotoxicological, cytotoxicity and lifespan studies of beer and some components Merinas-Amo, Maria Tania; Villalba-Benito, Leticia; Almagro-Berlanga, Rafael; Romero-Jimenez, Magdalena; Mateo-Fernandez, Marcos; Alonso-Moraga, Angeles; Calahorro-Nuñez, Fernando P09-25 Withdrawal time of Fosfomycin in pigs and broiler chickens after oral and intramuscular administration Pérez, Denisa S.; Soraci, Alejandro L.; Tapia, María O. P11: Immunotoxicology / Immunogenicity P11-01 Allergic Skin Inflammation Induced by Chemical Sensitizers is Controlled by the Transcription Factor Nrf2. Zeina El Ali, Cédric Gerbeix, Philippe Esser, Pauline Robert, Jean-Jacques Legrand, Stefan Martin, Marc Pallardy and Saadia Kerdine-Römer 82 P11-02 An international pre-validation study on the epidermal equivalent sensitizer potency assay Marc A.T. Teunis, Sander Spiekstra, Mieke Smits, Els Adriaens, Tobias Eltze, Valentina Galbiati, Cyrille Krul, Robert Landsiedel, Raymond Pieters, Judith Reinders, Erwin Roggen, Emanuela Corsini, Susan Gibbs P11-03 Basophil Activation Test for Investigation of IgE-Mediated Mechanisms in Drug Hypersensitivity Pecaric Petkovic, Tatjana; Gentinetta, Thomas; Dörig, Dario; Buenter, Antonia; Pichler, Werner J.; Hausmann, Oliver P11-04 Better prediction of immunogenicity of biopharmaceuticals in humans, is it possible? Dr. Simon Folkertsma, Dr. Babs O. Fabriek, Dr. Geertje van Mierlo, F.J. Tielen, Dr. R. Klein Entink, Dr. E. Reefman, Dr. C.Krul P11-05 Brominated flame retardants stimulate immune response in vitro Eiko Koike, Rie Yanagisawa, and Hirohisa Takano P11-06 Carbamate pesticides induce apoptosis in human T cells Li, Qing; Kobayashi, Maiko; Kawada, Tomoyuki P11-07 Coculture of antigen-presenting cells and keratinocytes: Modulation of compound-related increase of CYP mRNA in antigen-presenting cells Hennen J., Cohrs C., John A., Seidel A., Blömeke B. P11-08 Development of skin sensitization test method utilizing THP-1 cells cultured on a collagen vitrigel membrane chamber Uchino, Tadashi; Shimizu, Kumiko; Yamashita, Kunihiko; Kojima, Hajime; Takezawa, Toshiaki; Akiyama, Takumi; Ikarashi, Yoshiaki P11-09 Differential Effect of Cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) on Rat Brain Microglia-derived Proinflammatory and Anti-inflammatory Cytokine and Chemokine generation David Macadam, Mary L. Hall, Domonkos Feher, Philip Williams, and Alejandro M.S. Mayer Posters P11-10 Effect of LPS on CD40 Expression on Spleen Cells of male BALB/C Mice – A Potential Model for the Investigation of Immunosupressant Compounds Philip Allingham, Silke Huber, Anne-Laure Leoni, Wolfram Riedel P11-11 Identification and statistical power of mRNA based classifiers for direct immunotoxicity Shao, Jia; Peijnenburg, Ad C. C. M.; Hendriksen, Peter J. M.; van Loveren, Henk; Volger, Oscar L. P11-12 Methlychloroisothiazolinone/methylisothiazolinone: a contact sensitizer or a respiratory allergen? Dearman, Rebecca; Hayes, Mark; Kimber, Ian P11-13 The aryl hydrocarbon receptor: differential contribution to type 17 T cell subsets Dearman, Rebecca; Hayes, Mark; Ovcinnikovs, Vitaly; Kimber, Ian 83 P11-14 Method-Validation and Assessment of Immunotoxicity Potential for New Drugs Sagelsdorff, Peter; Canut, Lourdes; Dickel, Denise; Fernandez, Elena; Mendoza, Paula; Reig, Vanessa P11-15 Perinatal exposure to an insecticide methamidophos affected the immune response to virus infection in the next generation of mice Watanabe, Wataru; Yoshida, Hiroki; Hirose, Akihiko; Kurokawa, Masahiko P11-16 Protein kinase CK2 and JNK control Nrf2 activation in response to skin contact sensitizers in THP1 cells. Marie de Bourayne, Zeina El Ali, Odile Filhol, Claude Cochet, Marc Pallardy, Saadia Kerdine-Römer Concert Hall P04: Clinical Toxicology P04-01 “Synthe-tic co-caine” as legal cocaine hides synthetic cannabinoids CA Locatelli, D Lonati, E. Buscaglia, S Vecchio, A Giampreti, VM Petrolini, F. Chiara, M Aloise, E Cortini, P Papa, L Rolandi, L Rocchi, C Rimondo, C Seri, G Serpelloni P04-02 Italian viper venom neurotoxicity: clinical evidences in 11-year experience of Pavia poison control centre CA Locatelli, D Lonati, A Giampreti, VM Petrolini, S Vecchio, M Aloise, F Chiara, D Flachi, L Manzo P04-03 Antidotes supply in emergency from Pavia Poison Control Centre Carlo Alessandro Locatelli, Eleonora Buscaglia, Marta Mazzoleni, Davide Lonati, Andrea Giampreti, Sarah Vecchio, Valeria Margherita Petrolini, Anna Losurdo P04-04 Chloracne /MADISH-like cystic lesions induced by Vemurafenib: A model for the tissue modelling effects of dioxin in humans Gürkan Kaya, Nikolina Saxer-Sekulic, Olivier Sorg, Luc Thomas, Jean-Hilaire Saurat P04-05 Co-Cr wear products derived from metal-on-metal articulations induce apoptosis on monocyte-like U937 cells Posada, Estefan; Olga, Maria; Grant, Helen; Tate, Rothwelle J P04-06 Effects of MDMA and methylphenidate on steroid levels in healthy humans Julia Seibert, Cédric M. Hysek, Matthias E. Liechti and Alex Odermatt P04-07 Is Excessive Acetaminophen Intake Associated with Transaminitis in Patients with Dengue Fever? D. Pandejpong, P. Saengsuri, R. Rattarittamrong, C. Chouriyagune P04-08 Protective effects of para-aminosalicylic acid (PAS) against manganese (Mn)-induced neurotoxicity Marreilha dos Santos AP, Andrade Vanda, Santos Dinamene, Lucas Rui, Aschner Michael, Batoréu M Camila 84 P04-09 Recent Epidemiologic Features of Carbon Monoxide Poisoning in South Korea: A Single Center Retrospective Cohort Study Choi, Byungho; Jeon, Jin; Ryoo, SeungMok; Seo, Dongwoo; Kim, Wongyoung; Oh, Bumjin; Lim, Kyoungsoo; Sohn, Changhwan P04-10 Role of Skeletal Muscle Transport Systems in Statin-Induced Myotoxicity Feuerstacke, Christian; Stieger, Bruno P04-11 The effect of antioxidants on the morphological picture of thymus and heart of rats intoxicated with sodium fluoride Barbara Stawiarska-Pięta, Natalia Grzegorzak, Katarzyna Kuczera, Agnieszka Helis, Jolanta ZalejskaFiolka, Beata Bielec, Ewa Birkner, Robert Kubina P04-12 The levels of the antioxidant enzymes and trace elements in patients with chronic viral hepatitis and alcoholic liver disease Ahmet Sayal, Nuri Erçin, Ahmet Erdil, Yasemin Kartal, Zeliha Kayaaltı. P04-13 The Toxicological Examination of the Victims in a Chilean Prison Fire Bastías Chian, María José; Cortes Picazo, Patricio; Herrada H., Luis; Hananias, Karime P04-14 Unexpected Combined Drug Intoxication (CDI). A case report. Ángel Luis Pérez Martínez, Francisco Javier González Delgado, Carmen Rubio Armendáriz, Inmaculada Frías Tejera, Luis Manuel Menéndez Quintanal, Francisco Javier Hernández Díaz, Arturo Hardisson de la Torre P10: Genotoxicity P10-01 Antigenotoxic Effects of Ferulic Acid on Sepsis-Induced DNA Damage in the Liver and Kidney of Wistar Albino Rats M Bacanlı, S Aydın, G Taner, T Şahin, AA Başaran and N Başaran Posters P10-02 Biological activities of medicinal plants and some phenolic components: toxicity, DNA protecting effects and tumour grow inhibition Merinas-Amo, Maria Tania; Almagro-Berlanga, Rafael; Mateo-Fernandez, Marcos; Calahorro-Nuñez, Fernando; Alonso-Moraga, Angeles; Romero-Jimenez, Magdalena P10-03 Current Status of the Cosmetics Europe Animal-Free Genotoxicity Projects Reisinger K, Pfuhler S, Fautz R, Quedraogo G, Latil A, Kenny J, Moore C, Kühnl J, Hewitt NJ, Barroso J P10-04 The Hen’s Egg Test for Micronucleus-Induction (HET-MN): Results of the Method Transfer prior a Validation Study Reisinger K., Fieblinger D., Heppenheimer A., Kreutz J., Luch A., Maul K., Pirow R., Poth A., Strauch P., Wolf T. 85 P10-05 Cytotoxic and genotoxic assessment of Euterpe oleracea fruit oil and Pentaclethra macroloba oil in human peripheral lymphocytes E.L. Maistro, E.S. Marques, M.S.F. Tsuboy P10-06 Determination of Lymphocyte DNA Damage using The Comet Assay in Sandbalsting Workers Exposed to Crystalline Silica Dust Esma Söylemez, Zeliha Kayaaltı, Dilek (Kaya) Akyüzlü, Tülin Söylemezoğlu P10-07 Evaluation of Genotoxic Effect of Arsenic in Silver Mining Plate Workers using Alkaline Comet Assay Esma Söylemez, Zeliha Kayaaltı, Dilek (Kaya) Akyüzlü, Engin Tutkun, Tülin Söylemezoğlu P10-08 The 4977 bp and 7436 bp Mitochondrial DNA Deletions in Workers with Acute Exposed to Iridium-192 Esma Söylemez, Zeliha Kayaaltı, Dilek (Kaya) Akyüzlü, Engin Tutkun, Tülin Söylemezoğlu P10-09 Effects of Reduction of the Top Concentration Limit Used in the In Vitro Chromosomal Aberration Test Morita, Takeshi; Hatano, Akiko; Honma, Masamitsu P10-10 Evaluation of Aromatic Amines in the EpiDermTM 3D Human Reconstructed Skin Micronucleus (RSMN) Assay Holland, Daniela; Barnett, Brenda; Aardema, Marilyn; Pfuhler, Stefan P10-11 Evaluation of In Vivo DNA Damaging and Oxidative Stress Effects of Sertraline Ayca Aktas, Dilek Battal, Mehmet Ali Sungur, Serap Yalin, Ela Kadıoglu, Ebru Derici Eker, Nefise Ozlen Sahin, Sahan Saygi P10-12 Exposure-response relationships in adolescents of the 2nd Flemish Environment and Health Study: The correlation between polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and DNA damage Eva Govarts, Carmen Franken, Gudrun Koppen, Elly Den Hond, Greet Schoeters, P10-13 Genotoxic assessment of tobacco-specific nitrosamine mixtures using the in vitro γH2AX assay Carolina Garcia-Canton, Graham Errington, Clive Meredith P10-15 Modulating Effects of Pycnogenol on Sepsis Induced DNA Damage In the Liver and Renal Tissue Cells of Rats Gökçe Taner, Sevtap Aydın, Merve Bacanlı, Tolga Şahin, A. Ahmet Başaran, Nurşen Başaran P10-16 Use of in vitro assays to assess the potential cytotoxic, genotoxic and antigenotoxic effects of vanillic acid Gökçe Taner, Deniz Özkan Vardar, Sevtap Aydın, Zeki Aytaç, Ahmet Başaran, Nurşen Başaran 86 P10-17 New Study Design Considerations for Somatic and Germ Cell Analysis in the Big Blue® Transgenic Rodent Mutation Assay Robert R. Young, David Bruning, Marilyn J. Aardema P10-18 Noncanonical activation of ATR-p53 axis by DNA-protein crosslinks controls cell death responses to formaldehyde Anatoly Zhitkovich, Victor Wong, Jessica Morse P10-19 Preclinical safety assessment of aqueous Gentiana lutea radix extracts Turek, Claudia; Mörbt, Nora; Felenda, Jennifer; Link, Kerstin; Christiane, Beckmann; Müller, Margit; Vögele, Peter; Stintzing, Florian P10-20 Predicting in vivo genotoxicity using mRNA and miRNA data from two in vitro liver models. Linda Rieswijk, Daneida Lizarraga, Karen Brauers, Stan Gaj, Jos C. Kleinjans, and Joost H.M. van Delft P10-21 Retrospective study of false positive results in in vitro genotoxicity studies Hofman-Hüther, Hana P10-22 Selected methyleugenol metabolites suppress topoisomerase I activity and diminish the DNA-damaging properties of the DNA-topoisomerase poison camptothecin in human colon carcinoma cells Groh, Isabel Anna Maria; Schröter, Anika; Marko, Doris; Esselen, Melanie P10-23 The food dye Quinoline Yellow modulated mRNA transcriptional profile associated to DNA damage signaling pathway Farah Maria Drumond Chequer; Vinícius de Paula Venâncio, Maria Lourdes Pires Bianchi, Lusânia Maria Greggi Antunes P10-24 The ToxTracker assay: Unveiling the carcinogenic properties of chemicals. P15: Methods in Toxicology P15-01 3-month intravenous bolus injections via the femoral vein and an external access port in rats Perron, Josee; Armer, Lynn; Tavcar, Robert; Forster, Roy P15-02 A 4D lung multi-culture system which mimicking alveolar cellular organization to study the toxic potential of airborne particles T. Serchi, S.G. Klein, A. Jehanno, S. Legay, S. Contal, J. Hennen, A.C. Gutleb, L. Hoffmann and B. Blömeke P15-03 A new culture system activating hepatic function of HepG2 cells utilizing a collagen vitrigel membrane chamber and its application to liver metabolism and toxicity assays Oshikata-Miyazaki Miyazaki, Ayumi; Ishida, Seiichi; Kuroda, Yukie; Takezawa, Toshiaki 87 Posters Giel Hendriks, Fabienne Calléja, Bruno Morolli, Bob van de Water and Harry Vrieling. P15-04 A novel approach for extrapolating toxicity in vivo by analyzing the behavior of stem cells cultured on TOSHI (tissue/organ sections for histopathology)-substrata derived from experimental animals after exposing chemicals Takezawa, Toshiaki P15-05 A refined surgical technique for telemetry in group housed macaques (M. fascicularis) J. Luft, J. Sternberg, M. Fine; D. Sarazan P15-06 Assessment of benzene-induced hematotoxicity using a human-like hematopoietic lineage in NOD/Shi-scid-IL2Rγnull mice Masayuki Takahashi, Noriyuki Tsujimura, Tomoko Yoshino, Masahito Hosokawa, Tadashi Matunaga, Satoshi Nakasono P15-07 Bovine Corneal Opacity and Permeability Test (BCOP) – an Appropriate in vitro Alternative Method for Evaluation of the Potential Ocular Corrosivity or Severe Irritancy of Nonpolar Substances? Weidmann, Katharina; Schmid, Sandra; Albrecht, Achim; Schleh, Carsten; Allingham, Philip; Leoni, Anne-Laure P15-08 Construction of a mouse MA-10 Leydig cell line stably expressing a HSDB luciferase reporter Roger Engeli, Cornelia Fürstenberger and Alex Odermatt P15-09 Development and validation of a gas chromatography/mass spectrometry method for simultaneous quantification of benzylpiperazine and its metabolites: application to a pilot toxicokinetic study in mice M. Monteiro, M. Carvalho, M.L. Bastos and P. Guedes de Pinho P15-10 Development of a Simple and Rapid Spectrophotometric Method for the Quantification of Carboxyhemoglobin Ana Oliveira, Fernanda Sampaio-Silva, Félix Carvalho, Ricardo Silvestre, Ricardo Jorge Dinis-Oliveira P15-11 Identification of psychoactive substances in “legal highs” marketed in Portugal Ana Margarida Araújo, Maria de Lourdes Bastos, Márcia Carvalho, Félix Carvalho, Helena Gaspar, Ana Cardoso Matias, Paula Guedes de Pinho P15-12 Dose Determination of Particles for Air/Liquid Interface (ALI) Technique for Toxicity Testing on Human Lung Cells Troeller S. and Linsel G. P15-13 Extraction of Perfluorinated Alkyl Acids and Lipophilic Persistent Organic Pollutants from Human Serum C. Bjerregaard-Olesen, R. Bossi, E.C. Bonefeld-Jørgensen P15-14 Flow-through versus static design for dermal absorption experiments in vitro K. Guth, M. Schäfer-Korting, E. Fabian, E. Haltner-Ukomadu, B. van Ravenzwaay, R. Landsiedel 88 P15-15 Following the Fate of Modified Microcystin-LR Grundler, Verena; Kohler, Esther; Faltermann, Susanne; Blom, Judith; Pernthaler, Jakob; Fent, Karl; Gademann, Karl P15-16 Historical Control Data generated in a 2-Year Life Span Study in Wistar Rats (Crl:Wi(Han)) demonstrate a Reliable Model for Carcinogenicity Studies Philip Allingham, Anne-Laure Leoni, Achim Albrecht, Wolfram Riedel, Susan Gähler, Gabriele Pohlmeyer-Esch, Klaus Weber P15-17 Implementation and establishment of blood toxicity protocol for use of pre-clinical testing of drugs. Studies in rats. Teles, Alessandra; Gorniak, Silvana P15-18 Local tolerance evaluation of fibrin and thrombin solution in a free-flap model in the juvenile Sprague-Dawley rat Colombo P, Neri MT, Carù F, Scarpellini M, Bacci M, Guarnieri C, Ali Youssef D, Riccardi E, Rosa B P15-19 Novel formats for the comet assay Sergey Shaposhnikov, Gunnar Brunborg, Amaya Azqueta, Isabel Gaivão, Andrew Smart, Andrew R. Collins P15-20 Predicted drug-induced bradycardia related cardio toxicity using a zebrafish in vivo model is highly correlated with results from in vitro tests Myoung joo, Park; Dae-Seop, Shin; Sung- Hoon, Ahn; Myung Ae, Bae P15-21 Predicting intramuscular discomfort with the Slug Mucosal Irritation assay Adriaens, Els; Lenoir, Joke; Remon, Jean Paul P15-22 Read-across approach for hazard assessment of fatty acid esters via investigating the lipase mediated hydrolysis P15-23 Searching of Standard Comet Assay Parameters for Detecting Lymphocyte DNA Damage Using Fourteen Different Test Conditions Esma Söylemez, Zeliha Kayaaltı, Tülin Söylemezoğlu P15-24 SLIM: a smart way from innovations to humans Marc Teunis, Rob Vandebriel, Ruud Woutersen, Diane Kegler, Jan Raaijmakers, Jan van der Valk, Raymond Pieters, Cyrille Krul P15-25 Substantive reduction of animal numbers on regulatory toxicology studies by using microsampling or sample-sparing techniques Lawrence R, Mitchell D, Coleman D P15-26 Successful continuous intravenous infusion in post-weaning juvenile rats Allais, Linda; Gerhardy, Cécilia; Briffaux, Jean-Paul; Vignand, Philippe; David, Sylvie; Fant, Pierluigi 89 Posters Li, Qiang; Lee, Moung Sook; Jost, Martina; Höppner, Christoph; Kreiling, Reinhard P15-27 The evaluation of the embryotoxic chemicals by using undifferentiated human embryonic stem cells Eui-Man Jung, Yeoul Choi, Hong-Seok Kang and Eui-Bae Jeung P15-28 The role of the transcutaneous electrical resistance test (TER) in the sequential testing strategy aimed at evaluating dermal irritating and corrosive properties of chemical substances Gruszka, Katarzyna; Mrzyk, Inga; Sornat, Robert; Kropidlo, Aneta; Drzewiecka, Agnieszka P15-29 The Threshold of Toxicological Concern as a Tool For The Safety Assessment of Cosmetic Ingredients Assanome, Karen; Queiroz, Diana; Zacarias, Cyro P15-30 Development of MISPE-MS/MS method for Cocaine and its metabolites in vitreous humor Raquel M. T. Fernandes, Júlio César Santos Júnior, Carla Giane Loss, Nelci Fenalti Höehr, Pedro Carlos Mollo Filho, Ruggero Bernardo Felice Guidugli and Marcos N. Eberlin P16: Omics P16-01 A proteomic approach to investigate the modification in the proteome of the cytoplasmatic compartment of Balb/3T3 cells after exposure to gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) Hubert Chassaigne, Sabrina Gioria, Donatella Carpi, Antonietta Parracino, Paola Barboro and François Rossi P16-02 Untargeted metabolomics in human health risk assessment of nanoparticles: data processing workflow challenges Hubert Chassaigne, Sabrina Gioria, Giorgio Tomasi, Agnieszka Kinsner-Ovaskainen, François Rossi, Claude Guillou P16-03 Amiodarone: a metabolomic approach of different modes of action (MOAs) in rats G. Montoya, V. Strauss, E. Fabian, H. Kamp, W. Mellert, T. Walk, R. Looser, M. Herold, G. Krennrich, E. Peter and B. van Ravenzwaay P16-04 Mechanistic explanation of different metabolomics patterns in rat plasma for the differentiation of direct thyroid hormone synthesis inhibitors and compounds increasing thyroid hormone clearance G. Montoya, V. Strauss, E. Fabian, H. Kamp, W. Mellert, T. Walk, R. Looser, M. Herold, G. Krennrich, E. Peter and B. van Ravenzwaay P16-05 Application of metabolomics in vitro for identification of toxicological modes of action Tzutzuy Ramirez, Natalie Bordag, Werner Mellert, Hennicke Kamp, Tilmann Walk, Ralf Looser and Bennard van Ravenzwaay P16-06 Changes in Hepatic Gene Expression Induced by Various Statin Formulations in Chimeric PXB-Mouse® with Highly Humanized Liver Mikiro Nakashima, Hidehisa Tachiki, Hatsun e Enomoto, Takashi Shimada and Shin-Ichiro Nagatsuka 90 P16-07 Characterisation of novel Australian snake venom toxins as potential therapeutic agents. Liam St Pierre, Paul Masci, Kong-Nan Zhao, John De Jersey and Martin Lavin. P16-08 Genetic Variations of DMT1 Gene and Blood Iron, Lead and Cadmium Levels in Thalassemia Patients Tülin Söylemezoğlu, Zeliha Kayaalti, Derya Söylemez Gökyer P16-09 Human skin proteome: insights into chemical induced skin sensitisation Zhu, Zheying; Fang, Min P16-10 Oxidative stress in carcinogenesis: a Toxicogenomics based comparison between liver and colon carcinoma cells. Deferme L, Briedé JJ, Cavill R, Kleinjans JCS P16-11 Percellome Toxicogenomics application to Sick House Syndrome-level Inhalation Toxicity with Special Reference to Transcriptomic Response of Hippocampus. Jun Kanno, Ken-ichi Aisaki, Katsuhide Igarashi, Yuhji Taquahashi and Satoshi Kitajima P16-12 Proteomic investigations into mechanisms of nephrotoxicity induced by 3-MCPD and its dipalmitate in rat kidney S. Sawada, C. Meckert, J. Potkura, A. Oberemm, A. Lampen P16-13 Systems biology approach reveals a dose-dependent recovery of primary human airway epithelium culture after exposure to cigarette smoke Carole Mathis, Stephan Gebel, Carine Poussin, Arnd Hengstermann, Dirk Weisensee, Alain Sewer, Vincenzo Belcastro, Sam Ansari, Sandra Wagner, Julia Hoeng, Manuel C. Peitsch P16-14 XRCC1 Arg399Gln and XRCC3 Thr241Met polymorphisms in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease Posters Ayşegül Bacaksiz, Zeliha Kayaalti, Dilek (Kaya) Akyüzlü, Esma Söylemez, Gülseren Karabıyıkoğlu, Hatice Taslak, Tülin Söylemezoğlu P17: Pesticide Toxicology P17-01 Analysis of hepatotoxic mixture effects of (tri)azole fungicides in a broad dose range Heise, T., Rieke, S., Schmidt, F., Ladwig, M., Haider, W., Kneuer, C., Pfeil, R., Niemann, L., Marx-Stoelting, P. P17-02 Analysis of toxic heavy metals and pesticides in Mucuna pruriens by Spectroscopic methods Siddique NA, Mujeeb M, Ahmad S, Aamir M, Rshid M P17-03 Combination effects of (tri)azole fungicides on the adrenal gland in vivo Rieke S., Schmidt F., Heise T., Pfeil R., Ladwig, M., Haider, W., Hirsch-Ernst, KI., Niemann L., MarxStoelting, P. 91 P17-04 Concentration Addition Model to Assess Activation of the Pregnane X Receptor (PXR) by Pesticide Mixtures Found in the French Diet G. de Sousa, A. Nawaz, R. Rahmani P17-05 Currently used pesticides and their mixtures affect the function of sex hormone receptors and aromatase enzyme activity Lisbeth Stigaard Kjeldsen, Mandana Ghisari and Eva Cecilie Bonefeld-Jørgensen P17-06 Establishment of cohort study for Agricultural worker exposured pesticides in KOREA Mihye Jeong, Soon-Sung Hong, Kyung-Hun Park, Soo Jin Lee P17-07 Evaluation of DNA damage and telomerase activity in liver and kidney after long term rabbits exposure to chlorpyrifos. Vasilaki Fotini, Maravgakis Georgios, Stivaktakis Polychronis, Tsitsimpikou Christina, Vakonaki Elena, Fragkiadaki Persefoni, Kovatsi Leda, Christakis-Hampsas Maria, Emmanuel N. Kokkinakis, Tsatsakis M. Aristidis P17-08 Evaluation of organochlorine pesticides- mediated toxicity in vitro and ameliorating effect of n-acetylcystein and curcumin Manushi Siddarth, Sudip K Datta, Rafat S Ahmed, Om P Kalra, Basu D Banerjee and Ashok K Tripathi P17-09 In vitro – in vivo correlations for endocrine activity of a mixture of 5 currently used pesticides Camilla Taxvig, Niels Hadrup, Julie Boberg, Marta Axelstad, Rossana Bossi, Eva Cecilie Bonefeld Jørgensen & Anne Marie Vinggaard P17-10 Mechanism of action of the herbicide Paraquat mediated oxidative stress on erythroid differentiation pathway in bone marrow and spleen of mice Bhardwaj, Nitin; Saxena, Rajiv K P17-11 New biochemical and physiological aspects of chlorpyrifos neurotoxicity Rosalovsky, Volodymyr; Salyha, Yuriy P17-12 Organophosphates used in agriculture and produce export Aikaterini N. Kokkinaki, Emmanuel N. Kokkinakis, Tzatzarakis Manolis, Fragkiadaki Persefoni, Tsakiris N. Ioannis, Vynias Dionisios, Georgios Maravgakis, Matthaios Kavvalakis, Aristidis M. Tsatsakis P17-13 Pesticide training as a major factor sustaining public health, during farming of certified produce. Aikaterini N. Kokkinaki, Emmanuel N. Kokkinakis, Georgia Tavladaki, Georgia Panagiotaki, Sofia Niniraki, Giannakoudakis Konstantinos, Tsakiris Ioannis, Kavvalakis P. Mathaios, Aristidis M. Tsatsakis P17-14 Potential ecotoxicity impact induced by plant protection products in Finnish crop farming K. Räsänen, T. Mattila, P. Porvari, S. Kurppa P17-15 The effect of glyphosate on the spontaneous motoric activity of rat isolated jejunum strips Mendel, Marta; Chlopecka, Magdalena; Dziekan, Natalia; Karlik, Wojciech 92 P17-16 The role of microtubule on dithiocarbamate cytotoxicity Eugene Gonzalez-Lopez and Shu-Yuan Cheng P17-17 Toxic effects of combined (tri)azole fungicides on prostate gland and testis in rats Schmidt F, Rieke S, Heise T, Ladwig M, Haider W, Hirsch-Ernst KI, Niemann L, Pfeil R, Marx-Stoelting P P17-18 Understanding the imidacloprid metabolism in long-term exposure through a comparative study of imidacloprid and its major metabolite levels in the urine and hair of intentionally exposed rabbits Mathaios P. Kavvalakis, Manolis N. Tzatzarakis, Stivaktakis Polychronis, Manolis Barbounis, Marina Goumenou, Athanasios Alegakis, Elisavet Renieri, Dionisis Vynias, Aristidis M. Tsatsakis Club Casino P05: Computational Toxicology P05-01 A new approach based on QSAR based expert system and a quantitative read across methodology to achieve better in silico genotoxicity assessment of drugs, impurities and metabolites Suman Chakravarti, Roustem Saiakhov P05-02 A quantitative weight-of-evidence approach used in decision support for safety and risk assessment J.F. Rathmana, C. Yang, S. Boyerc, C. Hasselgrenc, H. Zhoua P05-03 Assessing the inter-individual variability of toxicokinetic processes of trichloroethylene (TCE) in humans Olie J.D.N., Boerleider R.Z., DeVries I., Meulenbelt J., Hunault C.C. Cronin, Mark; Enoch, Steven; Madden, Judith; Richarz, Andrea; Roberts, David P05-05 Data mining toxicity effects through an ontology approach to investigate toxicity mode of action Vessela Vitcheva, Chihae Yang, Aleksandra Mostrag-Szychtying, Mark Nelms, Petko Alov, Steve Enoch, Ivanka Tsakovka, James Rathman, Mark Cronin P05-06 Development of New COSMOS oRepeatDose and non-cancer Threshold of Toxicological Concern (TTC) Databases to Support Alternative Testing Methods for Cosmetics Related Chemicals Chihae Yang, Massimo Ambrosio, Kirk Arvidson, Sue Barlow, Alan Boobis, Maria Checheva, Mark Cronin, Susan Felter, Elena Fioravanzo, Heli Hollnagel, Dimitar Hristozov, Kristi Jacobs, Detlef Keller, Aleksandra Mostrag-Szylchtying, Mark Nelms, James Rathman, Andrea Richarz, Ivanka Tsakovska, Stephane Vidry, Vessela Vitcheva, Andrew Worth 93 Posters P05-04 Category Formation and Read-Across for Toxicity Prediction: A Review of the Current Status and Future Directions P05-07 Development of Integrated In Silico Models for Toxicity Prediction Focussing on Cosmetic Ingredients Richarz, Andrea-Nicole; Neagu, Daniel; Yang, Chihae; Fioravanzo, Elena; Péry, Alexandre; Worth, Andrew; Berthold, Michael; Cronin, Mark P05-8 In Silico Workflows for Toxicity Prediction Implemented into KNIME Richarz, Andrea-Nicole; Enoch, Steven; Hewitt, Mark; Madden, Judith; Nelms, Mark; Przybylak, Katarzyna; Yang, Chihae; Berthold, Michael; Meinl, Thorsten; Ohl, Peter; Cronin, Mark P05-09 Development of the KY-methods for used in toxicity prediction Yuta, Kohtaro P05-10 External Validation of the Toxicological Categories in Hazard Evaluation Support System Integrated Platform (HESS) Sakuratani, Yuki; Yamada, Takashi; Ikenaga, Yutaka; Yamada, Jun; Ohta, Satoshi; Hayashi, Makoto P05-11 Generalized workflow for generating high quality in-silico models for off-target mediated toxicity Anger, Lennart T.; Schleifer, Klaus-Juergen; Schrenk, Dieter; Rohrer, Sebastian P05-12 Human Bioaccumulation Potential Simulated in R and Implemented into KNIME interface Alicia Paini, José Vicente Sala Benito, Monika Gajewska, Andrew Worth, José Manuel Zaldivar Comenges P05-13 Modelling Chemically-Induced Cell Toxicity: an Open Source Implementation of a Virtual Cell Based Assay Model Alicia Paini, José Vicente Sala Benito, Milena Mennecozzi, Monika Gajewska, Andrew Worth, José Manuel Zaldivar Comenges P05-14 Identification of potential CMR substances under REACH by (Q)SAR Eva B. Wedebye, Nikolai G. Nikolov, Marianne Dybdahl, Sine A. Rosenberg, Jay R. Niemelä P05-15 Integration of Omics Data and Systems Biology Modeling: Response of the NFE2L2 Pathway in Human Renal Kidneys Cells exposed to Cyclosporine A in vitro Jérémy Hamon, Paul Jennings, Frédéric Y. Bois P05-16 Molecular Modelling of LXR Binding to Evaluate the Potential for Liver Steatosis E. Fioravanzo, A. Bassan, M.T.D. Cronin, S. Kovarich, C. Manelfi, A.-N. Richarz, I. Tsakovska, A.P. Worth. P05-17 Multi-scale modeling for individualized spatiotemporal prediction of drug effects Juan G. Diaz Ochoa, Joachim Bucher, Jens Niklas, Klaus Mauch P05-18 New strategies to develop chemical categories in the context of REACH – work in progress Batke M, Bitsch A, Gundert-Remy U, Guetlein M, Helma Ch, Kramer S, Maunz A, Partosch F, Seeland M, Stahlmann R 94 P05-19 Pharmacophore-based virtual screening as a prioritization tool to assess mechanism-based cardiotoxic effects of small organic molecules Daniela Schuster, Michael Edtbauer, Jadel M. Kratz, Christina E. Mair, Steffen Hering, Judith M. Rollinger P05-20 Pharmacophore-based virtual screening in the search for endocrine disrupting chemicals – successful case studies Anna Vuorinen, Alex Odermatt, Daniela Schuster P05-21 Skin sensitization study by a new qualitative sttructure-toxicity relationships (QSTR) approach: K-step Yard Sampling (KY) methods. Sato, Kazuhiro; Kusaka, Yukinori; Yuta, Kohtaro P05-22 The Danish (Q)SAR Database Update Project Nikolai G. Nikolov, Marianne Dybdahl, Sine A. Rosenberg, Eva B. Wedebye P05-23 Toward better understanding of liver steatosis MoA: Molecular modelling study of PPAR gamma receptor Al Sharif, Merilin; Alov, Petko; Cronin, Mark; Fioravanzo, Elena; Tsakovska, Ivanka; Vitcheva, Vessela; Worth, Andrew; Yang, Chihae; Pajeva, Ilza Tuesday, September 3rd, 2013 Posters Location: Auditorium Foyer:P12/01 – P14/28, P20/01 – P21/03 Concert Hall: P18/01 – P18/27, P23/01 – P25/28 Club Casino: P19/01 – P19/18; P22/01 – P22/05 Auditorium Foyer P12: In vitro Toxicology P12-01 A human 3D myocardial microtissue model for cardiotoxicity testing Philippe Beauchamp, Irina Agarkova, Wolfgang Moritz, Jens Kelm, Christian Zuppinger P12-02 A physiologically relevant HepG2 cell based 3D cell culture model for high throughput toxicity studies Price, Leo; van de Water, Bob; van Delft, Joost; Commandeur, Jan; Braver, Michiel; Coonen, Maarten; Ramaiahgari, Sreenivasa; Jennen, Danyel; Meerman, John 95 P12-03 A Triple cell co-culture model of the air-blood barrier reconstructed from primary human cells Jackson, George; Mankus, Courtney; Oldach, Jonathan; Child, Matthew; Spratt, Maureen; Kandarova, Helena; Ayehunie, Seyoum; Hayden, Patrick P12-04 Air/Liquid Interface (ALI) technique for toxicity testing of gaseous compounds on human lung cells Troeller S., Linsel G., Huettig N., Bauer M., Graebsch C., Smirnova L., Pirow R., Liebsch M., Berger-Preiß E., Kock, H., Oertel A., Ritter D., Knebel, J. P12-05 Alternative in-vitro phototoxicity test using reconstructed skin model, KeraSkin® Yang-Hwan Ryu, Su-Hyon Lee P12-06 Development of a new reconstituted human cornea model to assess the eye irritation Su-Hyon Lee, Haeng-Sun Jung, Kyoung-Mi Jung, Kyoung-Min Lim P12-07 Evaluating the micronucleus induction potential for the genotoxicity assay using the KeraSkin® human skin model Su-Hyon Lee, Haeng-Sun Jung P12-08 Amphotericin B: relationship between nephrotoxicity and inhibition of PKA and p38 MAPK signaling pathways França, F.D., Tagliati, C.A., Chaves, M.M. P12-09 An automated system for a stable and reproducible long-term cultivation of epithelial cells at the air-liquid interface – the CULTEX®LTC module Michaela Aufderheide, Jessica Rach, Niklas Möhle P12-10 An in vitro model of the renal proximal tubule composed of small intestinal submucosa (SIS) and human kidney-derived cells (hKDCs) Hoppensack, Anke; Schanz, Johanna; Kazanecki, Christian; Colter, David; Walles, Heike P12-11 An investigation into the toxicity and genotoxicity of brominated flame retardants in SHSY-5Y cells Sostare, Jelena; Michelangeli, Francesco; Hodges, Nikolas P12-12 Analysis of the Validated Epiderm Skin Corrosion Test (EpiDerm SCT) and a Prediction Model for Sub-Categorization According to the UN GHS and EU CLP. Helena Kandarova, Silvia Letasiova, Tatiana Milasova and Mitchell Klausner P12-13 Arctigenin’s mode of toxicity in oxidative metabolizing cell lines. Virginie Riebel, Brecht K, Bonifacio A, Marcellin M, Couttet, P, Chibout SD, Pognan F, Wolf A, and Uteng M. P12-14 Are in vitro methods really useful for eye irritation assessment of children products? Fragoso Rocha, Bianca; Queiroz, Diana; Fonseca, Vitor; Lucena, Kaline; Sá-Rocha, Vanessa 96 P12-15 Are structural analogues to bisphenol A a safe alternative? Rosenmai, Anna; Dybdahl, Marianne; Pedersen, Gitte Alsing; Pedersen, Mikael; van Vugt-Lussenburg, Barbara; Taxvig, Camilla; Vinggard, Anne Marie P12-16 Bioengineered carbon-encapsulated magnetic nanoparticles as target antibody delivery systems in glioma toxicity Monika A. Cywinska, Ireneusz P. Grudzinski, Anita Kosmider, Magdalena Poplawska, Michal Bystrzejewski, Andrzej Cieszanowski, Agnieszka Ostrowska P12-17 Cell cycle-related genes transcriptionally induced by the mycotoxin Zearalenone Vaccari, Monica; Perdichizzi, Stefania; Mascolo, Maria Grazia; Silingardi, Paola; Morandi, Elena; Rotondo, Francesca; Guerrini, Angela; Bergamini, Cecila; Colacci, Annamaria P12-18 Comparison of in silico and two in vitro high content screening approaches, phospholipidosis and lysosomal trapping, in predicting in vivo phopholipidosis Frost, Kerry; Bauch, Caroline; Ellis, Samantha; Woodhouse, Heather; Walker, Paul P12-19 Cytotoxicity of Pycnogenol and Resveratrol in CHO and HeLa Cell Lines Zehra Sarıgöl, Gökçe Taner, Sevtap Aydın, Merve Bacanlı, A.Ahmet Başaran, Nurşen Başaran P12-20 Determination of liver specific toxicities in rat hepatocytes by High Content Imaging during 2-week multiple treatment Germano, Davide; Uteng, Marianne; Couttet, Philippe; Grenet, Olivier; Chibout, Salah-Dine; Pognan, Francois; Wolf, Armin P12-21 Development of a 3D suspension culture system of umbilical cord-derived mesenchymal stromal cells (UCX®) for potential in vitro toxicological applications Miranda J.P., Filipe E., Filipe M., Teixeira M., Cipriano M., Barcia R., Cruz P., Cruz H., Oliveira N.G., Castro M., Santos J.M. Miranda J.P., Cipriano M., Fernandes A.S., Castro M. and Oliveira N.G. P12-23 Development-dependent inflammatory response elicited by the herbicide paraquat in 3D neural cultures Jenny Sandström von Tobel, Jorane Althaus, Julien Mermoud and Florianne Monnet-Tschudi P12-24 Effects of culture on polymer biomaterials on the cellular responses to chemicals Miyajima-Tabata, Atsuko; Kato, Reiko; Sakai, Keiko; Matsuoka, Atsuko P12-25 Effects of extended low-load operation of a non-DPF diesel engine on the relative toxicity of its emissions Topinka, Jan; Rossner, Pavel; Milcova, Alena; Schmuczerova, Jana; Rossnerova, Andrea; Pavlikova, Jitka; Ambroz, Antonin; Novakova, Zuzana; Svecova, Vlasta; Vojtisek-Lom, Michal 97 Posters P12-22 In vitro cytotoxicity assessment using three-dimensional cell cultures of MCF10A cells P12-26 Effects of neurotoxic compounds on functional three-dimensional neural tissues derived from hESCs. L. Stoppini, I. Charvet, KH Krause P12-27 Effects of Neurotoxicity on Fipronil using human cell SH-SY5Y Young-Lim Kim, Mihye Jeong, Soo-Jin Park, Kyung-Hun Park, Jeong Eun Lee, Jae Hyun Park, Hyun Chul Koh P12-28 Effects of perfluoroalkyl acids on the function of the thyroid hormone and the aryl hydrocarbon receptor Long, Manhai; Ghisari, Mandana; Bonefeld-Jørgensen, Eva C. P12-29 Efficiency and efficacy of using a sophisticated 3D in vitro system of the human epithelial airway barrier to gain insight into the hazard posed by nanomaterials Martin J. D. Clift, Carola Endes, Dimitri Vanhecke, Peter Wick, Peter Gehr, Roel P. F. Schins, Alke Petri-Fink & Barbara Rothen-Rutishauser P12-30 Estimation of oral mucosa toxicity using 3-D reconstructed human oral tissue model for animal alternative Sun-A Cho, Yin-zhu Piao, Gi-baeg Nam, Ji Hoon Kim, Mee-ju Kim, Il-Hong Bae, Kwang-Mahn Kim, Jun-Cheol Cho, Kyeho Shin P12-31 Evaluating the potential of utilizing human embryonic stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes on multielectrode array as a pre-clinical cardiotoxicity assay Clements, Mike; Roquemore, Liz P12-32 Evaluation of Biological Efficiency of Oxime Based Reactivators Against Organophosphate Inhibited AChE: An In-vitro Study Bhanushree Gupta & Kallol K. Ghosh P12-33 Feasibility study of a new microfluidic device consisting in the coculture of intestinal and hepatic cells Thibault Bricks, Patrick Paullier, Marie-José Fleury, Franck Merlier, Eric Leclerc P12-34 High throughput screening of toxicological signaling pathways using in vitro 3D epithelial luciferase reporter models Mankus, Courtney; Jackson, George; Armento, Alexander; Kandarova, Helena; Hayden, Patrick P12-35 Importance of adaption-time to galactose-medium for accurate in vitro assessment of mitochondrial toxicity K. Dernick, F. Boess, T. Singer, F. Schuler, A. Roth, S. Kustermann P12-36 Importance of reproducibility demonstration of the bio-engineered tissue models used for in vitro toxicity testing purposes. Silvia Letasiova, Michael Bachelor, Helena Kandarova, Paul Kearney, Mitchell Klausner 98 P12-37 In Vitro Assessment of Adsorbents to Prevent Disruption of the Intestinal Barrier by Mycotoxins A Anadón, M A Martínez, I Ares, V Castellano, M Martínez, E Ramos, M R Martínez-Larrañaga and A Romero. P12-38 In Vitro Cytotoxicity And Genotoxicity Testing Using Upcyte® Hepatocytes Nörenberg, Astrid, Vera Sonntag-Buck, Nicola Hewitt, Stefan Heinz, Joris Braspenning P12-39 In vitro effects of deoxynivalenol and β-Zearalenol alone and in combination on steroidogenesis in bovine small granulosa cells F. Pizzo, F. Caloni, N. Schreiber, M. Totty, L.J. Spicer P12-40 In vitro effects of fumonisin B1 on porcine granulosa cell steroidogenesis and gene expression C. Cortinovis, F. Caloni, N. Schreiber, L.J. Spicer P12-41 In Vitro Modeling of Cytokine-Drug Interactions Using Micropatterned Co-Cultures of Primary Hepatocytes and Kupffer Macrophages Michael McVay, Chitra Kanchagar, Salman R. Khetani and Okechukwu Ukairo P12-42 In vitro pituitary and thyroid cell proliferation assays and their relevance as alternatives to animal testing Jomaa, Barae; Aarts, Jac M.M.J.G.; de Haan, Laura H.J.; Peijinenburg, Ad A.C.M.; Bovee, Toine F.H.; Murk, Albertinka J.; Rietjens, Ivonne M.C.M. P12-43 In vitro studies on the neurotoxic effects of piperazine-derived designer drugs and 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA, “ecstasy”) P12-44 Insights into mechanisms underlying inter-individual susceptibility to Drug-Induced-LiverInjury (DILI) from data on in vitro exposure, transcriptomics and functionality of cryopreserved human primary hepatocytes – The example of Chlorpromazine Richert L, Hewitt P, Blaauboer B, Bois F, Mueller S and Annaert P P12-45 Interindividual variation in response to xenobiotic exposure established in precision-cut human liver slices Marlon J.A. Jetten, Sandra M. Claessen, Cees H.C. Dejong, Agustin Lahoz, Danyel G.J. Jennen, Jos C.S. Kleinjans, Joost H.M. van Delft P12-46 Iron induced mitochondrial damage, which is blocked by LKB1 activation Sang Chan Kim, Guang-Zhi Dong, Il Je Cho and Young Woo Kim, P12-47 Roots of Erigeron annuus inhibits acute inflammatory response through NF-kB inactivation Sang Chan Kim, Il Je Cho and Young Woo Kim 99 Posters Popova, Dina; Forsblad, Andréas N. P.; Jacobsson, Stig O. P. P12-48 Kinetic Studies of Cholinesterase Reactivators with Organophosphate Inhibited AChE Rahul Sharma & Kallol K. Ghosh P12-49 Low concentration mixtures of MDMA and its major human metabolites induce significant toxicity to liver cells, both at physiological and hyperthermic conditions Diana Dias da Silva, Elisabete Silva, Félix Carvalho, Helena Carmo P12-50 Melatonin Protection against Type II Pyrethroid-Induced Cytotoxicity in SH-SY5Y, HepG2 and Caco-2 Human Cell Lines M R Martínez-Larrañaga, M A Martínez, I Ares, V Castellano, M Martínez, E Ramos, A Anadón, and A Romero. P12-51 Microgravity spheroids as a reliable, long-term tool for predictive toxicology. Stephen J. Fey and Krzysztof Wrzesinski P12-52 miRNA profiling as a tool for developmental neurotoxicity pathway analysis in human in vitro model Price, Anna; Fabbri, Marco; Sacco, Maria Grazia; Gribaldo, Laura; Pamies, David; Pallocca, Giorgia P12-53 MiRNA-210 modulates nickel-induced hypoxic responses by repressing the iron-sulfur cluster assembly proteins ISCU1/2 Mindi He, Lin Mao, Zhengping Yu, Zhou Zhou P12-54 miRNomics, metabolomics and 3D neuronal differentiation of LUHMES progenitor cells as an in vitro model for DNT studies. L. Smirnova, G. Harris, H. Hogberg, S. Martos, and T. Hartung P12-55 Multicellular D Human Liver Microtissues for long-term toxicity testing Simon Messner, Paul Walker, Wolfgang Moritz, Jens M. Kelm P12-56 Multiple endpoint approach improves prediction of hepatotoxicity Truisi GL, Parmentier C, Richert L, Mueller SO, Hewitt PG P12-57 Natural Ingredients in Sensitizing Formulations Inhibit the Response of Sensitization Markers in Dendritic Cells N. Lambrechts, H. Witters, J. Hooyberghs, G. Schoeters P12-58 Optimization of the EpiOcularTM Eye Irritation Test for Hazard Identification and Labelling of Chemicals in Response to the Requirements of the EU Cosmetic Directive and REACH Legislation Yulia Kaluzhny, Helena Kandarova, Laurence d’Argembeau-Thornton, Jane De Luca, Patrick Hayden, Amy Hunter, Thoa Truong, and Mitchell Klausner. P12-59 Organotypic human oral tissue models for toxicological studies Bridget Breyfogle, Silvia Letasiova, Patrick Hayden and Mitchell Klausner 100 P12-60 Perfluorinated compounds affect the function of sex hormone receptors Kjeldsen, Lisbeth Stigaard; Bonefeld-Jorgensen, Eva Cecilie P12-61 Pharmacodynamic profiling of EGFR inhibitors in human keratinocytes Balavenkatraman KK, Vicart A, Couttet P, Ledieu D, Hopfer U, Rathfelder N, Bertschi B, Greutmann B, Marcellin M, Chibout SD, Lambert A, Moggs J, Pognan F, Wolf A P12-62 Piperazine designer drugs present cytotoxicity to primary rat hepatocytes Marcelo Dutra Arbo, Simone Melega, Markus Schug, Regina Stöber, Jan Hengstler, Maria de Lourdes Bastos, Helena Carmo. P12-63 Precision-cut intestinal slices as an in vitro model to predict NSAID induced intestinal toxicity Niu, Xiaoyu; van der Bijl, Henk; Groothuis, Geny; de Graaf, Inge P12-64 Prediction of Drug-Induced Liver Injury in Human with a Multiparametric Assay on the HepaRG® Cell Line Nelly Buron, Mathieu Porceddu, Célestin Roussel, Pierre Rustin, Sandrine Camus, Bernard Fromenty and Annie Borgne-Sanchez P12-65 Predictive Human Kidney-Specific In Vitro Models Yao Li, Zay Yar Oo, Wei Seong Toh, and Daniele Zink P12-66 Prevalidation of the CULTEX® method (BMBF project 0315710): The air-liquid interface exposure of human lung cells in the CULTEX® Radial Flow System (RFS) Niklas Möhle, Dirk Steinritz, Christine Pohl, Sebastian Hoffmann, Michaela Aufderheide P12-67 Primary cells derived from the non-human primate P12-68 Protective effect of traditional African vegetable (Amaranthus hybridus) against aflatoxin B1 and/or fumonisin B1 in a rat hepatoma cell-line Mohamed I.M. Ibrahim, Rialet Pieters, A.M. van der Walt, Cornelius C. Bezuidenhout, Skeina H. Abdel-Azeim, Mosaad, A. Abdel-wahhab P12-69 Protective Effects of Boron Compounds against Metal Induced Genotoxicity in V79 Cells Aylin Üstündağ, Claudia Behm, Wolfram Föllmann, Yalçın Duydu, Gisela H. Degen P12-70 Rat neuronal microtissues for toxicity testing David A. Fluri, Rosemarie Marchan, Simon Messner, Jan G. Hengstler and Jens M. Kelm P12-71 Relevance of in-vitro methods for the evaluation of eye and skin irritation/corrosion potential of aliphatic tertiary amines Li, Qiang; Kreiling, Reinhard 101 Posters S Grote-Wessels, R v Laer, B Niggemann P12-72 Saussurea Lappa induce apoptosis in HL-60 cells via activation of JNK and inhibition of ERK1/2 Su Jin Kang, Sae Kwang Ku, Young Joon Lee P12-73 Sestrin2 Induction by Nrf2 Is Essential for the Protection against Oxidative Damage in Hepatocytes Il Je Cho, Young Woo Kim, Sung Hwan Ki, and Sang Chan Kim P12-74 Skin irritation using VitroDerm model for the personal care products classification: Internal validation process Ficheux, Hervé; Catoire, Sophie; Lopez, Fabiola P12-75 Systems-Toxicology Approach to Evaluate the Biological Impact of a Subset of Harmful/ Potentially Harmful Constituents of Tobacco Smoke Ignacio Gonzalez-Suarez, Carole Mathis, Emmanuel Guedj, Paul Walker, Samantha Ellis, Heather Woodhouse, Remi Dulize, Sandra Wagner, Florian Martin, Nikolai Ivanov, Julia Hoeng, Manuel C. Peitsch P12-76 The effect of environmentally relevant concentration of selected PPCPs on fish cell lines J. Kolarova, V. Zlabek, R. Grabic, O. Golovko, K. Grabicova, V. Burkina, T. Randak P12-77 The effect of selected furanocoumarins on the spontaneous motoric activity of rat isolated intestine strips Mendel, Marta; Chlopecka, Magdalena; Dziekan, Natalia; Karlik, Wojciech; Skalicka-Wozniak, Krystyna P12-78 The gastrointestinal uptake of TiO2 nanoparticles and associated toxicity Gitrowski, Constantinos; Al-Jubory, Aliaa; Handy, Richard P12-79 The importance of understanding drivers of irritation in vivo for selection of chemicals used in the development and evaluation of in vitro eye irritation assays: Cosmetics Europe analysis Barroso J, Alépée N, De Smedt A, De Wever B, Hibatallah, J, McNamee P, Mewes K, Millet M, Pfannenbecker U, Tailhardat M, Templier M P12-80 The survival of murine dendritic cells is controlled by the transcriptional factor Nrf2 in response to contact sensitizers. Zeina El Ali, Marc Pallardy and Saadia Kerdine-Römer P12-81 The use of Real-Time Cell Analyzer (RTCA) in In Vitro Toxicology S. Barcellini-Couget, G. de Sousa, R. Rahmani P12-82 Toxicity of cadmium chloride in a 28-day repeated exposure human bronchial epithelial cell model Emma Bishop, Damien Breheny, Debbie Dillon & Clive Meredith 102 P12-83 Trimetyltin promotes neuroinflammation and enhances 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase 1 expression in microglial cells isolated and in an histotypic context Boonrat Chantong, Fanny Zuffery, Tania Dos Santos, Florianne Tschudi-Monnet and Alex Odermatt P12-84 Use of ‘same donor’ endothelial cells and PBMC in co-culture to detect cytokine storm reactions to a TGN1412-like anti-CD28 antibody: A novel assay for biologic drug safety screening Reed, Daniel; Gashaw, Hime; Bailey, Lucy; Paschalaki, Koralia; Starke, Richard; Randi, Anna; Hansel, Trevor; Mitchell, Jane P12-85 Using transcriptomics from a human hepatocyte cell line to predict pesticide genotoxicity and carcinogenicity: Comparing gene- and pathway-based classifiers Cavill, Rachel; Brauers, Karen; Kleinjans, Jos; Briedé, Jacob-Jan P12-86 Utilization of Hormone Responsive Cell Lines for Identification of Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals Yama Abassi, Can Jin, Melinda Stampfl, Xiao Xu, Xiaobo Wang P12-87 Vaccinium Myrtillus extract protects against UVA- and UVB- induced damage in HaCaT keratinocytes Calo’, Rossella; Lo Scalzo, Roberto; Marabini, Laura P12-88 Validation of high throughput 2D hepatocyte, micro-patterned co-cultured hepatocyte, and 3D hepatocyte spheroid models for prediction of rodent and human liver toxicity Xiaoman Ang, Thomas Sachnik, Alex Odermatt, Adrian B. Roth, Claudia McGinnis P12-89 Vitrigel-EIT (eye irritancy test) methods provide a brief assay system for estimating the changes of barrier function and architecture after exposing test chemicals to a human corneal epithelium model P13: Mechanisms of Toxicities P13-01 “Ecstasy” impairs mitochondrial trafficking in hippocampal neurons by a Tau phosphorylation-dependent mechanism involving GSK3β Daniel José Barbosa, Romàn Serrat, Serena Mirra, Marti Quevedo, Elena Gomez de Barreda, Jesús Àvila, Eduarda Fernandes, Maria de Lourdes Bastos, João Paulo Capela, Félix Carvalho, and Eduardo Soriano P13-02 Alterations in Survivin and Caspase-3 Expressions after Hypericin Mediated PDT in HT-29 and Caco-2 Cells Aysun Kiliç Süloğlu, Çağatay Karaaslan, Elif Karacaoğlu, Güldeniz Selmanoğlu P13-03 Association between δ-aminolevulinic Acid Dehydratase Polymorphism and Placental Lead Levels Tülin Söylemezoğlu, Zeliha Kayaaltı, Dilek (Kaya) Akyüzlü, Esma Söylemez, Selda Sert 103 Posters Yamaguchi, Hiroyuki; Kojima, Hajime; Takezawa, Toshiaki P13-04 CAR-mediated, rodent-specific, mechanism of liver foci formation: evidence from 8-day KO mouse study Hoflack JC, Niederhauser U, Flint N, Lenz B, Herrmann A, Boess F, Singer T & Roth A P13-05 Chronic Toxicity Study of benzaldehyde semicarbazone in rats: alterations in liver and bones Vieira, Andrea; Vieira, Rafael; Cassali, Geovanni; Galassi, Carolina; Beraldo, Heloisa; Taligati, Carlos P13-06 Cobalt chloride speciation, mechanisms of cytotoxicity on human pulmonary cells, and synergistic toxicity with zinc Carole Bresson, Carine Darolles, Asuncion Carmona, Céline Gautier, Nicole Sage, Stéphane Roudeau, Richard Ortega, Eric Ansoborlo, Véronique Malard P13-07 Dibutyltin blocks metabotropic glutamate receptor mGluR5 signaling resulting in increased intracellular calcium and endoplasmic reticulum stress in mouse BV-2 microglia cells Boonrat Chantong and Alex Odermatt P13-08 Endocrine modulatory effects of cadmium and the molecular mechanism of action Imran Ali, Pauliina Damdimopoulou, Ulla Stenius and Krister Halldin P13-09 Epoxyeicosatrienoic acids modulate amyloid precursor protein (APP) processing in vitro Mule, Nandkishor; Arand, Michael; Cronin, Annette; Kollar, Sarah; Marowsky, Anne P13-10 Evaluation of Rats Liver Damage Degree Following Administration of Different Antituberculosis Medicines Combinations S. Anisimova, G. Shayakhmetova, L. Bondarenko, A. Voronina, V. Kovalenko P13-11 HLA haplotype determines hapten or p-i T cell reactivity to flucloxacillin Wuillemin, Natascha; Adam, Jacqueline; Fontana, Stefano; Kraehenbuehl, Stephan; Yerly, Daniel; Pichler, Werner J. P13-12 Increased Hypothalamic Dopaminergic Neuron Tyrosine Hydroxylase Expression in Lean Wistar Rats Simon M. Plummer, Mariana Beltran, Laura Aitken, Mike Millar, Rolly Wiegand, and Jayne Wright. P13-13 Interaction between mercury compounds and selenium and its effects on the activity and expression of thioredoxin and thioredoxin reductase in liver cells. Vasco Branco, Ana G. Santos, Juan Rodrigues, João Gonçalves, Jun Lu, Arne Holmgren, Cristina Carvalho P13-14 Interactions of signaling through the aryl hydrocarbon receptor and the β-catenin pathway in the regulation of CYP1A1 expression Albert Braeuning, Pascal Schulthess, Alexandra Löffler, Nils Blüthgen, Michael Schwarz 104 P13-15 Key scientific issues relevant to the identification and characterisation of endocrine disrupting substances – Report of the Endocrine Disrupters Expert Advisory Group Sharon Munn, Marina Goumenou P13-16 Mitochondrial impairment after mitoxantrone multi-administration to Male Wistar rats Fernando Remião, Luciana Grazziotin Rossato, Eliane Dallegrave, Marcelo Arbo, Renata Silva, Rita Ferreira, Francisco Amado, Ricardo JorgeDinis-Oliveira, José Alberto Duarte, Maria de Lourdes Bastos, Carlos Palmeira, and Vera Marisa Costa P13-17 Modulation of sphingolipid metabolism and alterations of membrane proteins by dioxinand non-dioxin-like toxicants in liver progenitor cells M. Machala, J. Slavik, K Pencikova, J. Vondracek P13-18 Quercetin effectiveness in the prevention of pathological processes at the metabolic syndrome Rushchak, Volodymyr; Voronina, Alla; Shayakhmetova, Anna; Chashchyn, Mykola P13-19 Polyphenolic compounds from Aronia melanocarpa berries protect from hydrogen peroxide accumulation in the bone tissue of cadmium-exposed rats Roszczenko, Alicja; Brzóska, Malgorzata M.; Rogalska, Joanna P13-20 Protective efficacy of selenite against lead-induced neurotoxicity in Caenorhabditis elegans Vivian Hsiu-Chuan Liao, Wen-Hsuan Li, Yeu-Ching Shi, I-Ling Tseng P13-21 Protein Kinase C Inhibition Induced Steroid Hormonal Perturbation in Rat in vivo Schadt Heiko, Dincer Zuhal, Schwald Marianne, Dietz Audrey, Ledieu David, Cordier Andre, Papoutsi Maria, Junker Walker Ursula, Spence Fiona, Chibout Salah-Dine, Wolf Armin, Pognan Francois P13-22 Quantum mechanical, In Vitro and In Vivo Evidence of the Involvement of Non-Bonding Nitrogen Interactions in Valine Derived β- amino Chalcogenides Posters Waseem Hassan, Senthil Narayanaperumal, Kashif Gul, Rogério de Aquino Saraiva, Antonio L. Braga, Oscar E.D. Rodrigues and João Batista Teixeira da Rocha P13-23 Structure-activity studies on the RXR agonist activity of organotins Nakanishi, Tsuyoshi; Hiromori, Youhei; Nishikawa, Jun-ichi; Nagase, Hisamitsu P13-24 Tributyltin-induced endoplasmic reticulum stress and its mechanism Kotake, Yaichiro; Isomura, Midori; Masuda, Kyoichi; Miyara, Masatsugu; Okuda, Katsuhiro; Samizo, Shigeyoshi; Sanoh, Seigo; Hosoi, Toru; Ozawa, koichiro; Ohta, Shigeru P13-25 Zinc supplementation protects from cadmium-induced oxidative stress in the brain of rats Brzóska, Malgorzata M.; Rogalska, Joanna; Galazyn-Sidorczuk, Malgorzata 105 P14: Metabolism and kinetics P14-01 3D hepatocyte cultures: a useful tool in the study of Nevirapine bioactivation and toxicity Miranda J.P., Pinheiro P.F., Marinho A.T., Harjivan S.G., Castro M., Pereira S.A., Antunes A.M.M., Marques M.M. P14-02 Consumption of foods containing cyanogenic glycosides: A study on bioavailability of cyanide in humans Abraham K, Buhrke T, Lampen A P14-03 Determination of urinary butoxyacetic acid (2-BAA) in rat treated with diethyleneglycoldibutylether (DEGDBE) for the purpose of read-across hazard assessment Lee, Moung Sook; Grimm, Andreas; Kreiling, Reinhard P14-04 Differences in detoxification of the ultimate carcinogenic dihydrodiol epoxides of benzo[a] pyrene and dibenzo[a,l]pyrene in human Caco-2 cells Hessel, Stefanie; John, Andrea; Seidel, Albrecht; Lampen, Alfonso P14-05 Effect of maternal vitamin D receptor FokI single-nucleotide polymorphism on the placental lead level Tülin Söylemezoğlu, Zeliha Kayaalti, Dilek (Kaya) Akyüzlü, Esma Söylemez, Deniz Koca P14-06 Effects of single or repeated Bojungikkitang (BJIKT) administration, a polyherbal formula, on pharmacokinetics of gefitinib in rats Soo-Jin Park, Jong-Dae Kim, Dae-Sung Hyun, Su-Yeon Cho, Sae-Kwang Ku P14-07 Effects of single or repeated Jaeumkanghwatang (JEKHT) administration, a polyherbal formula, on pharmacokinetics of tamoxifen in rats Soo-Jin Park, Young-Sun Park, Sung-Hwan Park, Sang-Chan Kim, Su-Yeon Cho, Sae-Kwang Ku P14-08 Effects of single or repeated Kongjindan (KJD) administration, a polyherbal formula, on pharmacokinetics of donepezil in rats Soo-Jin Park, Oh Dae Kwon, Dae-Kyoo Chung, Su-Yeon Cho, Sae-Kwang Ku P14-09 Effects of single or repeated Chungsinoryungsan (CSORS) administration, a polyherbal formula, on pharmacokinetics of perindopril in rats Soo-Jin Park, Seok-Bong Kang, Ho-Sang Shon, Su-Yeon Cho, Sae-Kwang Ku P14-10 Effects of single or repeated Ijintanggamibang (IJTGMB) administration, a polyherbal formula, on pharmacokinetics of ondansetron in rats Soo-Jin Park, Dae-Jun Kim, Ryu Hyun-Mo, Su-Yeon Cho, Sae-Kwang Ku P14-11 Effects of single or repeated Kongjindan (KJD) administration, a polyherbal formula, on pharmacokinetics of sorafenib in rats Soo-Jin Park, Seung-Mo Kim, Chang Hyeong Lee, Sang-Chan Kim, Su-Yeon Cho, Sae-Kwang Ku 106 P14-12 Experimental investigation of chrome accumulation kinetics in the animal organism Gumarova Zh.Zh., Bekmukhambetov Ye.Zh., Jarkenov T.A. P14-13 FRET-based analysis of the interaction between mEH and CYP Anette Orjuela, Michael Arand P14-14 Genetic Variations of MT2A Gene are Associated with Arsenic Levels in Biological Samples of Individuals Occupationally Exposed to Arsenic Dilek (Kaya) Akyüzlü, Zeliha Kayaaltı, Esma Söylemez, Vugar Ali Türksoy, Engin Tutkun, Tülin Söylemezoğlu P14-15 Maternal hemochromatosis gene H63D single-nucleotide polymorphism and placental lead levels Dilek (Kaya) Akyüzlü, Zeliha Kayaaltı, Esma Söylemez, Sinem Işık, Tülin Söylemezoğlu P14-16 Interindividual Variability in Generating Acetaminophen Reactive Metabolite NAPQI by Various Human Liver and Kidney Microsomes Ege Arzuk, Burak Turna, Murat Sözbilen, Hilmi Orhan P14-17 Metabolic and thermoregulatory effects of skin versus diet L-menthol treatment Angelica Valente, Athanasios Z. Jamurtas, Eleutheria Theodoropoulou, Elena Vakonaki, Maria Christakis-Hampsas, Stavros Pantelakos, Manolis Tzatzarakis, Aristidis Tsatsakis, Andreas D. Flouris P14-18 P-glycoprotein expression and activity are differently modulated by Colchicine in Caco-2 cells: in vitro and in silico studies Fernando Remião, Renata Silva, Vânia Vilas-Boas, Daniel José Barbosa, Andreia Palmeira, Emília Sousa, Félix Carvalho, Maria de Lourdes Bastos and Helena Carmo P14-19 Participation of Mammalian Gut Bacteria in Metabolism of Natumetone Anzenbacherova, Eva; Anzenbacher, Pavel; Matuskova, Zuzana; Kolár, Milan; Tlaskalova-Hogenova, Helena Posters P14-20 Pharmacokinetics and percutaneous absorption of benzophenone-3 from sunscreen formulations in rats Tae Hwan Kim, Sung Ha Ryu, Beom Soo Shin, Sun Dong Yoo, Kyu-Bong Kim P14-21 Pharmacokinetics and tissue distribution of acrylamide and its active metabolite, glycidamide in rats Kyu-Bong Kim, Sung Ha Ryu, Ji Won Kim, Beom Soo Shin P14-22 Pharmacokinetics and tissue distribution of benzophenone-3, a UV filtering agent in rats Tae Hwan Kim, Sung Ha Ryu, Beom Soo Shin, Sun Dong Yoo, Kyu-Bong Kim P14-23 Polyphenolic compounds from Aronia melanocarpa berries protect from cadmium accumulation in the liver and kidney of rats Brzóska, Malgorzata M.; Galazyn-Sidorczuk, Malgorzata; Jurczuk, Maria 107 P14-24 Rational design of novel CYP2A6 inhibitors Raunio, Hannu; Tani, Niina; Juvonen, Risto; Fashe, Muluneh; Leppänen, Jukka; Zhao, Bin; Miksys, Sharon; Tyndale, Rachel; Rahnasto-Rilla, Minna P14-25 Reactivity and risk assessment of CoA-conjugated carboxylic acid drugs Malin Darnell and Lars Weidolf P14-26 Study of Intracellular Reaction and Diffusion Mechanism of Carcinogenic PAH:s Using Non-Standard Compartment Modeling Approach Qasim A. Chaudhry, Michael Hanke P14-27 The role of rat and human CYP enzymes in okadaic acid-associated toxicity Kolrep, Franziska; Hessel, Stefanie; Ehlers, Anke; Lampen, Alfonso P14-28 Toxicokinetics of sub-nanomaterials following oral administration for safety evaluation Higashisaka, Kazuma; Uji, Miyuki; Yamaguchi, Manami; Mori, Takahide; Misato, Kazuki; Tsunoda, Shin-ichi; Yoshioka, Yasuo; Tsutsumi, Yasuo P20: Risk Assessment P20-01 A case study of risk assessment in Malaysia Thannimalay, Letchumi P20-02 An In Vitro Model for Predicting Penetration of Polyethylene Glycols ([14C]-PEG 7 Phosphate) through Intact, Moderately and Highly Compromised Skin Helga Rothe, Swatee Dey, Leanne Page, Robert O’Connor, Sara Farahmand, Frank Toner, and Shaoying Zhou P20-03 Animal-Free Studies in Cosmetic Ingredient Industry: Perspective and Strategy after a 10-Year Experience Ficheux, Herve; Catoire, Sophie; Lopez, Fabiola P20-04 Assessment of endocrine disrupting effects of inorganic arsenic Gutu, Claudia Maria; Purdel, Carmen Nicoleta; Gubandru, Miriana; Ilie, Mihaela; Balalau, Dan P20-05 Assessment of health risks of high levels of arsenic in drinking water. The Romanian experience. Nicola, Claudia; Ilie, Mihaela; Purdel, Nicoleta Carmen P20-06 Asymmetric phthalates – a special case for risk assessment Ulrike Bernauer, Agnes Schulte, Monika Moeder, Steffi Schrader, Thorsten Reemtsma 108 P20-07 Correlation between styrene concentration in saliva and blood samples for the biological monitoring of occupational exposure Monica Gherardi, Giovanna Tranfo, Maria Pia Gatto, Andrea Gordiani, Enrico Paci, Bruno Papaleo P20-08 Determination of operator’s external exposure to deltamethrin used in vector control in French Guyana Norvès, Benoit; Pontal, Pierre-Gérard P20-09 Development of cumulative and aggregate risk assessment models for human health Dalzell, Abigail; Glass, Richard; Kennedy, Marc P20-10 Extrapolation of toxicology endpoint data in developing integrated human and environmental risk assessments Dalzell, Abigail; Glass, Richard P20-11 Dinitrosopiperazine (DNPZ) and N-nitrosopiperazine (NPZ): Toxicological properties and acceptable exposure levels for the general population Ledirac, Nathalie; Bossard, Camille; Bertomeu, Lisa; Pontal, Pierre-Gérard P20-12 EFSA’s Qualified Presumption of Safety (QPS) risk assessment approach reduces toxicological data requirements Renata Leuschner, Rosella Brozzi, Frédérique Istace and Anne Theobald P20-13 Estimation of Benchmark Dose for Thyroid Hormone Levels in Rats Exposed to Prolonged Cadmium Intoxication Aleksandra Buha, Zorica Bulat, Biljana Antonijević, Danijela Đukić-Ćosić, Vesna Jaćević, Slavica Vučinić, Vesna Matović Buha, Aleksandra; Filipovic, Angelina; Dumanovic, Jelena; Antonijevic, Evica; Curcic, Marijana; Jankovic, Saša; Nikolic, Dragica; Antonijevic, Biljana P20-15 Evaluating and comparing some current environmental toxicity prediction models for the use of preparing for Korean Act on registration and evaluation of chemicals Kim, Kwang-Yon; Cha, Ji Young; No, Kyoung Tai P20-16 Exposure data for family care products Galonnier, Maude; Gomez-Berrada, Marie-Pierre; Guillou, Sonia; Rielland, Aurelie; De Javel, Dominique; Ferret, Pierre-Jacques P20-17 Exposure to dish washing liquid evaluated in Brest university population: a preliminary study. A. Ramirez-Martinez, N. Wesolek, D. Parent-Massin, A.C. Roudot 109 Posters P20-14 The Use of @Risk Software for Risk Assessment of Mercury Intake via Marine Food among Serbian Population P20-18 Facilitating the use of non-standard in vivo studies in health risk assessment – a proposal to improve evaluation criteria and reporting Molander, Linda; Beronius, Anna; Rudén, Christina; Hanberg, Annika P20-19 Feasibility study: New selection rules for the TTC concept based on experimental and in silico data Hauge-Nilsen, Kristin; Keller, Detlef P20-20 Human Biomonitoring of Parabens in Korean Children’s Urine Seung-Youl Lee, Min-Sik Kyung, Song-Yi Park, Hee-Seok Lee, Min-Ki Shin, Ahra Ko, Ji-Young Kim, Sang-yub Kim, Young-Mi Jang P20-21 In vitro risk assessment of hypersensitivity-causing drugs Buenter, Antonia; Wuillemin, Natascha; Adam, Jacqueline; Yun, James; Yerly, Daniel; Dörig, Dario; Pecaric Petkovic, Tatjana; Pichler, Werner J. P20-22 (Cancelled) P20-23 International Training Programme in Health Risk Assessment P20-24 Life-cycle toxicity assessment of Caenorhabditis elegans exposed to selenium Vivian H.-C. Liao, Wen-Hsuan Li, Yun-Ru Ju P20-25 Occupational Risk Assessment: threshold and non-threshold models for the mutagenic effect of epoxides and consequences for the determination of a virtual safe dose Fröhlicher Mirjam, Sagelsdorf Peter, Arand Michael and Dollenmeier Peter P20-26 Phytoestrogen aglycones but not glucuronides were found estrogenic in in vitro models Leeuwen, F. X. Rolaf van; Rietjens, Ivonne M. C. M.; Murk, Albertinka J. P20-27 Post hoc ergo propter hoc? – the CIOMS scale to differentiate time and causal association in hepatotoxicity Johannes Schulze and Rolf Teschke P20-28 Probabilistic exposure assessment to nail cosmetics by French consumers Morisset, Typhaine; Ficheux, Anne-Sophie; Postic, Cindy; Chevillotte, Grégoire; Roudot, Alain-Claude P20-29 Quantitative Risk Assessment for Infant and Children’s products based on Child Specific Exposure Considerations Kirsch, Taryn; Felter, Susan P20-30 Refined animal toxicity testing using unequally sized dose groups and Benchmark dose analysis Öberg, Mattias; Ringblom, Joakim; Kalantari, Fereshteh; Johanson, Gunnar 110 P20-31 Risk and Nutritional Assessment of Toxic (Hg, Cd, Pb, Sn and As) and Essential Elements (Cu, Mn, Se and Zn) in Fish and Shellfish Samples Gil F, Olmedo P, Pla A, Hernández AF, Molina-Villalba I P20-32 Risk assessment based on computer-aided and bibliographical methods of a homeopathic preparation from Pulsatilla pratensis L. as an example Merz, Karl-Heinz; Jochims, Karin; Schrenk, Dieter P20-33 Risk assessment for hazardous substances contained in household product-cleaner and wet-tissue Park, KunHo; Park, Junghyun; Kim, Chan-Kook; Shin, Jihye; Lee, Jong-Hyeon P20-34 SAR- and analogue based safety assessments of cosmetic ingredients Petry, Thomas; Jeronimo-Roque, Daniela; Tencalla, Francesca; Mishra, Sanghamitra P20-35 The PCB effect database: a tool for translational research and health risk assessment Hellgren, Dennis; Wu, Jianyao; Roos, Robert; Westerholm, Emma; Adfeldt-Still, Oliver; Andersson, Patrik; Halldin, Krister; Håkansson, Helen P20-36 Toxicogenomics to group environmental chemicals in vitro? Ignarski, Alessa; Legradi, Jessica; Legler, Juliette; Segner, Helmut P20-37 Toxicological evaluation of LASSBio-596: in vitro and in vivo Araujo, G.L.; Vieira, A.E.D., Barreiro, Eliezer J, Lima, Lidia M., Cardoso, C.N.; Emiliano, N.F.; Martins, M.T.; Souza, S.S.; Soares, S., Tagliati C. A. P20-38 TTC: A new concept for inhalation exposure Escher, Sylvia; Tluczkiewicz, Inga; Kühne, Ralph; Ebert, Ralf-Uwe; Schüürmann, Gerrit; Mangelsdorf, Inge Posters P21: Safety Assessment of Mixtures P21-01 A low dose chemical mixture modulates the effect of PFNA in male rats Hadrup, Niels; Skov, Kasper; Taxvig, Camilla; Frandsen, Henrik; Vinggaard, Anne Marie P21-02 Hemostatic activity screening and skin toxicity of sap of Jatropha multifida L. (Euphorbiaceae) used in traditional medicine (Benin) Dougnon Tamègnon Victorien, Klotoé Jean Robert, Dougnon Tossou Jacques, Sègbo Julien, Atègbo Jean-Marc, Loko Frédéric, Dramane Karim P21-03 Safety of green coffee oil in cosmetic formulations: from in vitro to clinical studies Tais A. L. Wagemaker,; Ana Sofia Fernandes,; Catarina Rosado; Patricia Rijo,; Patricia Maia Campos; Luis M. Rodrigues, 111 Concert Hall P18: Regulatory Toxicology P18-01 A prototype for integrating toxicokinetics into the human health risk assessment process for agrochemicals: sulfoxaflor Terry, Claire; Aggarwal, Manoj; McCoy, Alene; McFadden, Lisa; Bartels, Michael; Billington, Richard P18-02 Mode of Action Analysis of Decreased Neonatal Rat Survival Induced by In Utero Exposure to Sulfoxaflor Claire Terry, Robert G. Ellis-Hutchings, Sue Marty, Reza J. Rasoulpour, Valerie Marshall, Edward W. Carney, and Richard Billington P18-03 Alternative Method in practice: postvalidation experience of the skin sensitization in vitro test strategy Susanne N. Kolle, Annette Mehling, Wera Teubner, Bennard van Ravenzwaay and Robert Landsiedel P18-04 Applicability of in silico models for the prediction of the sensitization potential of industrial chemicals Wera Teubner, Annette Mehling, Paul Xaver Schuster, Katharina Guth, Andrew Worth, Julien Burton, Bennard van Ravenzwaay, Robert Landsiedel P18-05 Assessment factors for susceptible populations analysis of airway response during short-term exposure to airborne chemicals Öberg, Mattias; Johansson, Mia; Johanson, Gunnar P18-06 Assessment of the subchronic and developmental toxicity of sodium-dimethyl-5-sulphonatoisophthalate (CAS 3965-55-7) in a weight of evidence approach Roth, Thomas; Jensch, Udo; Volz, Nadine P18-07 Comparison of methods for calculation of carry-over limits and their values with occupational exposure limits Lovsin Barle, Ester; Cudd, Margaret Amelia; Bechter, Rudolf; Gian Christian, Winkler P18-08 Derivation of a Guidance Limit for Cadmium in Children’s Jewellery: Health Canada’s Perspective John Field, Pierre Chantal, Sandra Wright, Paul Chowhan, Patricia Pelletier, Helen Ryan, and Gordon Barrett P18-09 Draize test for eye irritation: importance of the endpoints evaluated with regard to UN GHS / EU CLP classification Adriaens, Els; Barroso, João; Eskes, Chantra; Hoffmann, Sebastian; McNamee, Pauline; Alépée, Nathalie; Bessou-Touya, Sandrine; De Smedt, Ann; de Wever, Bart; Pfannenbecker, Uwe; Tailhardat, Magalie; Kirmizidis, George; Zuang, Valérie 112 P18-10 Gender-related difference in the toxic susceptibility of rats to an ultraviolet absorber, 2-(2’-hydroxy-3’,5’-di-tert-butylphenyl)benzotriazole: a role of peroxisome proliferator- activated receptor (PPAR) alpha Ono, Atsushi; Hirata-Koizumi, Mutsuko; Ise, Ryota; Kato, Hirohito; Matsuyama, Takashi; Ema, Makoto; Hirose, Akihiko P18-11 Trend Analysis of Body Weights, Survival, and Tumor Incidence, and the Effect of Body Weight on the Incidence of Spontaneous Tumors in Tg.rasH2 Mice Elbekai, Reem; Paranjpe, Madhav P18-12 Historical Control Data of Neoplastic Lesions in Transgenic CBYB6F1-Tg(HRAS)2Jic (Tg.rasH2) Mice Paranjpe, Madhav; Elbekai, Reem P18-13 Historical Control Database of Non-Neoplastic Lesions in Transgenic CBYB6F1-g(HRAS)2Jic (Tg.rasH2) Mice Elbekai, Reem; Paranjpe, Madhav P18-14 Improving the Quality of Cardiovascular and Respiratory Endpoints in Toxicology Studies Crome SJ, Broadmeadow A, Meecham K P18-15 Legal principles for handling information deficits in REACH Zetterberg, Charlotta; Nilsson, Charlotte; Håkansson, Helen P18-16 Less is More: Better Toxicity Data from fewer Rodents using Plasma Microsampling Anne Eichinger-Chapelon, Daniela Zaugg, Georg Schmitt and Thomas Singer P18-17 Likeliness of false positive finding in Local Lymph Node Assay with Diethyleneglycoldibutylether P18-18 Non-animal approaches to assessing the skin sensitization endpoint under REACH Thomas Petry, Nirmala Ranggasami and Francesca Tencalla P18-19 Non-experimental alternative methods for the hazard evaluation of cosmetics and chemicals Carole Charmeau, Nathalie Ledirac, Laëtitia Fiévez-Fournier, Muriel Danten, Aurélie Sevestre P18-20 Overview of the Existing Regulations and Testing Programs for Endocrine Active Chemicals Simon Warren, Elaine Freeman, Julian Reddy P18-21 Ranking of epoxy resin compounds based on their sensitising potency Schuhmacher-Wolz, Ulrike; Heine, Karin; Geier, Johannes; Kalberlah, Fritz 113 Posters Lee, Moung Sook; Kreiling, Reinhard P18-22 Relationship between mortality and dosage scheme as key issue in the design of regulatory toxicological studies of different types of human insulin analogs Kupny, Joanna; Mrzyk, Inga; Sornat, Robert; Drzewiecka, Agnieszka; Kropidlo, Aneta; Gruszka, Katarzyna; Szewczyk, Aleksandra; Pawlowska, Monika; Bogiel, Monika; Borowicz, Piotr P18-23 Reproductive toxicity of azole fungicides from a regulatory perspective Myöhänen K., Broeckaert F., Court Marques D., Lapenna S., Maggiore A., Spjuth L., Huuskonen H. P18-24 Role of Post-Translational Modifications in a Function of Pregnane X Receptor Vavrova A., Vrzal R., Dvorak Z. P18-25 Safety assessment of Hwangryunhaedok-tang: subchronic toxicity study in Crl:CD Sprague Dawley rats Lee, Meeyoung; Seo, Changseob; Kim, Young bum; Shin, Hyeunkyoo P18-26 Tumour and cumulative mortality information in oral tumorigenicity studies in the CD 1 mouse between 1995 and 2011 Broadmeadow, Alan; Crome, Steve; Webley, Lisa; Taylor, Ian P18-27 Vaccines Europe reflection paper on the Safety Assessment of Residuals and Contaminants in Vaccines Damsten, Micaela; Segal, Lawrence; Gould, Sarah; Finkelstein, Martin; Frantz, Christopher; Geuns, Ed; Herzyk, Danuta; Mulder, Mariska; Novicki, Deborah; Smith, Thomas P23: Target Organ Toxicities P23-01 ‘Ecstasy’ and amphetamine neurotoxicity to cultured rat cortical neurons in a continuous exposure model Silvana da Costa Araújo, Vera Marisa Costa, Frederico C. Pereira, Eduarda Fernandes, Maria de Lourdes Bastos, Félix Dias Carvalho, João Paulo Capela, P23-02 A novel zebrafish model to predict organ toxicities in mammals Ingham, Philip; Wang, Xingang; Wang, Haishan; Kaur, Navrinder; Mathavan, Sinnakaruppan; Fowler, Stephen; Weiser, Thomas; Cohen, Stephen; McGinnis, Claudia P23-03 Acrylamide induced chronic nephrotoxicity in rats Raoufi, Ahmad, jamshidi, keivan P23-04 Chloracne/MADISH-like cystic lesions after low-dose exposure to dioxin: A histological study of 43 cases Nikolina Saxer-Sekulic, Gürkan Kaya, Jean-Hilaire Saurat, Olivier Sorg P23-05 Comparison of the accumulation of ochratoxin A residues in treated pig tissues Jelka Pleadina, Nina Peršia, Dragan Kovačevićb, Ana Vulića, Dinka Milićc 114 P23-06 Evaluation of zebrafish larvae as alternative test system to predict hepatotoxicity S. Verstraelen, A. Covaci, W. Maho, P. Berckmans, B. Peers, H. Witters P23-07 Full-field electroretinogram recording in the Göttingen minipig Haag, Valérie; Forster, Roy; Augsburger, Anne-Sandrine P23-08 Gene expression of mitotic reorientation on rat prostate epithelial cells exposed to subchronic testosterone Liu, Xiang-yun; Xu, Li; Li, Lei; Cheng, Yi; Shao, Yue; Yang, Jian-yan; Sun, Zu-yue P23-09 Heat shock protein 90 inhibitor, TAS-116, demonstrates favorable tissue distribution profiles and leads to minimized ocular toxicity Hitotsumachi, Hiroko; Kodama, Yasuo; Ohkubo, Shuichi; Besshi, Kazuhiko; Yonekura, Kazuhiko; Morita, Fumio; Hayashi, Taiji P23-10 Histopathological findings, telomerase activity and oxidative stress in kidney tissue after long-term rabbits exposure to turinabol and methanabol Fragkiadaki Persefoni, Tsitsimpikou Christina, Vasilaki Fotini, Stivaktakis Polychronis, Segradakis John, Tsarouhas Konstantinos, Tzardi Maria, Kouretas Demetrios, Tsatsakis Aristidis P23-11 Lactoferrin enhances apoptosis and protects the liver in the rat thioacetamide-induced liver fibrosis Hegazy, Rehab; Hessin, Alyaa; Hassan, Azza; Yassin, Nemat; Kenawy, Sanaa P23-12 Neuroprotective effects of tomato seed extract against rotenone-induced oxidative impairments and neurotoxicity in mice Gokul K and Muralidhara P23-13 Neurotoxicity in vitro: assessment of the predictivity of neuronal networks coped to microelectrode arrays for identification of neurotoxicants P23-14 Pharmacological concentrations of mitoxantrone are able to transiently activate caspases and dually modify glutathione pathways in HL-1 cells Vera Marisa Costa, João Paulo Capela, Maria de Lourdes Bastos, José Alberto Duarte, Fernando Remião and Félix Carvalho P23-15 Protective effects of sulforaphane on acetaminophen-induced hepatotoxicity in mice Masubuchi, Yasuhiro; Shiiki, Ayano; Matsumura, Astushi; Makita, Masahiro P23-16 TCDD-induced sebaceous gland atrophy in mice: Kinetics of restoration following end of treatment Fabienne Fontao, Frédérique Ino, Olivier Sorg, Jean-Hilaire Saurat 115 Posters Tzutzuy Ramirez, Timo Weisschu, Hans-Albrecht Hüner, Bennard van Ravenzwaay, Robert Landsiedel P23-17 Study of Benzophenone Induced Oxidative Stress in the Cytomorphological Alterations of Rat Lung Uma Dutta P24: Toxicology of Nanomaterials P24-01 Acute and subchronic pulmonary toxicity of cerium oxide nanoparticles for safety assessment Alazne Domínguez, Carolina Aristimuño, Eneritz Arriaga, Amaia Aspiazu, Blanca Suárez-Merino and Felipe Goñi-de-Cerio P24-02 Amorphous Silica Nanoparticles Induce Autophagic Cell Death in HepG2 Cells Triggered by Reactive Oxygen Species Yongbo Yu, Junchao Duan, Yang Yu, Yang Li, Xiaomei Liu, Xianqing Zhou, Peili Huang, Zhiwei Sun P24-03 Assessment of oxidative stress and cytotoxicity of copper oxide nanoparticles in human skin epidermal cell line (HaCaT) Saud Alarifi, Daoud Ali P24-04 Biodistribution and toxicological effects of intranasally instilled polyamidoamine (PAMAM) dendrimers in BALB/c mouse brain Tin-Tin Win-Shwe, Yoshika Kurokawa, Hiroshi Nitta, Seishiro Hirano, Hideko Sone P24-05 Comparative Immunotoxicity on Physicochemical Properties of Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes: in Vitro and in Vivo Soyoung Lee, Dongwoo Khang, Sang-Hyun Kim P24-06 Ecotoxicity of engineered nanomaterials: known facts and data gaps Juganson, Katre; Ivask, Angela; Koitjärv, Meelika; Mortimer, Monika; Bondarenko, Olesja; Kasemets, Kaja; Kahru, Anne P24-07 Effect of manufactured nanoparticles on allergen-induced sensitization Birgit Baré, Nathalie Lambrechts, Hilda Witters, Peter Hoet, Inge Nelissen P24-08 Effects of zinc oxide nanoparticles on an in vitro model of the air-blood barrier R. Bengalli, M. Gualtieri, M. Camatini, C. Urani, P. Mantecca P24-09 High-temperature calcined fullerene nanowhiskers and multi-wall carbon nanotubes have abilities to induce IL-1beta secretion through NLRP3-dependent mechanism, depending on their lengths Nishimaki-Mogami, Tomoko; Cui, Hongyan; Wu, Weija; Okuhira, Keiichiro; Naito, Mikihiko; Nishimura, Tetsuji; Sakamoto, Yoshimitsu; Ogata, Akio; Maeno, Tomokazu; Inomata, Akiko; Nakae, Dai; Miyazawa, Kun’ichi; Hirose, Akihiko 116 P24-10 In vitro exposure of human intestinal cells to iron phosphate nanoparticles indicate no direct cytotoxicity von Moos, Lea; Trantakis, Ioannis; Rast, Peter; Hilty-Vancura, Florentine; Zimmermann, Michael; Pratsinis, Sotiris; Sturla, Shana P24-11 Influence of nano-polystyrene particles in inducing cytotoxicity in mice co-injected with carbon tetrachloride, cisplatin, or paraquat Isoda, Katsuhiro; Yoshimi, Shimizu; Nishimura, Tetsuji; Tezuka, Masakatsu; Ishida, Isao P24-12 Long-term biodistribution, metabolism and toxicity of carbon nanotubes in vivo Deng, Xiaoyong; Luo, Man; Shao, Erlei; Zhao, Hui; Yang, Xing; Ni, Qingshun; Jiao, Zheng P24-13 Metabolic response of human keratinocytes to silver nanoparticles: a metabolomics study Joana Carrola, Ana M. Gil, Ana L. D. Silva, Verónica Bastos, Helena Oliveira, José M. P. F. Oliveira, Conceição Santos and Iola F. Duarte P24-14 Metal nanoparticles caused death of metastatic MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells Adeyemi, Oluyomi; Edkins, Adrienne; Whiteley, Christopher P24-15 Neurotoxicity Assessment of Zinc Oxide Nanoparticles: Cytotoxic and Genotoxic Effects Gözde Kiliç, Carla Costa, João Paulo Teixeira, Eduardo Pásaro, Blanca Laffon, Vanessa Valdiglesias P24-16 Particle and Fiber toxicity database – PaFtox Schröder K., Pohlenz-Michel C., Voss J.-U., Simetska N., Escher S., Mangelsdorf I. P24-17 Plasma Kinetics and Biodistribution of CdTe Quantum Dots in Mice: A Comparison between Cadmium and Tellurium Peili Huang, Jialing Zhang, Xiaoyan Du, Dong Chang, Zhiwei Sun,Ying Han, Na Liu, Hui Wang Cavallo, Delia; Ursini, Cinzia L.; Fresegna, Anna Maria; Ciervo, Aureliano; Maiello, Raffaele; Tassone, Paola; Iavicoli, Sergio P24-19 The effect of silver nanoparticles in intestinal Caco-2 cells Böhmert, Linda; Horzowski, Sabine; Lichtenstein, Dajana; Girod, Matthias; Hansen, Ulf; Niemann, Birgit; Thünemann, Andreas; Lampen, Alfonso P24-20 The Th2-biased immune adjuvant effect of silver nanoparticles Yingying Xu, Huan Tang, Jia-hui Liu, Yuanfang Liu, HaifangWang P24-21 The ToxTracker assay provides mechanistic insight into the (geno)toxic properties of metal oxide nanoparticles. Giel Hendriks, Anda Gliga, Harry Vrieling and Hanna Karlsson 117 Posters P24-18 Study of cyto-genotoxic effects and inflammatory response induced by nano-sized titanium dioxide particles on human bronchial cells P24-22 Toxic effects of carbon-based nanomaterials on acetylcholynesterase: an experimental and computational investigation Tina Mesarič, Lokesh Baweja, Damjana Drobne, Darko Makovec, Alok Dhawan, Kristina Sepčić P24-23 Toxicity mechanisms of coated and uncoated silver nanoparticles to yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae BY4741 Suppi, Sandra; Kasemets, Kaja; Kahru, Anne P24-24 Toxicity of Nanomaterials: Availability and Suitability of Data for the Development of In Silico Models Richarz, Andrea-Nicole; Cronin, Mark; Madden, Judith; Lubinski, Lukasz; Mokshina, Elena; Urbaszek, Piotr; Puzyn, Tomasz; Kuz’min, Victor P24-25 Toxicokinetics of zinc oxide nanoparticles in rats treated by two different routes, by a single intravenous injection and a single oral administration Kwangsik Park, Jonghe Choi, Heyjin Kim, Pilje Kim, Hyun-Mi Kim and Kyunghee Choi P24-26 Transfer of Engineered Nanoparticles across the Human Placenta Stefanie Grafmüller, Ursula von Mandach, Pius Manser, Liliane Diener, Pierre-André Diener, Wolfram Jochum, Harald F. Krug, Peter Wick P24-27 ZnO nanoparticles and dissolved zinc affect transcripts of pro-inflammatory cytokines in zebrafish embryos N. Brunab, V. Christena, B. Wehrlib, K. Fentab P25: Other P25-01 Aluminum hydroxide in preclinical vaccine safety testing Harmke H. van Vugt, Ph.D., Miranda H.M. van Tuyl, M.Sc., Harry H. Emmen, M.Sc. P25-02 Antiulcer activity of mirtazapine, escitalopram and venalfaxine on oxidant and antioxidant parameters in stomach tissue of depressed rats Sally A. El-Awdana, Hala F. Zaki, Sanaa A. Kenawy P25-03 Assessment of chromium and nickel levels in maternal blood, placenta and cord blood by Graphite Furnace Atomic Absorption Spectrometry Arica, Enes; Kayaalti, Zeliha; Kaya Akyuzlu, Dilek; Soylemezoglu, Tulin P25-04 Etiological and demographic characteristics of poisoning cases admitted to all departments of university hospital in Diyarbakir, Turkey. Arica, Enes; Uysal, Cem; Tokgoz, Orhan; Goren, Suleyman P25-05 Beneficial impact of polyphenolic compounds from Aronia melanocarpa berries on the biomechanical properties of the lumbar spine vertebral body in cadmium-exposed rats Roszczenko, Alicja; Brzóska, Malgorzata M.; Rogalska, Joanna 118 P25-06 Biochemical and haematological parameters are different for rats of the same strain obtained from different breeders. Schleh C, Allingham P, Rudragowda S, Ceccatelli R, Takawale P, Schropp P, Schmid S, Luetkenhaus K, Neuenhahn P, Leoni AL P25-07 Brine shrimp toxicity of total extracts of four cruciferous plants Ebadollahinatanzi, Alireza; Maleki, Zohreh; Ahadi-Mikaeildarsi, Monir; Alavi, Seyed Mohammad P25-08 Measurement of antioxidant capacities in two plant extracts from cruciferae family Ebadollahinatanzi, Alireza; Shoara, Saghar; Farzi, Soheilla P25-09 Chlorpyrifos neurotoxicity – a scientometric analysis Schulze, Michaela, Schrumpf, Laura and Schulze, Johannes P25-10 Diosmin protects against TCE (trichloroethylene) induced renal injury in Wistar rats: Plausible role of p53, Bax and caspases Muneeb U Rehman, Mir Tahir, Abdul Quaiyoom Khan, Rehan Khan, Abdul Lateef, Oday-O-Hamiza, Farrah Ali and Sarwat Sultana P25-11 Evaluation of Arsenic Levels in Biological Samples of Smelter Workers in Turkey Bayram Yüksel, Zeliha Kayaalti, Vugar Ali Türksoy, Engin Tutkun, Tülin Söylemezoğlu P25-12 Evaluation of the Pb, Cd, Fe, Zn and Cu levels in the blood samples of metallurgy workers exposed to Pb and control groups Odabasi, Miyase; Kayaalti, Zeliha; Türksoy, Vugar Ali; Yilmaz, Hinç; Söylemezoglu, Tülin P25-13 Exposure to PM 2,5-bound PAHs in Rome: the contribution of transportation microenvironments M. Gherardi, M.P. Gatto, A. Gordiani, C. Gariazzo Posters P25-14 Urban Air Pollution in Rome: Children and Elderly Exposure to Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in Fine Particulate Matter (PM2.5) M. Gherardi, M.P. Gatto, C. Gariazzo, A. Gordiani P25-15 Impact of hexabromocyclododecane on lipid and glucose metabolism in high-fat diet- induced obese mice Rie Yanagisawa, Tin-Tin Win-Shwe, Eiko Koike, Hirohisa Takano P25-16 (Cancelled) P25-17 Involvement of Heme Oxygenase-1 in attenuation of the Cardioprotective effect of Ischemic Preconditioning in Diabetic Rat Heart Goyal, Shubham; Verma, Nitin; Jinddal, Vaneeta 119 P25-18 To evaluate the Protective effect of Vitis vinifera & Solanum lycopersicum in diet induced obesity in Rats Goyal, Shubham; Verma, Nitin; Jinddal, Vaneeta P25-19 New medicine approach in pollution’s hospitalizations Polichetti, Giuliano; De Sio, Alessandra P25-20 Patterns of self-poisoning in Sikasso, Mali Hami Hinde, Diallo Tidiane, Maïga Ababacar, Mokhtari Abdelrhani, Soulaymani-Bencheikh Rachida, Soulaymani Abdelmajid P25-21 Poisoning of domestic animals: 2012 data from Poison Control Centre of Milan Francesca Caloni, Cristina Cortinovis, Fabiola Pizzo, Marina Rivolta, Franca Davanzo P25-22 Preclinical Toxicology of Mesima, an Anti-cancer Immunological Activator; Results of Oral Subchronic Toxicity in Rats Jung-Ho Noh, Jae-Woo Cho, Eun Ju Jeong, Kyoung-Sik Moon P25-23 Respiratory consequences of treatments developed to counteract severe soman-induced refractory status epilepticus in mice Sébastien Graziani, Didier Christin, Philippe Desforges, Gilles Guillot, Noel Perrier, Annie Foquin, Frederic Dorandeu et Laurent Taysse. P25-24 Subacute toxicity study of CKD-501, a novel thiazolidinedione, after 4-week repeated oral administration in mice Kyoung-Sik Moon, Jung-Ho Noh, Yong-Bum Kim, Eun Ju Jeong, In-Chang Hwang, Dal-Hyun Kim, Ho-Sung Yu, Hyo-In Yun P25-25 The Apoptotic Effect and Mechanism of Arsenic Compounds in MA-10 Mouse Leydig Tumor Cells Huang, Bu-Miin P25-26 The Maternal-Infant Research on Environmental Chemicals Study – Overview of the Biomonitoring Component of a Canadian Pregnancy Cohort D’Amour M, Arbuckle TE, Fisher M, and Fraser W. P25-27 Toxicology Evaluation of Impurities during Small Molecule Drug Development Elizabeth Martin, Charles Humfrey and Andrew Teasdale P25-28 Forensic toxicological Cases in the Pharmacology Curriculum in Undergraduated 3rd year Medical Students Pavlina Gateva, MD, PhD 120 Club Casino P19: Reproductive Toxicology P19-01 Bidirectional placental transfer of BPA and its metabolite in the perfused human placental cotyledon model Corbel T, Gayrard V, Berrebi A, Gil S, Lacroix M, Puel S, Viguié C, Toutain PL, Picard-Hagen N P19-02 Effect of Zearalenone gestational exposure: modulation of placenta cell differentiation and transport function Caroline Prouillac, Farah Koraichi, Bernadette Videmann, Michelle Mazallon, Frédéric Rodriguez, Michel Baltas, Mohamed Benahmed, Sylvaine Lecoeur P19-03 High-throughput compatible EST assay Simon Stroebel, Jan Lichtenberg, Wolfgang Moritz and Jens M. Kelm P19-04 Human exposure to chlorinated and brominated compounds is associated with increased risk for subfertility. Elly Den Hond, Willy Baeyens, Bianca Cox, Petra De Sutter, Tim Nawrot, Willem Ombelet, Herman Tournaye, Nik Van Larebeke, Thomas D’Hooghe P19-05 No longitudinal transmission of AAV5-PBGD vector DNA in mice. Ana Gloria Gil Royo, Gloria González-Aseguinolaza, Ismael Aizpun, Astrid Pañeda Rodríguez, María Eugenia Cornet, María del Mar Municio, Tracy Freeman, Harald Petry, Marc Sonnemans, Lisa Spronck, Florence Salmon P19-06 Premature reproductive aging in female rats after developmental exposure to mixtures of endocrine disrupters Jacobsen, PR., Axelstad, M., Christiansen, S., Boberg, J., Hass U. P19-07 Role of Alcohol-Mediated Rat Testes CYP2E1 Induction in Changes of Spermatogenesis Indices and Type I Collagen Posters Shayakhmetova, Ganna; Voronina, Alla; Bondarenko, Larysa; Kovalenko, Valentina P19-08 Skeletal examination of Cynomolgus monkey fetuses: control morphology and Thalidomide-induced malformations Foulon, Olivier; Spezia, François; Dauzat, Caroline; Da Silva, Marie; Barrow, Paul; Palate, Bernard; Forster, Roy P19-09 Subchronic Reproductive Toxicity in Prepubertal Male Rats Exposed to Food Contaminant Acrolein Elif Karacaoğlu, Güldeniz Selmanoğglu, Gökçen Mülayimçelik Özgün P19-10 Teratogenic effects of mixtures of azole fungicides assessed in rodents by using in vitro and in vivo methods. Angelo Moretto, Francesca Di Renzo, Francesca Metruccio, Elena Menegola 121 P19-11 The reproductive toxicity of atrazine, an endocrine disruptor Sunny O. Abarikwu, Ebenezer O. Farombi, Aditya B. Pant P19-12 Use of rodent and human cell culture systems for the investigation of testicular toxicity Yannick Brunner, Laura Suter, Stefan Kustermann, Nicole Clemann; Catherine M. Pastore, Paola Antinori, Alexandre Scherl, Thomas Weiser, Thomas Singer, Denis Hochstrasser; Serge Nef and Luc Stoppini, P19-13 Using Adverse Outcome Pathway Genes to Assess Developmental Toxicity of Compounds in a Mouse Stem Cell System Marc A.T. Teunis, Danielle Fiechter, Paulina Mika, Peter T. Theunissen, Giel Hendriks, Cyrille A.M. Krul, Aldert H. Piersma Wir kennen 30 000 Krankheiten. Erst jede vierte kann wirksam behandelt werden. Darum forschen wir. Merck ist unter anderem Weltmarktführer bei Flüssigkristallen für LCD-Fernseher und andere Displays. Ratschläge zum Umgang mit Medikamenten A G VIELE ERFOLGREICHE UNTERNEHMEN BEGLEITEN DEN WANDEL IN GESELLSCHAFT, FORSCHUNG UND TECHNIK. WIR GESTALTEN IHN. Transplantation – letzte Chance für viele Patienten Eine Informationsbroschüre der forschenden pharmazeutischen Firmen der Schweiz Bei Depressionen ist eine rasche Behandlung entscheidend Eine Informationsbroschüre der forschenden pharmazeutischen Firmen der Schweiz Hepatitis C die stille Epidemie Eine Informationsbroschüre der forschenden pharmazeutischen Firmen der Schweiz f www.merck.de Diese Broschüren können Sie kostenlos bestellen: www.interpharma.ch (Service) Verband der forschenden pharmazeutischen Firmen der Schweiz Petersgraben 35, Postfach, CH-4003 Basel +41 (0)61 264 34 00, www.interpharma.ch 061_13_BS_CM_MERCK_ImageAD_210x297_v3.indd 1 122 29.05.13 10:39 P19-14 Validation of the Yeast Estrogen and Yeast Androgen Screens for Endocrine Active Substances: Inter-laboratory ring trial Ramirez, Tzutzuy; Woitkowiak, Claudia; Hüner, Hans-Albrecht; Schönlau, Christine; Hollert, Henner; Broschk, Susanne; Zierau, Oliver; Vollmer, Günter; Jäger, Martina; Poth, Albrecht; Higley, Eric; Hecker, Markus; van Ravenzwaay, Ben; Landsiedel, Robert P19-15 Double staining technique for minipig fetal skeletons at gestation day 60 Pique, Céline; Marsden, Edward; Quesada, Paul; Jocteur-Monrozier, Audrey; Briffaux, Jean-Paul P19-16 Histology of selected organs from the Göttingen Minipig fetus from days 60 (mid term) and 110 (term) of gestation Thuilliez, Céline; Perron Lepage, Marie-France; Marsden, Edward; Leroy, Mariline; Briffaux, Jean-Paul P19-17 Nigella sativa oil protects against reproductive toxicity of acetamiprid insecticide in male rats. Mosbah, Rachid; Yousef, Mokhtar Ibrahim; Chettoum, Aziez P19-18 Chronic Exposure to Ethephon Induces Reproductive Stress in Albino Rat Mayurakshi Deka and Uma Dutta P22: Safety Pharmacology P22-01 Cellular Impedance Assay for prediction of QT Prolongation Induced by hERG and non-hERG Channel Modulators Using Human Stem Cell Derived Cardiomyocytes Zhang, Xiaoyu; Abassi, Yama P22-02 Factors Determining the Emergence of Negative Medicine Outcomes (NMOs) in Emergencies P22-03 Identification of enantiospecific interactions between clinically used chiral drugs and AHR using in vitro stable transfected luciferase reporter gene cell line AZ-AHR Novotna A., Kamenickova A., Dvorak Z. P22-04 Predictivity of non-clinical Repolarization Assay Data for clinical TQT Data in FDA Database Valentin, Jean-Pierre; Koerner, John; Willard, James; Park, Eun Jung; Bi, Daoqin; Link, William; Fiszman, Monica; Kozeli, Devi; Skinner, Matt; Cantilena, Louis; Gintant, Gary; Wisialowski, Todd; Pettit, Syril; Vargas, Hugo P22-05 Telemetric data recordings in conscious, freely moving monkeys using the DSI digital PhysioTel system M Niehoff, J. Sternberg, B Niggemann 123 Posters Merino Alonso J, Rubio Armendariz C, Núñez Díaz S, Martín Conde JA, Callejón Callejón G Established in 1978, ECETOC is Europe’s leading industry association for developing and promoting top quality science in human and environmental risk assessment of chemicals. Members include the main companies with interests in the manufacture and use of chemicals, biomaterials and pharmaceuticals, and organisations active in these fields. ECETOC is the scientific forum where member company experts meet and co-operate with government and academic scientists, to evaluate and assess the available data, identify gaps in knowledge and recommend research, and publish critical reviews on the ecotoxicology and toxicology of chemicals, biomaterials and pharmaceuticals. ECETOC also provides scientific representation for its member companies through presentations at specialist meetings and by participation in the scientific activities of international agencies, government authorities and professional societies. A non-profit, non-commercial and non-governmental organisation, ECETOC prides itself on the objectivity and integrity of its work programme, the output of which is published in the form of peer-reviewed reports and articles in peer-reviewed journals, or as specialised workshops. Vision ECETOC will be the partner of choice focusing and engaging industry expertise for the European Commission, ECHA, and EFSA in the development of practices and concepts based on science as policy becomes embodied in regulations. Mission To promote the use of good science in human and environmental risk assessment of chemicals, biomaterials and pharmaceuticals. Approach ECETOC pursues its vision and mission through an issue-based science strategy comprising 10 science areas grouped under 5 main themes: - Presence of chemicals in humans - Presence of chemicals in the environment - Effects in humans and ecosystems - Methods - Science of risk assessment Further information is available at www.ecetoc.org ECETOC is Europe’s leading industry association for developing and promoting top quality science in human and environmental risk assessment of chemicals. Av e nu e E . V an N ie u w en h u ys e 2 Bt e 8, B - 1 1 60 B ru s se l s T el. ( 3 2) 2 6 7 5 36 0 0 F a x. ( 3 2) 2 6 7 5 3 6 2 5 E- ma il: i nf o@ e c e t oc .o rg Vi s it w w w .ecet o c .o rg f o r t h e l at est n ew s f ro m EC ET O C 124 Author Index Aardema, Marilyn P10-10, P10-17 Aarts, Jac M.M.J.G. P12-42 Abarikwu, Sunny P19-11 Abassi, Yama P12-86, P22-01 Abdel-Wahab, Doaa P07-32 Abraham, Klaus P14-02 Abubakar, Mu’azu Gusau P07-07 Abusoglu, Sedat P08-35 Acilan, Ceyda P03-14 Achard, Sophie P08-26, P08-45 Ada, Ahmet O. P02-22 Adam, Jacqueline P13-11, P20-21 Adamovsky, Ondrej P08-12 Ademuyiwa, Olapido P08-30 Adewole, O. P08-30 Adeyemi, Oluyomi P24-14 Adfeldt-Still, Oliver P20-35 Adiguzel, Zelal P03-14 Adriaens, Els P11-02, P15-21, P18-09 Afshari, Reza S13-4 Agarkova, Irina P12-01 Aggarwal, Manoj P18-01 Ahadi – Mikaeildarsi, Monir P25-07 Ahamed, Sayed P09-19 Ahmed, Rafat S P17-08 Ahmet, Sayal P07-09 Aicher, Lothar S12-2 Aisaki, Ken-ichi P16-11 Aitken, Laura P13-12 Aizpun, Ismael P19-05 Ajvazi, Majlinda P02-04 Akinwunmi, F. P08-30 Akiyama, Takumi P11-08 Aktas, Ayca P10-11, P08-15 Akyüzlü, Dilek P10-06, P10-07, P10-08, P13-03, P14-05, P14-14, P14-15, P16-14 Al Sharif, Merilin P05-23 Alarifi, Saud P24-03 Alavi, Seyed Mohammad P25-07 Alberto Duarte, José P13-16 Albrecht, Achim P15-07 Alegakis, Athanasios P09-01, P17-18 Alemdar, Yilmaz P02-22 Alépée, Nathalie P18-09 Ali Youssef, Doris P15-18 Ali, Imran P13-08 Al-Jubory, Aliaa P12-78 Allais, Linda P15-26 Allen, Sandra L S11-3 Allingham, Philip P11-10, P15-07, P15-16, P25-06 Almagro-Berlanga, Rafael P10-02, P09-24 Almeida, Mara Ribeiro P10-14 Aloise, Monia P04-01, P04-02 Alonos-Moraga, Angeles P10-02, P09-24 Alov, Petko P05-05, P05-23 Alshana, Usama P02-15 Althaus, Jorane P12-23 Altun, Beril P02-15 Alzualde, Ainhoa W11-5 Amado, Francisco P13-16 Amberg, Alexander S09-3 Ambrosio, Massimo W04-2, W04-3, W04-5, P05-06 Ambroz, Antonin P12-25 Amir, Mohd P17-02 Anadon, Arturo P12-37, P12-50 Andersson, Patrik P20-35 Andrade, Vanda P04-08 Ang, Xiaoman P12-88 Anger, Lennart T. P05-11 Anisimova, Svitlana P13-10 Anjum, Sameya P07-05, P08-29 Ankley, Gerald T. P08-20 Ankrah, Nii-Ayi P09-08 Ansari, Sam P16-13 Ansoborlo, Eric P13-06 Anthérieu, Sébastien P08-03 Antoine, Daniel J W10-4, W13-3 Antonijevic, Biljana P20-13, P20-14 Antonijevic, Evica P20-14 Antunes, Alexandra MM P14-01 Antunes, Lusania Maria Greggi P10-14 Anzenbacher, Pavel P06-03, P09-02, P14-19 Anzenbacherova, Eva P06-03, P09-02, P14-19 Aouichri, Mohamed P07-31 Arand, MichaelW08-1, P13-09, P14-13, P20-25 Araujo, Gabrielle P20-37 Arbo Dutra, Marcelo P12-62, P13-16 Arbuckle, Tye P25-26 Ares, Irma P12-37, P12-50 Ariano, Eugenio W02-3 Arica, Enes P25-03, P25-04 Arisseto, Adriana P09-18 Aristimuño, Carol P24-01 Arlt, Volker M S05-1 Armento, Alexander P07-03, P07-25, P12-34 Armer, Lynn P15-01 Arogundade, L. P08-30 Arora, Manu P07-22 Arriaga, Eneritz P24-01 Arvidson, Kirk P05-06 Asare, George P09-08 Aschner, Michael P04-08 Posters A 125 Asik, Elif P02-15 Aspiazu, Amaia P24-01 Assanome, Karen P08-52, P15-29 Atabey, Esref P02-15 Ataman, O. Yavuz P02-15 Atli, Gülüzar P08-01, P08-02 Atobatele, Z. P08-30 Attianese, Carolina P08-05 Aucejo, Susana P09-03, P09-04, P09-05, P09-06, P09-07 Aufderheide, Michaela P12-09, P12-66 Augsburger, Anne-Sandrine P23-07 Autrup, Herman S15-1 Axelstad, Marta P17-09, P19-06 Ayala, Jose P09-18 Aydin, Emine Gul P08-35 Aydin, Sevtap P10-01, P10-15, P10-16, P12-19 Ayehunie, Seyoum P07-03, P12-03 Aytaç, Zeki P10-16 Azevedo, Keller P06-02 B Bacaksiz, Aysegul P08-35, P16-14 Bacanli, Merve P10-01, P10-15, P12-19 Bacanu, Claudia P02-19 Bacci, Michela P15-18 Bachelor, Michael P12-36 Badea, Alexandra W15-1 Bae, Il-Hong P12-30 Baeyens, Willy P19-04 Bailey, Lucy P12-84 Baillie, Thomas A S17-2 Balalau, Dan P20-04 Balavenkatraman, Kamal Kumar P12-61 Baldi, Isabelle W02-5 Baldrick, Paul W03-1 Ball, Jonathon W11-3 Baltas, Michel P19-02 Bandouchova, Hana P08-12, P08-21, P08-41 Banerjee, Basu D P17-08 Barboro, Paola P16-01 Barbosa, Daniel José P14-18 Barbounis, Manolis P17-18 Barcellini-Couget, Sylvie P12-81 Barcelo, D S12-1 Barcia, Rita P12-21 Bardet, Gaëlle P08-26, P08-45 Baré, Birgit P24-07 Barlow, Sue P05-06 Barnett, Brenda P10-10 Barregard, Lars P08-08 Barreiro, Eliezer P20-37 Barrero-Moreno, Josefa P08-44 Barrett, G W04-3 Barroso, João P18-09 126 Barrow, Paul Bartels, Michael Bártiková, Hana Bartos, Milan Bartosova, Ladislava Basaran, A.Ahmet Basaran, Nursen Bassan, Arianna Bassetti-Gaille, Catherine Bastías Chian, María José Bastos, Maria de Lourdes Bastos, Verónica Batinic-Haberle, Ines Batke, Monika Batoréu, M Camila Battal, Dilek Bauch, Caroline Bauer, Daniel Bauer, Mario Baweja, Lokesh Baykal, Tarik Beauchamp, Philippe Bechshøft, Thea Ø. Bechter, Rudolf Begriche, Karima Behm, Claudia Behnisch, Peter Beker, Anna Beklova, Miroslava Belcastro, Vincenzo Bell, David R Belles, Montserrat Beltran, Mariana Benahmed, Mohamed Bengalli, Rossella Benjamin, Amanda Benvenisty, Nissim Beraldo, Heloisa Bergamini, Cecila Berger-Preiss, Edith Bergmann, Albert Bergstrom, Goran Bermúdez, Jose M Bernauer, Ulrike Beronius, Anna Berrada, Houda Berrebi, Alain Berry, Colin Berthold, Michael Bertomeu, Lisa Bertschi, Bertschi Besshi, Kazuhiko Bessou-Touya, Sandrine Bhardwaj, Nitin Bi, Daoqin Bialesova, Lucia Bianchi, Maria Lourdes Pires P19-08 P18-01 P06-03 P07-30 P07-30 P10-01, P10-15, P10-16, P12-19 P10-01, P10-15, P10-16, P12-19 P05-16 P08-24 P04-13 P12-62, P15-09, P23-01, P23-14 P24-13 P03-05 P05-18 P04-08 P10-11, P08-15 P12-18 P07-02 P12-04 P24-22 P03-14 P12-01 P08-59 P18-07 P08-03 P12-69 P02-21 P07-33 P08-49, P08-50 P16-13 K3-1 P08-38 P13-12 S15-2, P19-02 P24-08 W10-2 S04-1 P13-05 P12-17 P12-04 R01-1 P08-08 P09-04, P09-07 P20-06 W05-1, P20-18 P09-17 P19-01 K2-1 P05-07, P05-08 P20-11 P12-61 P23-09 P18-09 P17-10 P22-04 P08-23, P08-47 P10-14 Brees, D W13-1 Breheny, Damien P12-82 Breier, Albert P08-47 Bresson, Carole P13-06 Breyfogle, Bridget P12-59 Brezovšek, Polona P07-28 Bricks, Thibault P12-33 Briedé, Jacob-Jan P12-85, P16-10 Briffaux, Jean-Paul P15-26, P19-15, P19-16 Broadmeadow, Alan P18-14, P18-26 Broeckaert, Fabrice P18-23 Broekman, Henrike P09-09 Broschk, Susanne P19-14 Brott, David W10-2 Brouwer, Adam P02-21 Brozzi, Rosella P20-12 Brtko, Julius P08-23, P08-47 Brun, Nadja P24-27 Bruning, David P10-17 Brüschweiler, Beat J W17-5 Brzóska, Malgorzata M. P13-19, P13-25, P14-23, P25-05 Buenter, Antonia P20-21, P11-03 Buetler, Timo P09-13 Buha, Aleksandra P08-09, P08-22, P20-13, P20-14 Bulat, Petar P08-09 Bulat, Zorica P08-09, P08-22, P20-13 Burgaz, Sema P02-15, P02-22 Burkina, Viktoriia P01-05, P12-76 Burton, Julien P18-04 Buscaglia, Eleonora P04-01, P04-03 Bushell, Martin W13-4 Buss, Nicholas W09-5 Bystrzejewski, Michal P07-20, P12-16 C Cadore, Solange P09-11 Calabrese, Evan W15-1 Calahorro-Nunez, Fernando P10-02, P09-24 Calleja, Ana P08-19, P08-18 Calléja, Fabienne P10-03 Callejón, Gador P22-02 Calo’, Rossella P12-87 Caloni, Francesca P12-39, P12-41, P25-21 Camatini, Marina P24-08 Cameán, Ana M. 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P13-22 Brauers, Karen P10-20, P12-85 Braver, Michiel P12-02 Brecht, Karin P12-13 127 Capri, E S12-1 Cardoso, Carolia P20-37 Carmo, Helena P12-62, P14-18 Carmona, Asuncion P13-06 Carney, Edward P18-02 Carpi, Donatella P16-01 Carrara, Maria P08-14 Carrola, Joana P24-13 Caru’, Francesco P15-18 Carvalho, Cristina P08-37, P13-13 Carvalho, Félix P02-17, P12-49, P13-01, P14-18, P15-10, P15-11, P23-01, P23-14 Carvalho, Márcia P15-09 Cassali, Geovanni P13-05 Castellano, Victor P12-37, P12-50 Castro, Matilde P03-05, P07-15, P09-15, P12-21, P12-22, P14-01 Catoire, Sophie P12-74, P20-03 Caumette, Vincent P08-10 Cavallo, Delia P02-02, P24-18 Cavill, Rachel P12-85 Ceccatelli, Raffaella P25-06 Ceccatelli, Sandra K5-1 Cechelli, Romeo S03-1 Cecilie Bonefeld Jørgensen, Eva P17-09 Celebi, Celalettin R. P02-15 Ceriani, Roberta P09-18 Cervinkova, Zuzana P07-04 Cesla, Petr P07-04 Cetin, Yuksel P03-14 Cha, Ji Young P20-15 Chakravarti, Suman P05-01 Chang, Louis W P08-55 Chanotng, Boonrat P13-07 Chantong, Boonrat P12-83 Chapman, Kathryn W06-4 Charmeau, Carole P18-19 Charvet, Igor P12-26 Chashchyn, Mykola P13-18 Chassaigne, Hubert P16-01, P16-02 Chaudhry, Qasim Ali P14-26 Chaves, Miriam P12-08 Checheva, Maria P05-06 Chen, Chunying S02-2 Chen, Rong-Jane P08-55 Chen, Tao W13-5, P02-16 Cheng, Shu-Yuan P17-16 Cheng, Yi P23-08 Chettoum, Aziez P01-06, P19-17 Chevillotte, Grégoire P20-28 Chiara, Francesca P04-01, P04-02 Chibout, Salah-Dine W10-3, W13-1, P12-13, P12-20, P12-61, P13-21 Child, Matthew P12-03 Chlopecka, Magdalena P12-77, P17-15 Cho, Eun-Sang P01-01 128 Cho, Il Je P12-46, P12-49, P12-73 Cho, Jun-Cheol P12-30 Cho, Sun-A P12-30 Cho, Su-Yeon P14-06, P14-07,P14-08 Choi, Byungho P02-18, P04-09 Choi, Eun-young P08-27 Choi, Jonghe P24-25 Choi, Kyunghee P24-25 Choi, Yeoul P15-27 Chorti, Maria P06-01 Chouriyagune, Charoen P04-07 Christakis-Hampsas, Maria P14-17, P17-07 Christen, Verena P24-27 Christiane, Beckmann P10-19 Christiansen, Sofie P08-24, P19-06 Christin, Didier P25-23 Chung, Chieh-Han P03-01 Chunhabundit, Rodjana P03-12 Ciervo, Aureliano P02-02, P24-18 Cieszanowski, Andrzej P07-20, P12-16 Ciffroy, P S12-1, S12-4 Cini, Barbara P02-21 Cipriano, Madalena P03-05, P12-21, P12-22 Claessen, Sandra P12-45 Clements, Mike P12-31 Clift, Martin P12-29 Coatney, Robert W W15-3 Cocher, Hervé P25-23 Cochet, Claude P11-16 Cocker, John W02-4 Coelho, Patrícia P02-08 Coenraads, Pieter Jan P06-04 Cohen, Samuel M S07-4 Cohen, Stephen P23-02 Cohrs, Christopher P11-07 Cok, Ismet P07-24, P07-29, P08-15 Colacci, Annamaria P12-17 Coleman, David P15-25 Colombo, Paolo P15-18 Colosio, Claudio W02-3 Colter, David P12-10 Comley, R W15-2 Commandeur, Jan P12-02 Connon, Richard E W18-2 Conolly, Rory B S07-4, K6-1 Contal, Servane P15-02 Coonen, Maarten P12-02 Corbel, Tanguy P19-01 Cordier, Andre W13-1, P13-21 Cornet, Maria Eugenia P01-03, P19-05 Corsini, Emanuela W01-4, P11-02 Cortes Picazo, Patricio P04-13 Cortini, Emanuela P04-01 Cortinovis, Cristina P12-41, P25-21 Corton, J Christopher S16-2 Costa, Carla P02-08 Costa, João G. P07-15, P09-15 D d’Argembeau-Thornton, LaurenceP12-58 da Costa Araújo, Silvana P23-01 da Rocha, João Batista Teixeira P13-22 Da Silva, Marie P19-08 Daci, Nexhat P02-04, P08-34 da Costa, Goncalo Gamboa S05-2 Dae-Seop, Shin P15-20 Dagher, Rafif P03-03 Dallegrave, Eliane P13-16 Dalzell, Abigail P20-09, P20-10 Damdimopoulou, Pauliina P13-08 D’Amour, Monique P25-26 Damsten, Micaela P18-27 Danten, Muriel P18-19 Darin, Joana Darc Castania P10-14 Darnell, Malin P14-25 Darolles, Carine P13-06 Datta, Sudip K P17-08 Dauzat, Caroline P19-08 Davanzo, Franca P25-21 David, Sylvie P15-26 Davuljigari, chand Basha P08-04 de Bourayne, Marie P11-16 de Graaf, Inge P12-63 de Groot, Didima P07-33 de Haan, Laura H.J. P12-42 De Javel, Dominique P20-16 de Jersey, John P16-07 de Jong, Govardus P09-09 de la Moureyre-Spire, Catherine W13-5, P02-16 De Luca, Jane P12-58 De Luna-López, Ma. Carolina P02-07 de Oliveira Silva, Diogo P08-33 De Sio, Alessandra P08-05, P08-06, P25-19 De Smedt, Ann P18-09 de Sousa, Georges P12-81, P17-04 De Sutter, Petra P19-04 De Vizcaya-Ruiz, Andrea P08-32 de Wever, Bart P18-09 De Witte, P W11-4 Dear, James W13-3 Dearman, Rebecca P11-12, P11-13 Decrock, Elke W07-2 Deferme, Lize P16-10 Degen, Gisela H. P12-69 Degim, Ismail Tuncer P07-24 Dejong, Cees P12-45 Deka, Mayurakshi P19-18 de Lange, Dylan S13-5 del Cacho, Carmen P08-44 Dellarco, Michael S07-2 Del Espinola, A W10-3 del Mar Municio, Maria P01-03, P19-05 Demidkina, Anna P01-02 Demirbag, Ali E. P02-22 Demircigil, Gonca Çakmak P02-15 Demirkol, Sait P07-10, P07-11 Demiroglu, Canan P02-22 den Hartog Jager, Stans P09-09 Den Hond, Elly P10-12, P19-04 Deng, Xiaoyong P24-12 Denslow, Nancy D W18-4 Dekant, Wolfgang S03-1 Derici Eker, Ebru P10-11 Dernick, Karen P12-35 Desai, Pankaj P07-17 DeSesso, John M W14-4 Desforges, Philippe P25-23 DeVries, Erik FJ W15-2 DeVries, Irma P05-03 Dey, Swatee P20-02 Dhawan, Alok P24-22 D’Hooghe, Thomas P19-04 Di Renzo, Francesca P19-10 Diallo, Tidiane P25-20 Diaz Ochoa, Juan Guillermo P05-17 Dickel, Denise P11-14 Diener, Liliane P24-26 Diener, Pierre-André P24-26 Diepgen, Thomas P06-04 Dierckx, RAJO W15-2 Dietrich, Daniel P08-40 Dietz, Audrey P13-21 Dietz, Rune P08-59 Dilon, Debbie P12-82 Dincer, Zuhal P13-21 Dinis-Oliveira, Ricardo P13-16 Dogan, Zehra P08-01 Posters Costa, Solange P02-08 Costa, Vera Marisa P13-16, P23-01, P23-14 Coté, Serge W10-1 Coulouarn, Cédric P08-03 Court Marques, Danièle P18-23 Couttet, Philippe W10-3, W13-2, W13-5, P02-16, P12-13, P12-20, P12-61 Cox, Bianca P19-04 Crawford, A W11-4 Crome, Steven P18-14, P18-26 Cronin, Annette P13-09 Cronin, Mark T. D. W04-2, W04-3, W16-2, P05-04, P05-05, P05-07, P05-06, P05-08, P05-16, P05-23, P24-24 Cruz, Hélder P12-21 Cruz, Pedro P12-21 Cudd, Margaret Amelia P18-07 Cui, Hongyan P24-09 Curcic, Marijana P20-14 Currie, Richard A S07-3, S16-1 Cuzic, Snjezana P07-18 Cywinska, Monika P07-20, P12-16 Czich, Andreas S01-4 129 Dollenmeier, Peter P20-25 Domingo, Jose-Luis P08-38 Domínguez, Alazne P24-01 Dorandeu, Frederic P25-23 Dorne, Jean-Lou W18-5 Dörig, Dario P20-21, P11-03 Dos Santos, Tania P12-83 Dotse, Eunice P09-08 Dougnon, Victorien P09-21, P21-02 Drobne, Damjana P24-22 Drzewiecka, Agnieszka P15-28, P18-22 Duarte, Iola P24-13 Duarte, José P23-14 Dubost, V W10-3, W13-1 Ðukic-Cosic, Danijela P08-09, P08-22, P20-13 Dulize, Remi P12-75 Dumanovic, Jelena P20-14 Dutta, Uma P19-18, P23-17 Duydu, Yalçin P12-69 Dvorak, Zdenek P07-08, P09-02, P22-03, P18-24 Dybdahl, Marianne P12-15 Dziekan, Natalia P12-77, P17-15 E Ebadollahinatanzi, Alireza P25-07, P25-08 Eberlin, Marcos Nogueira P15-30 Ebert, Ralf-Uwe P20-38 Edkins, Adrienne P24-14 Edmiston, Jeffery P02-25 Edtbauer, Michael P05-19 Edwards, J W04-5 Efe, Sibel P02-22 Egea Gonzalez, Francisco Javier W02-2 Ehlers, Anke P14-27 Ehrenshaft, Marilyn P08-13 Eichinger-Chapelon, Anne P18-16 El ALi, Zeina P12-80, P11-01, P11-16 El Awdan, Sally P25-02 Elbekai, Reem P18-12, P18-13, P18-11 Eleršek, Tina P07-28 Elford, Peter P07-21 El-Haggar, Mohamed P07-32 Ellinger-Ziegelbauer, Heidrun W13-5, P02-16 Ellis, G. 87 Ellis, Samantha P12-18, P12-75 Ellis-Hutchings, Robert P18-02 Eltze, Tobias P11-02 Ema, Makoto P18-10 Emer Gegin, Eda P07-09, P07-11 Emerce, Esra P07-24, P07-29 Emiliano, Nathalia P20-37 Endes, Carola P12-29 Engeli, Roger P08-54, P15-08 Enoch, Steven P05-04, P05-05, P05-08 130 Enomoto, Hatsune Ercin, Nuri Erdil, Ahmet Erdmann, Simon E. Eroglu, Ali Errington, Graham Ertas, Nusret Escher, Sylvia Esguerra, C Eskes, Chantra Espana, Bernadette Esselen, Melanie Esser, Philipp R. Ewart, Lorna Expert Committee, ANSES’ Working Group on EDs Expert Workin Group on Endocrine Disruptors, ANSES P16-06 P04-12 P04-12 P08-59 P08-01 P10-13 P02-15 P20-38, P24-16 W11-4 P18-09 P19-02 P10-22 P11-01 S14-5 616 451 F Faass, Oliver P08-24 Fabbri, Marco P12-52 Fabian, Eric S16-4, P15-14 Fabriek, Babs P11-04 Fabrizi, Giovanni P02-23 Fagerberg, Bjorn P08-08 Fahrer, Jörg P03-07 Faltermann, Susanne P15-15 Fang, Min P16-09 Fant, Pierluigi P15-26 Faqi, Ali P09-22 Farahmand, Sara P20-02 Fariss, Marc P02-25 Farzi, Soheilla P25-08 Fashe, Muluneh P14-24 Faust, Michael S12-1, S12-4 Fautz, Rolf P06-04 Federova, Ganna P01-05 Feher, Domonkos P11-09 Felenda, Jennifer P10-19 Felice Guidugli, Ruggero Bernardo P15-30 Felter, Susan W04-2, W04-5, P05-06, P20-29 Fent, Karl P15-15, P24-27 Fernandes, Ana S. P03-05, P07-15, P09-15 P12-22, P21-03 Fernandes, Eduarda P23-01 Fernandes, Isabela C. P09-10 Fernandes, Raquel MT P15-30 Fernandez, Elena P11-14 Ferrara, Donato P23-04 Ferreira, Rita P13-16 Ferrer, Emilia P09-16 Ferret, Pierre-Jacques W04-5, P20-16 Feuerstacke, Christian P04-10 Fey, Stephen P12-51 Ficheux, Anne-Sophie P20-28 Ficheux, Hervé P12-74, P20-03 Furlong, Stephen Fussel Karma C W10-2 S15-2 G Gad, Seham P07-32 Gademann, Karl P08-57, P15-15 Gaj, Stan P10-20 Gajewska, Monika P05-12, P05-13 Galassi, Carolina P13-05 Galazyn-Sidorczuk, Malgorzata P13-25, P14-23 Galbiati, Valentina P11-02 Galonnier, Maude P20-16 Garcia, L W04-5 Garcia-Canton, Carolina P10-13 Garcia-Reyero, Natalia W18-4 Gariazzo, Claudio P25-13, P25-14 Gashaw, Hime P12-84 Gaspari, Marco P09-09 Gateva, Pavlina P25-28 Gatto, Maria Pia P20-07, P25-13, P25-14 Gautier, Céline P13-06 Gayrard, Véronique P19-01 Gebel, Stephan P16-13 Gehr, Peter P12-29 Geier, Johannes P18-21 Genter, Mary Beth P07-17 Gentile, Antonio P08-05, P08-06 Gentinetta, Thomas P11-03 Gerbeix, Cédric P11-01 Gerberick, G Frank P06-04 Gerecht, Marik P08-42 Gerhardy, Cécilia P15-26 Germano, Davide P12-20 Geuns, Ed P18-27 Ghanem, Abdel-Aziz P07-32 Gherardi, Monica P02-02, P20-07, P25-13, P25-14 Ghisari, Mandana P12-28, P17-05 Ghosh, Kallol K P12-32, P12-48 Giampreti, Andrea P04-01, P04-03, P04-02 Gian Christian, Winkler P18-07 Giannakoudakis, Konstantinos P17-13 Gibbs, Susan P11-02 Gil Royo, Ana Gloria P19-05 Gil, Ana M. P24-13 Gil, Fernando P02-10, P02-11, P08-16, P08-19, P08-18, P20-31 Gil, Sophie P19-01 Gili, Marilena P02-21 Gintant, Gary P22-04 Gioria, Sabrina P16-01, P16-02 Girod, Matthias P24-19 Gitrowski, Constantinos P12-78 Giynas, Nilgun P08-35 Glass, C Richard S12-1, W02-2, P20-09, P20-10 131 Posters Fickova, Maria P08-23, P08-25, P08-46, P08-47 Fiechter, Danielle P19-13 Fiévez-Fournier, Laëtitia P18-19 Fijalek, Zbigniew P07-20 Filhol, Odile P11-16 Filipe, Elysse P09-15, P12-21 Filipe, Mariana P12-21 Filipic, Metka P07-28 Filipovic, Angelina P20-14 Finkelstein, Martin P18-27 Fioravanzo, Elena P05-07, P05-06, P05-16, P05-23 Fioretti, Marzia P02-23 Fischmann, Stephanie P02-13 Fiszman, Monica P22-04 Flachi, Daniela P04-02 Fleury, Marie-José P12-33 Flint, Nicholas P13-04 Flórido, Ana P03-05 Flouris, Andreas P06-01, P14-17 Fluri, David P12-70 Folkertsma, Simon P07-33, P11-04 Föllmann, Wolfram P12-69 Fonseca, Vitor P12-14 Font, Guillermina P09-16, P09-17 Fontana, Stefano P13-11 Fontanellas, Antonio P01-03 Fontao, Fabienne P23-16 Foquin, Annie P25-23 Forgiarini, Alessia P08-14 Forsblad, Andréas N. P. P12-43 Forster, Roy P03-03, P07-21, P15-01, P19-08, P23-07 Foulon, Olivier P19-08 Fowler, Stephen P23-02 Fragkiadaki, Persefoni P17-07, P17-12, P23-10 Fragoso Rocha, Bianca P12-14 Fragoso, Meire P06-02 Franca, Flavia P12-08 Frandsen, Henrik P21-01 Franken, Carmen P10-12 Frantz, Christopher P18-27 Fraser, William P25-26 Frauenstein, Katrin P07-08 Freeman, Elaine P18-20 Freeman, Tracy P19-05 Frericks, Markus S15-2 Fresegna, Anna Maria P02-02, P24-18 Frías Tejera, Inmaculada P04-14 Frih, Hacene P01-06 Frisch, Janina P03-07 Froeglicher, Mirjam P20-25 Fromenty, Bernard P08-03 Frost, Kerry P12-18 Fuchs, Anne P06-04 Fuerstenberger, Cornelia P08-54, P15-08 Fujitani, Tomoko S02-5 Gliga, Anda P24-21 Glojnaric, Ines P07-18 Goebel, Carsten P06-04 Gokul, K P23-12 Goldring, Chris W13-1, W13-3 Golovko, Oksana P12-76 Gomez-Berrada, Marie-Pierre P20-16 Gomez-Limia, Lucia P08-31 Goñi-de-Cerio, Felipe P24-01 Gonzalez Suarez, Ignacio P12-75 González-Aseguinolaza, Gloria P01-03, P19-05 González-Delgado, Francisco Javier P04-14 Gonzalez-Lopez, Eugene P17-16 Gonzalo, Sergio P08-38 Goodman, J W10-3 Goonesinghe, Alex W11-3 Gordiani, Andrea P20-07, P25-13, P25-14 Goren, Suleyman P25-04 Gorniak, Silvana P15-17 Gottipolu, Rajarami Reddy P08-04 Gould, Sarah P18-27 Goumenou, Marina P13-15, P17-18 Govarts, Eva P10-12 Goyal, Shubham P25-17, P25-18 Grabic, Roman P01-05, P12-76 Grabicova, Katerina P01-05, P12-76 Gradinaru, Daniela P02-19 Graebsch, Carolin P12-04 Graff, Candace P02-13 Grafmüller, Stefanie P24-26 Grant, Helen P04-05 Graziani, Sebastien P25-23 Grazziotin Rossato, Luciana P13-16 Greggi Antunes, Lusania P10-23 Grellet, Sophie P08-45 Grenet, Olivier W10-3, W13-1, P12-20 Greutmann, Barbara P12-61 Gribaldo, Laura P12-52 Grimm, Andreas P14-03 Groeters, Sibylle S15-2 Groh, Isabel Anna Maria P10-22 Groneberg, David P08-42 Groothuis, Geny P12-63 Grosell, Martin P08-02 Grote-Wessels, Stephanie P12-67 Grudzinski, Ireneusz P07-20, P12-16 Grundler, Verena P08-57, P15-15 Gruszka, Katarzyna P15-28, P18-22 Grzegorzak, Natalia P04-11, P08-53 Gualtieri, Maurizio P24-08 Guarnieri, Chiara P15-18 Gubandru, Miriana P02-14, P20-04 Gudelsky, Gary P07-17 Guedes de Pinho, Paula P15-09 Guedj, Emmanuel P12-75 Guerra, Lucas P06-02 Guerreiro, Patrícia S. P07-15, P09-15 Guerrini, Angela P12-17 132 Guetlein, Martin Guillot, Gilles Guillou, Claude Guillou, Sonia Guillouzo, Andre Gul, Kashif Gultekin, Melis Gumarova, Zhannat Gundert-Remy, Ursula Gunduzoz, Meside Guo, Yin Gupta, Bhanushree Guth, Katharina Gutieérrez Fernández, Ángel José Gutiérrez-Praena, Daniel Gutleb, Arno Gutscher, Heinz Gutu, Claudia Maria Guy, RH Guzmán-Guillén, Remedios P05-18 P25-23 P16-02 P20-16 S03-1 P13-22 P07-10 P14-12 P05-18 P08-35 P02-25 P12-32 P15-14 P04-14 P09-03, P09-04, P09-06, P09-07 P15-02 W08-2 P20-04 W04-3 P08-17, P09-06 H Ha, Sangwook P02-18 Haag, Valérie P23-07 Haarmann-Stemmann, Thomas P07-08 Hadrup, Niels P21-01, P17-09 Hahn, Axel P08-58 Hahne, F W13-1 Haider, Wolfram P17-01, P17-03, P17-17 Håkansson, Helen P20-23, P20-35, P18-15 Hall, Mary P11-09 Halldin, Krister P13-08, P20-35 Haltner-Ukomadu, Eleonore P15-14 Hami, Hinde P25-20 Hammond, Tim G S14-3 Hamon, Jeremy P05-15 Han, Xianglu S15-3 Hananias, Karime P04-13 Hanberg, Annika P20-18, P20-23 Handy, Richard P12-78 Hanke, Michael P14-26 Hansel, Trevor P12-84 Hansen, Ulf P24-19 Hardisson, Arturo P04-14 Harjivan, Shrika G P14-01 Harris, Georgina P12-54 Hartmann, Andreas S01-2 W06-2 Hartung, Thomas P12-54 Hartwig, Andrea W08-4 Hasegawa, Tatsuya P25-16 Hass, Ulla R01-2, P08-24, P19-06 Hassan, Azza P23-11 Hassan, Waseem P13-22 Hasselgren, Catrin P05-02 Hatano, Akiko P10-09 Hirose, Akihiko S02-5, P11-15, P18-10, P24-09 Hirsch-Ernst, Karen Ildico P17-03, P17-17 Hisarli, N. Deniz P02-15 Hitotsumachi, Hiroko P23-09 Ho, Chi-Tang P03-01 Ho, Yuan-Soon P03-08, P08-55 Hochstrasser, Denis P02-12 Hodges, Nikolas P12-11 Höehr, Nelci Fenalti P15-30 Hoekstra, Eddo P09-12 Hoeng, Julia P12-75, P16-13 Hoet, Peter P24-07 Hoffmann, Lucien P15-02 Hoffmann, Sebastian P12-66, P18-09 Hoflack, Jean-Christophe P13-04 Hofman-Hüther, Hana P10-21 Hogberg, Helena P12-54 Hoheisel, Jörg D W13-2 Holland, Daniela P10-10 Hollert, Henner P19-14 Hollnagel, Heli M S15-4, W04-2, W04-5, P05-06 Honegger, Paul S03-1 Hong, Chung-Oui P07-06 Hong, Soon-Sung P17-06 Honma, Masamitsu P10-09 Hood, Steven W09-3 Hooyberghs, Jef P12-57 Hopfer, Ulrike P12-61 Hoppensack, Anke P12-10 Höppner, Christoph P15-22 Horinouchi, Yuya P08-13 Horzowski, Sabine P24-19 Hosoi, Toru P13-24 Hosokawa, Masahito P15-06 Houben, Geert F W12-3, P09-09, P09-23 Houchi, Hitoshi P08-13 Hourihane, Jonathan OB W12-1 Houtman, Judith P09-05 Hristozov, Dimitar P05-06 Huang, Bu-Miin P25-25 Huang, Peili P24-17 Huber, Christian S03-1 Huener, Hans-Albrecht P19-14, P23-13 Huettig, Nicole P12-04 Hughes, Kathy P18-28 Humfrey, Charles P25-27 Hunakova, Luba P08-47 Hunault, Claudine P05-03 Hunter, Amy P12-58 Husain, Asif P07-05 Huuskonen, Hannele P18-23 Hwang, In-Chang P25-24 Hysek, Cédric M. P04-06 I Iavicoli, Sergio Ibrahim, Mohamed P02-02, P24-18 P12-68 133 Posters Hattersley, Sue W12-2 Hauaji Zacarias, Cyro P08-52 Hauge-Nilsen, Kristin P20-19 Hausmann, Oliver P11-03 Häussinger, Daniel P08-57 Havránek, Tomáš P08-23, P08-25 Hayashi, Makoto P05-10 Hayashi, Taiji P23-09 Hayden, Patrick P07-03, P07-25, P12-03, P12-34, P12-58, P12-59 Hayes, Mark P11-12, P11-13 He, Min-Di P12-53 Heal, Paul P01-03 Healing, Guy W03-2 Hecker, Markus P19-14 Hegazy, Rehab P23-11 Heine, Karin P18-21 Heinz, Andreas P07-32 Heise, Tanja P17-01, P17-03, P17-17 Helis, Agnieszka P04-11, P08-53 Hellgren, Dennis P20-35 Helma, Christoph P05-18 Hemon, Patrice P11-01 Hempel, Katja P02-13 Hendriks, Giel P10-03, P19-13, P24-21 Hendriksen, Peter JM W01-1, P11-11 Heneweer, Marjoke S15-4 Hengstermann, Arnd P16-13 Hengstler, Jan G. S03-5, W08-3, P12-62, P12-70 Hennen, Jennifer P11-07, P15-02 Herceg, Zdenko S10-2 Hering, Steffen P05-19 Hernandes, Livia Cristina P10-14 Hernández Díaz, Francisco Javier P04-14 Hernández, Antonio P02-10, P02-11, P20-31 Herold, M S16-4 Herrada H., Luis P04-13 Herrmann, Annika P13-04 Herzyk, Danuta P18-27 Hessel, Stefanie P09-14, P14-04, P14-27 Hessin, Alyaa P23-11 Hetheridge, Malcolm W11-3 Hewitt, Mark P05-08 Hewitt, Philip G S03-1, P12-56 Hibatallah, Jalila P12-79 Higashisaka, Kazuma P14-28 Higley, Eric P19-14 Hillebrand, Marcus P08-58 Hilsherova, Klara P08-12 Hilty-Vancura, Florentine P24-10 Hines, Ronald H S07-4 Hirano, Seishiro P24-04 Hirata-Koizumi, Mutsuko P18-10 Hiromori, Youhei P13-23 Igarashi, Katsuhide P16-11 Iglesias, Alejandro P08-16, P08-19, P08-18 Iglesias, Antonio S06-5 Ignarski, Alessa P20-36 Ikarashi, Yoshiaki P11-08 Ikenaga, Yutaka P05-10 Ilie, Mihaela P02-14, P02-19, P20-04, P20-05 Indra, Radek P03-10 Ingham, Philip P23-02 Ino, Frédérique P23-16 Inomata, Akiko P24-09 Iscan, Mumtaz P02-22 Ise, Ryota P18-10 Ishida, Isao P24-11 Ishida, Seiichi P15-03 Isik, Sinem P14-15 Isoda, Katsuhiro P24-11 Isomura, Midori P13-24 Istace, Frédérique P20-12 Ito, Mamoru P03-13 Ivanov, Nikolai P12-75 Ivask, Angela P24-06 J Jacevic, Vesna P20-13 Jackson, George P07-25, P12-03, P12-34 Jacobs, Griet P10-12 Jacobs, Kristi P05-06 Jacobsen Rosenskjold, Pernille P19-06 Jacobsson, Stig O. P. P12-43 Jaeger, Martina P19-14 Jaffe, Aron S04-2 Jaillet, Léonore P07-21 Jamei, Masoud S03-1 Jamshidi, Keivan P23-03 Jamurtas, Athanasios P06-01, P14-17 Jang, Young-Mi P20-20 Jankovic, Saša P20-14 Jeanneret, Fabienne P02-12 Jehanno, Audrey P15-02 Jennen, Danyel P12-02, P12-45 Jennings, Paul S03-1, S03-2, P05-15 Jensch, Udo P18-06 Jeon, Jin P04-09 Jeong, Eun Ju P25-24 Jeong, Mihye P12-27, P17-06 Jeronimo-Roque, Daniela P20-34 Jetten, Marlon P12-45 Jeung, Eui-Bae P15-27 Jiao, Zheng P24-12 Jin, Can P12-86 Jin, Un-ho S18-2 Jinddal, Vaneeta P25-17, P25-18 Jirtle, Randy L S11-5 Jittorntrum, Bunyada P03-12 Jochims, Karin P20-32 134 Jochum, Wolfram P24-26 Jocteur-Monrozier, Audrey P19-15 Johanson, Gunnar P20-30, P18-05 Johansson, Mia P18-05 John, Andrea P11-07, P14-04 Johnson, G Allan W15-1 Johnson, Reed M W18-3 Jomaa, Barae P12-42 Jones, David R W03-3 Jones, Kate W02-4 Jordá, María P09-03, P09-05, P09-06 Jos, Ángeles P08-16, P08-19, P08-18, P09-03, 09-04, P09-05, P09-06, P09-07 Joshi, Deepmala P08-43 Jost, Martina P15-22 Jourová, Lenka P06-03 Juganson, Katre P24-06 Jung, Eui-Man P15-27 Jung, Eunsoo P08-39 Jung, Haeng Sun P12-06, P12-07 Jung, Kyoung Mi P12-06 Jung, Rubi P02-18 Junghans, Marion S15-3 Junker, Ursula P07-02 Jurasovic, Jasna P08-34 Jurczuk, Maria P14-23 Juvonen, Risto P14-24 K Kabakov, Alexander P01-02 Kabatkova, Marketa P03-09 Kacar, Omer P03-14 Kadioglu, Ela P02-15, P10-11 Kahru, Anne P24-06, P24-23 Kaina, Bernd P03-07 Kalantari, Fereshteh P20-30 Kalberlah, Fritz P18-21 Kalra, Om P P17-08 Kaluzhny, Yulia P12-58 Kamenickova, Alzbeta P09-02, P22-03 Kamp, Hennicke S16-4, P16-05 Kanak, Esin G P08-01 Kanaki, Katerina P07-19 Kandarova, Helena P12-03, P12-12, P12-34, P12-36, P12-58 Kang, Hong-Seok P15-27 Kanki, Masayuki W13-5, P02-16 Kanno, Jun S02-5, P16-11 Kansy, Manfred S01-1 Karaaslan, Çagatay P13-02 Karabiyikoglu, Gülseren P16-14 Karacaoglu, Elif P13-02, P19-09 Karlik, Wojciech P12-77, P17-15 Karlsson, Hanna P24-21 Karner, Tim P08-40 Kim, Young Woo P12-46, P12-49, P12-73 Kim, Young-Lim P12-27 Kimber, Ian P06-04, P11-12, P11-13 Kinsner-Ovaskainen, Agnieszka P16-02 Kirmizidis, George P18-09 Kirsch, Taryn P20-29 Lirsh, Richard W09-3 Kitajima, Satoshi P16-11 Kitteringham, Neil W13-3 Kizek, Rene P08-12 Kjeldsen, Lisbeth Stigaard P12-60, P17-05 Klausner, Mitchell P07-03, P07-25, P12-12, P12-36, P12-58, P12-59 Klein Entink, Rinke P09-23, P11-04 Klein, Sebastian P15-02 Kleinjans, Jos S16-3, P10-20, P12-45, P12-85, P16-10 Klenke, Elisabeth S09-1 Knapen, Dries P08-20 Knebel, Jan P12-04 Kneuer, Carsten P17-01 Knulst, André P09-09 Ko, Ahra P20-20 Kobayashi, Maiko P11-06 Kobayashi, Norihiro S02-5 Koca, Deniz P14-05 Kocalar, Kadir P08-01 Koccour Kroupova, Hana P01-05 Kock, Heiko P12-04 Kodama, Yasuo P23-09 Koerner, John P22-04 Koh, Hyun Chul P12-27 Kohler, Esther P08-57, P15-15 Kohoutek, Jirí P03-11 Koike, Eiko P11-05, P25-15 Koitjärv, Meelika P24-06 Koivisto, Pertti P02-01 Kojima, Hajime P12-89, P11-08 Kokkinaki, Aikaterini P17-12, P17-13 Kokkinakis, Emmanuel P17-07, P17-12, P17-13 Kolaja, Kyle S04-3 Kolár, Milan P14-19 Kolarova, Jitka P12-76 Kolárová, Veronika P06-03 Kollar, Sarah P13-09 Kolle, Susanne N. P18-03 Kolorz, Michal P07-30 Kolrep, Franziska P14-27 Komulainen, Hannu P08-11 Kongkachuichai, Ratchanee P03-12 Koppen, Gudrun P10-12 Kopp-Schneider, Annette S03-1 Koraichi, Farah P19-02 Korkalainen, Merja P08-11 Kortenkamp, Andreas W05-3, P08-24 Kosmider, Anita P07-20, P12-16 135 Posters Kartal, Yasemin P04-12 Kase, Robert S12-2 Kasemets, Kaja P24-06, P24-23 Kato, Hirohito P18-10 Kato, Reiko P12-24 Kaur, Manbir P07-22 Kaur, Navrinder P23-02 Kavvalakis, Matthaios P07-13, P07-19, P09-01, P17-12, P17-13, P17-18 Kawabata, Tom P02-24 Kawada, Tomoyuki P11-06 Kaya Akyuzlu, Dilek P25-03 Kaya, Guerkan P04-04, P23-04 Kaya, Seda P08-36 Kayaalti, Zeliha P04-12, P10-06, P10-07, P10-08, P08-36, P13-03, P14-05, P14-14, P14-15, P15-23, P16-08, P16-14, P25-03, P25-11, P25-12 Kazanecki, Christian P12-10 Kearney, Paul P12-36 Kegler, Diane P15-24 Kehrer, James P W05-4 Keller, Detlef W04-2, P05-06, P20-19 Kelm, Jens P12-01, P12-55, P12-70, P19-03 Kelsall, Janet W13-5, P02-16 Kenawy, Sanaa P23-11, P25-02 Kennedy, Marc P20-09 Kerdine-Römer, Saadia P12-80, P11-01, P11-16 Ketelslegers, Hans S10-1 Khang, Dongwoo P24-05 Kharchenko, Olga P07-14 Ki, Sung Hwan P12-73 Kilic Süloglu, Aysun P13-02 Kilic, Gozde P24-15 Kille, Peter W18-1 Kim, Chan-Kook P20-33 Kim, Dal-Hyun P25-24 Kim, Heyjin P24-25 Kim, Hyun-Mi P24-25 Kim, Ji Hoon P12-30 Kim, Kwang-Mahn P12-30 Kim, Kwang-Yon P20-15 Kim, Kyu-Bong P14-20, P14-21, P14-22 Kim, Mee-ju P12-30 Kim, Pilje P24-25 Kim, Sang Chan P12-46, P12-49, P12-73 Kim, Sang-Hyun P24-05 Kim, Sang-yub P20-20 Kim, Wongyoung P04-09 Kim, Yong-Bum P25-24 Kim, Young bum P18-25 Kostadinova, Radina P20-22 Kotake, Yaichiro P13-24 Kouretas, Demetrios P02-14, P23-10 Koutedakis, Yiannis P06-01 Kovacevic, Dragan P23-05 Kovacova, Veronika P08-12, P08-21, P08-41 Kovalenko, Valentina P13-10, P19-07 Kovarich, Simona P05-16 Kovatsi, Leda P07-13, P07-19, P17-07 Kozeli, Devi P22-04 Kozubik, Alois P03-06, P03-09 Kraehenbuehl, Stephan P13-11 Kraemer, Thomas K1-1 Kral, Jiri P08-21, P08-41 Kramer, Stefan P05-18 Krasteva, Maya P06-04 Krause, Karl-Heinz P12-26 Kreiling, Reinhard P12-71, P14-03, P15-22, P18-17 Krennrich, G S16-4 Kreyling, Wolfgang G S02-4 Krishan, Mansi P07-17 Kroghsbo, Stine W12-4 Kroll, Kevin W18-4 Kropidlo, Aneta P15-28, P18-22 Krug, Harald P24-26 Kruizinga, AG P09-23 Krul, Cyrille P07-33, P11-02, P11-04, P15-24, P19-13 Krupp, Eckart S01-4 Kubina, Robert P04-11 Kucera, Otto P07-04 Kuczera, Katarzyna P04-11 Kühne, Ralph P20-38 Kumi, Justice P09-08 Kunz, Petra S15-3 Kunze, Marc P02-06 Kuo, Lun-Cheng P03-04 Kupny, Joanna P18-22 Kurmayer, Rainer P08-57 Kuroda, Yukie P15-03 Kurokawa, Masahiko P11-15 Kurokawa, Yoshika P24-04 Kurppa, Sirpa P17-14 Kurt, Bulent P07-09 Kurti, Leonard P02-04 Kusaka, Yukinori P05-21 Kusakawa, Shinji P03-13 Kustermann, Stefan P12-35 Kuz’min, Victor P24-24 Kwaa, Freda P09-08 Kyriakakis, Michalis P06-01, P09-01 Kyriakopoulou, Katerina S12-4 Kyung, Min-Sik P20-20 L La Rocca, Cinzia Lacroix, Marlène Z 136 P12-40 P19-01 Ladwig, Mechthild P17-01, P17-03, P17-17 Länge Reinhard S12-3 Lafuente, Anunciacion P08-31 Lafuente, Daisy P08-38 Lahoz, Agustin P12-45 Lambert, Amy P12-61 Lambert, Carine P08-10 Lambrechts, Nathalie P12-57, P24-07 Lampen, Alfonso P09-14, P14-04, P14-27, P16-12, P24-19 Landry, Timothy P07-03 Landsiedel, Robert P11-02, P15-14, P18-03, P18-04, P19-14, P23-13 Lanni, Cristina W01-4 Lapenna, Silvia P18-23 Larsen, John Christian W17-2 Latado, Hélia P09-13 Lavin, Martin P16-07 Lawrence, Rachel P15-25 Le Guevel, Rémy P08-10 Lebailly, P W02-5 Leclerc, Eric P12-33 LeCluyse, Edward L S04-5 Lecoeur, Sylvaine P19-02 Ledieu, David W10-1, P12-61, P13-21 Ledirac, Nathalie P20-11, P18-19 Lee, Hee-Seok P20-20 Lee, Jeong Eun P12-27 Lee, Jong-Hyeon P20-33 Lee, Kwangwon P07-06 Lee, Kyoung-Youl P01-01, P08-27 Lee, Meeyoung P18-25 Lee, Mee-Young P01-01 Lee, Moung Sook P14-03, P15-22, P18-17 Lee, Seung-Youl P20-20 Lee, Soo Jin P17-06 Lee, Soyoung P24-05 Lee, Su Hyon P12-05, P12-06, P12-07 Lee, Syng-Ook S18-2 Lee, Young Joon P12-72 Leeuwen, F. X. Rolaf van P20-26 Legay, Silvan P15-02 Legler, Juliette P20-36 Legradi, Jessica P20-36 Lempiainen, H W10-3, W13-1 Lenoir, Joke P15-21 Lenz, Barbara P13-04 Lenze, Dido P09-14 Leonard, Martin S03-1 Leoni, Anne-Laure P02-06, P15-07, P25-06 Leppänen, Jukka P14-24 Leroy, Mariline P19-16 Letasiova, Silvia P07-25, P12-12, P12-36, P12-59 Lubinski, Lukasz Lucas, Rui Lucena, Kaline Luckert, Claudia Luft, Jörg Lühe, Anke Luisier, R Lukas, Arno Luo, Man P24-24 P04-08 P12-14 P09-14 P15-05 S01-1 W10-3, W13-1 S03-1 P24-12 M M. Kratz, Jadel P05-19 M. T. Fernandes, Raquel P15-30 Macadam, David P11-09 Macejova, Dana P08-23, P08-47 Machala, Miroslav P03-06, P03-09, P03-11, P13-17 Machat, Jiri P08-12 Machera, K S12-1 Macida, Kazuhiko P03-13 Macit, Enis P07-09, P07-11 Madden, Judith W16-2, P05-04, P05-08, P24-24 Madsen, Charlotte B W12-4 Maeno, Tomokazu P24-09 Maggiore, Angelo P18-23 Mahajan, V W15-2 Mahmoud Deabes, Mohamed P09-19 Maia Campos, Patrícia P21-03 Maiello, Raffaele P02-02, P24-18 Maïga, Ababacar P25-20 Mainero Rocca, Lucia P02-23 Mair, Christina E. P05-19 Maisanaba, Sara P09-03, P09-05, P09-06 Maistro, Edson P10-05 Makita, Masahiro P23-15 Makovec, Darko P24-22 Malachova, Katerina P08-56 Malard, Véronique P13-06 Maleki, Zohreh P25-07 Malhotra, Manav P07-22 Mally, Angela S05-3 Manda, Gina P02-19 Mandakas, Xenofon P07-19 Mandic-Rajcevic, Stefan W02-3 Mandy, Fisher P25-26 Manelfi, Candida P05-16 Mangelsdorf, Inge P20-38, P24-16 Mankus, Courtney P12-03 Mankus, Courtney P12-34 Manser, Pius P24-26 Mansour, Hayam P09-19 Mantecca, Paride P24-08 Manzano-Leon, Natalia P08-32 Manzo, Luigi P04-02 Manzoli de Sá, Júlia S. P09-10 Mao, Lin P12-53 Marabini, Laura P12-87 Posters Letcher, Robert J. P08-59 Leuschner, Renata P20-12 Leva, Paolo P08-44 Leverett, Dean S15-3 Lewin, Geertje S11-4 Lewis, Dick W R01-3 Li, Lei P23-08 Li, Lih-Ann P03-04 Li, Qiang P12-71, P15-22 Li, Qing P11-06 Li, Wen-Hsuan P20-24 Li, Yao P12-65 Li, Yufeng S02-2 Liao, Vivian P13-20, P20-24 Lichtensteiger, Walter P08-24 Lichtenstein, Dajana P24-19 Liebsch, Manfred P12-04 Liechti, Matthias E. P04-06 Lim, Kyoung Min P12-06 Lim, Kyoungsoo P02-18, P04-09 Lima, Lidia P20-37 Lin, Chun-Ju P03-04 Lin, Pinpin P08-55 Linares, Victoria P08-38 Link, Kerstin P10-19 Link, William P22-04 Linsel, Gunter P12-04, P15-12 Lipsa, Dorelia P08-44 Liu, Chunlei W15-1 Liu, Jia-Hui P24-20 Liu, Xiang-yun P23-08 Liu, Ying S02-2 Liu, Yuanfang P24-20 Lizarraga, Daneida P10-20 Llana Ruiz-Cabello, Maria P09-03, P09-04, P09-07 Llovet, Isabel P08-38 Lo Piparo, Elena W16-3 Lo Scalzo, Roberto P12-87 Locatelli, Carlo P04-01, P04-03, P04-02 Löffler, Alexandra P13-14 Loizou, George K6-1 Lonati, Davide P04-01, P04-03, P04-02 Long, Manhai P03-02, P08-59, P12-28 Longo, Daniela P02-05 Looser, Ralf S16-4, P16-05 Lopez, Fabiola P12-74, P20-03 López-Franco, Esperanza P01-03 Lopez-Villegas, Tania P08-32 Lo Piparo, Elena W04-5 Lorenz, Helga P02-13 Loret, Thomas P08-26 Losos, Jan W09-3 Loss, Carla Giane P15-30 Losurdo, Anna P04-03 Lourdes Bastos, Maria P13-16, P14-18 Lovsin Barle, Ester P18-07 137 Maravgakis, Georgios P17-07, P17-12 Marcellin, Magali W10-3, W13-1, P12-13, P12-61 Marchan, Rosemarie P12-70 Margina, Denisa P02-14 Margina, Denisa P02-19 Maria Drumond Chequer, Farah P10-23 Marinho, Aline T P14-01 Marko, Doris P10-22 Markovic, Darko P07-18 Marowsky, Anne P13-09 Marques, Eduardo P10-05 Marques, M Matilde P14-01 Marques, Marcella Camargo P10-14 Marquis, Judith P03-03 Marreilha dos Santos, Ana Paula P04-08 Marrer, E W13-1 Marsden, Edward P19-15, P19-16 Marshall, Valerie P18-02 Martín Conde, José Antonio P22-02 Martin, Elizabeth P25-27 Martin, Fabiana P06-02 Martin, Florian P12-75 Martin, Stefan F. P11-01 Martinais, Sophie P08-10 Martín-Cameán, Ana P08-16, P08-19, P08-18 Martinez, Maria Aranzazu P12-37, P12-50 Martinez, Marta P12-37, P12-50 Martinez-Larrañaga, Maria Rosa P12-37, P12-50 Martins, Marlon P20-37 Martos, Suzanne P12-54 Marty, Sue P18-02 Martyniuk, Christopher J W18-4 Marx-Stoelting, Philip P17-01, P17-03, P17-17 Marzocco, Stefania P12-40 Masci, Paul P16-07 Mascolo, Maria Grazia P12-17 Masubuchi, Yasuhiro P23-15 Masuda, Kyoichi P13-24 Mate, Alfonso P09-03 Matelska, Sara P08-53 Mateo-Fernandez, Marco P10-02, P09-24 Mathavan, Sinnakaruppan P23-02 Mathis, Carole P12-75, P16-13 Matovic, Vesna P08-09, P08-22, P20-13 Matsumura, Astushi P23-15 Matsuoka, Atsuko P12-24 Matsuyama, Takashi P18-10 Mattila, Tuomas P17-14 Matunaga, Tadashi P15-06 Matuskova, Zuzana P14-19 Maunz, Andreas P05-18 Maurella, Cristiana P02-05 Mayer, Alejandro P11-09 Mazallon, Michelle P19-02 Mazzoleni, Marta P04-03 McCoy, Alene P18-01 138 McFadden, Lisa P18-01 McGinnis, Claudia P12-88, P23-02 McMullin, T S07-4 McNamee, Pauline P18-09 McWhirter, Derrick W13-3 Meecham, Kenneth P18-14 Meehan, R W10-3 Meek, Thomas W09-3 Meerman, John P12-02 Mégarbane, Bruna S13-3 Mehinto, Alvine W18-4 Mehling, Annette P18-03, P18-04 Meier, Stefanie P02-06 Meinl, Thorsten P05-08 Meirelles, Antonio P09-18 Meistro, Serena P02-05 Melching-Kollmuss, Stephanie S15-2 Melega, Simone P12-62 Mellert, Werner S16-4, P16-05 Meloni, Daniela P02-21 Mendel, Marta P12-77, P17-15 Mendoza, Paula P11-14 Menegola, Elena P19-10 Menéndez Quintanal, Luis ManuelP04-14 Menke, Aswin W11-4, P07-33 Mennecozzi, Milena P05-13 Menouer, Dounia P08-03 Mercadante, Adriana Zerlotti P10-14 Meredith, Clive P10-13, P12-82 Merinas-Amo, Maria Tania P10-02, P09-24 Merino Alonso, Javier P22-02 Merlier, Franck P12-33 Mermoud, Julien P12-23 Merrill, Christine W09-3 Mertens, B. 21 Merz, Karl-Heinz P20-32 Mesaric, Tina P24-22 Mesens, N W11-4 Mesnil, Marc W07-3 Messner, Simon P12-55, P12-70 Metruccio, Francesca P19-10 Meulenbelt, Jan P05-03 Michelangeli, Francesco P12-11 Mika, Paulina P19-13 Miksys, Sharon P14-24 Mikulaskova, Hana P08-49, P08-50 Milani, Raquel Fernanda P09-11 Milasova, Tatiana P12-12 Milcova, Alena P12-25 Milic, Dinka P23-05 Millar, Mike P13-12 Mills, EN Clare W12-5 Minakuchi, Kazuo P08-13 Miranda, Joana P. 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P23-04 Nikolic, Dragica P20-14 Nikolov, Nikolai G P05-22 Posters Mitchell, Jane P12-84 Mitlianga, Paraskevi P09-01 Mittal, Deepak Kumar P08-43 Miura, Nobuhiko P25-16 Miyajima-Tabata, Atsuko P12-24 Miyara, Masatsugu P13-24 Miyazawa, Kun’ichi P24-09 Mizogami, Maki P07-26 Mlcakova, Veronika P08-12 Mlynarcikova, Alzbeta P08-25 Moggs, Jonathan W10-3, W13-1, W13-3, P12-61 Mohamed, Laila P09-19 Mohammadi Karakani, Ali P02-20 Möhle, Niklas P12-09, P12-66 Mohr, Susanne S01-1 Moilanen, Arja P08-11 Mokhtari, Abdelrhani P25-20 Mokshina, Elena P24-24 Molander, Linda P20-18 Molina-Villalba, Isabel P02-10, P02-11, P08-16, P20-31 Mollo Filho, Pedro Carlos P15-30 Moltó, Juan Carlos P09-17 Momas, Isabelle P08-26 MOMAS, Isabelle P08-45 Monnet-Tschudi, Florianne P12-23, P12-83 Monteiro, Márcia P15-09 Montoya Parra, Gina Alejandra S16-4, P16-03, P16-04 Moon, Kyoung-Sik P25-22, P25-24 Morandi, Elena P12-17 Morandy, Gregory P07-02 Moran-Pineda, Marina P08-32 Mörbt, Nora P10-19 Moreira, Daniele C.F. 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P23-01 Pereira, Sofia A P14-01 Pereiro, Natividad P08-31 Pérez Martínez, Ángel Luis P04-14 Pérez, Denisa Soledad P09-25 Pernthaler, Jakob P08-57, P15-15 Perrier, Noel P25-23 Perron Lepage, Marie-France P19-16 Perron, Josee P15-01 Perši, Nina P23-05 Persoz, Charles P08-26 Péry, Alexandre S12-1, S12-4, P05-07 Peschar, Maaike P07-34 Petri-Fink, Alke P12-29 Petrochenko, Svetlana P07-13 Petrolini, Valeria P04-01, P04-03, P04-02 Petry, Harald P01-03, P01-04, P19-05 Petry, Thomas P20-34, P18-18 Pettit, Syril P22-04 Pezzolato, Marzia P02-05, P02-21 Pfaller, Walter S03-1 Pfannenbecker, Uwe P18-09 Pfeil, Rudolf P17-01, P17-03, P17-17 Pflugmacher, Stephan P08-58 Pfuhler, Stefan P10-10 Phillips, Timothy P09-08 Piao, Yin-zhu P12-30 Piasek, Martina P08-34 Picard-Hagen, Nicole P19-01 Pichardo, Silvia P09-03, P09-04, P09-05, P09-06, P09-07 Pichler, Werner J. S06-4, P02-24, P13-11, P20-21, P11-03 Piersma, Aldert H S11-2, W14-3, P19-13 Pungier, Jacquemine Purdel, Nicoleta Carmen Putnoky, Salomeia Puzyn, Tomasz P06-04 P20-04, P20-05 62 P24-24 Q Queiroz, Diana Quesada, Paul Quezada-Tristan, Teodulo Quintaes, Késia D. Quintana-Belmares, Raul P06-02, P08-52, P12-14, P15-29 P19-15 P02-07 P09-10 P08-32 R Raaijmakers, Jan P15-24 Racchi, Marco W01-4 Rach, Jessica P12-09 Ragas, Ad MJ S12-5 Rahmani, Roger P12-81, P17-04 Rahnasto-Rilla, Minna P14-24 Raisuddin, Sheikh P08-29 Ramaiahgari, Sreenivasa P12-02 Ramirez Martinez, Alejandra P20-17 Ramirez, Tzutzuy P16-05, P19-14, P23-13 Ramos, Eva P12-37, P12-50 Randak, Tomas P01-05, P12-76 Randi, Anna P12-84 Ranggasami, Nirmala P18-18 Raoufi, Ahmad P23-03 Räsänen, Kati P17-14 Rashid, Mohd P07-05 Rasoulpour, Reza P18-02 Rast, Peter P24-10 Rathfelder, Nicole P12-61 Rathman, James P05-02, P05-05 Rattarittamrong, Rachawadee P04-07 Raunio, Hannu P14-24 Reddy, Julian P18-20 Reed, Daniel P12-84 Reefman, Esther P11-04 Rehman, Muneeb P25-10 Reichmann, Gaby S06-2 Reig, Vanessa P11-14 Reinders, Judith P11-02 Reinert, Knut S03-1 Reisinger, Kerstin P10-03, P10-04 Reißig, Sonja P03-07 Remião, Fernando P13-16, P14-18, P23-14 Remon, Jean Paul P15-21 Renieri, Elisavet P17-18 Renwick, A W04-5 Riccardi, Elena P15-18 Richarz, Andrea W16-2, P05-04, 9P12-11, P05-08, P05-16, P24-24 Richelmi, Guia Benedetta P02-05 142 Richert, Lysiane S03-1, P12-44, P12-56 Ridings, Jim W14-2 Riebel, Virginie P12-13 Rieke, Svenja P17-01, P17-03, P17-17 Rielland, Aurelie P20-16 Rieswijk, Linda P10-20 Rietjens, Ivonne M. C. M. W17-2, P12-42, P20-26 Rihel, Jason W11-2 Rijo, Patrícia P21-03 Rimondo, Claudia P04-01 Ringblom, Joakim P20-30 Rios, Victoria P08-17 Ritter, Detlef P12-04 Rivedal, Edgar W07-4 Rivolta, Marina P25-21 Rizvi, Syed Ibrahim P08-48 Roberts, David P05-04 Roberts, Ruth A S10-4 Robin, Marie-Anne P08-03, P08-10 Robinson, Sally W06-1 Rocchi, Loretta P04-01 Rocha, Bianca P06-02 Rodrigues, Luís P21-03 Rodrigues, Oscar E.D. P13-22 Rodriguez Carrasco, Yelko P09-17 Rodriguez, Frédéric P19-02 Rogalska, Joanna P13-19, P13-25, P25-05 Roggen, Erwin P11-02 Rogue, Alexandra P07-21 Rohrer, Sebastian P05-11 Rojas-Bracho, Leonora P08-32 Rolandi, Laura P04-01 Rollinger, Judith M. P05-19 Romero, Alejandro P12-37, P12-50 Romero-Jimenez, Magdalena P10-02, P09-24 Rondel, Karine P08-10 Roos, Robert P20-35 Roper, C W04-3 Roquemore, Liz P12-31 Rosa, Bruno P15-18 Rosa, Vivian P06-02 Rosado, Catarina P21-03 Rosalovsky, Volodymyr P17-11 Rosas, Irma P08-32 Rosenmai, Anna P12-15 Rossi, François P16-01, P16-02 Rossner, Pavel P12-25 Rossnerova, Andrea P12-25 Rostani, Amin S03-1 Roszczenko, Alicja P13-19, P25-05 Roth, Adrian B. P12-35, P12-88, P13-04 Roth, Nicolas S12-4 Roth, Thomas P18-06 Rothe, Helga W04-3, P20-02 Rothen-Rutishauser, Barbara P12-29 Rotondo, Francesca P12-17 Roudeau, Stéphane P13-06 Roudot, Alain-Claude P20-17, P20-28 P07-04 P07-16 W04-3 W02-3 P04-14, P22-02 P02-12 P20-18 P25-06 S04-2 P13-18 P12-40 S10-3 P02-12 P08-56 P02-18, P04-09 S S. Guerreiro, Patrícia P03-05 Saba saba, Falak Beigh P08-28 Sacco, Maria Grazia P12-52 Sachnik, Thomas P12-88 Saengsuri, Pornwanad P04-07 Safe, Stephen S18-2 Safford, R W04-2 Sage, Nicole P13-06 Sagelsdorff, Peter P11-14, P20-25 Sahin, Nefise Ozlen P10-11 Sahin, Tolga P10-01, P10-15 Saiakhov, Roustem P05-01 Sakai, Keiko P12-24 Sakamoto, Yoshimitsu S02-5, P24-09 Sakuratani, Yuki P05-10 Sala Benito, José Vicente P05-12, P05-13 Salah El din, Doha P09-19 Salmon, Florence P01-03, P01-04, P19-05 Salyha, Yuriy P17-11 Samizo, Shigeyoshi P13-24 Sampaio, Klicia P09-18 Sampedro, Ana P01-03 Samson, Leona D. P03-07 Sanchez, Brisa P08-32 Sandström von Tobel, Jenny P12-23 Sanoh, Seigo P13-24 Santos, Conceição P24-13 Santos, Dinamene P04-08 Santos, J Miguel P12-21 Santos Junior, Julio César P15-30 Saraiva, Nuno P03-05 Saraiva, Rogério de Aquino P13-22 Sari, Sibel P07-29 Sarigöl, Zehra P12-19 Sá-Rocha, Vanessa P12-14 Saron, Elisabete Segantini P09-11 Sato, Kazuhiro P05-21 Sato, Yoji P03-13 Saurat, Jean-Hilaire P02-12, P04-04, P23-04, P23-16 Sawada, Rumi P03-13 Sawada, Stefanie P16-12 Saxena, Rajiv K P17-10 Saxer-Sekulic, Nikolina P04-04, P23-04 Sayal, Ahmet P04-12 Sayal, Ahmet P07-11 Saygi, Sahan P10-11 Scarpellini, Manuela P15-18 Schadt, Heiko P13-21 Schaefer, Kai P02-13 Schäfer-Korting, Monika P15-14 Schanz, Johanna P12-10 Scherbichler, N W10-3, W13-1 Schilter, Benoit W04-1, W16-1 Schins, Roel P12-29 Schlatter, Harald P06-04 Schleh, Carsten P15-07, P25-06 Schleifer, Klaus-Juergen P05-11 Schlumpf, Margret P08-24 Schmeits, Peter C W01-1 Schmid, Sandra P15-07, P25-06 Schmidt, Flavia P17-01, P17-03, P17-17 Schmidt, Thomas P08-39 Schmidt-Posthaus, Heike P01-05 Schmitt, Georg W14-1, P18-16 Schmuczerova, Jana P03-06, P12-25 Schnabel, J W04-5 Schneider, Martin P07-02 Schneider, Steffen S11-1, S15-2 Schnuch, Axel P06-04 Schoeters, Greet P10-12, P12-57 Scholz, Gabriele P09-13 Schönlau, Christine P19-14 Schreiber, Nicole B. P12-39, P12-41 Schrenk, Dieter P05-11, P20-32 Schröder, Katrin P24-16 Schröder, Olaf S03-1 Schropp, Patricia P25-06 Schröter, Anika P10-22 Schrumpf, Laura P25-09 Schug, Markus P12-62 Schuh, Werner P06-04 Schuhmacher-Wolz, Ulrike P18-21 Schuler, Franz P12-35 Schulthess, Pascal P13-14 Schulze, Johannes P08-42, P20-27, P25-09 Schulze, Michaela P25-09 Schuster, Daniela P05-19 Schuster, Ingrid P02-06 Schuster, Paul X P18-04 Schüürmann, Gerrit S12-1, P20-38 Schwald, Marianne P13-21 Schwarz, Michael W10-3, W13-1, P13-14 Scian, Mariano P02-25 Searfoss, George W13-5, P02-16 Sedlackova, Jana P08-12 Seeland, Madeleine P05-18 Segal, Lawrence P18-27 143 Posters Rousar, Tomas Rowan, Edward Rua, D Rubino, Federico Maria Rubio Armendáriz, María del Carmen Rudaz, Serge Rudén, Christina Rudragowda, Shivakumar Ruffner, Heinz Rushchak, Volodymyr Russo, Rosario Rusyn, Ivan Rutledge, Douglas Rybkova, Zuzana Ryoo, SeungMok Segner, Helmut P20-36 Segredakis, John P23-10 Seibert, Julia P04-06 Seidel, Albrecht P11-07, P14-04 Selderslaghs, Ingrid W11-1 Selmanoglu, Güldeniz P13-02, P19-09 Seo, Changseob P18-25 Seo, Dongwoo P04-09 Sepcic, Kristina P24-22 Serce, Hakan P02-15 Serchi, Tommaso P15-02 Serhatli, Muge P03-14 Seri, Catia P04-01 Serpelloni, Giovanni P04-01 Serrano, Ana Belén P09-16 Serrano, Jesus P08-32 Sert, Selda P13-03 Seta, Nathalie P08-26, P08-45 Severino, Lorella P12-40 Sewer, Alain P16-13 Seyrek, Melik P07-09, P07-10, P07-11 Sezimova, Hana P08-56 Shah, Rashmi R S14-1 Shao, Erlei P24-12 Shao, Jia W01-1, P11-11 Shao, Yue P23-08 Shaposhnikov, Sergey P15-19 Sharapova, Tatiana W13-5, P02-16 Sharkey, Jack W13-3 Sharma, Rahul P12-48 Shayakhmetova, Ganna P13-10, P13-18, P19-07 Sheets, LP S07-4 Shiiki, Ayano P23-15 Shimada, Takashi P16-06 Shimizu, Kumiko P11-08 Shin, Hyeunkyoo P18-25 Shin, Jihye P20-33 Shin, Kyeho P12-30 Shin, Min-Ki P20-20 Shoara, Saghar P25-08 Shvedova, Anna A S02-3 Siddarth, Manushi P17-08 Siddeek, Benazir S15-2 Siddique, Nadeem Ahmad P17-02 Siddiqui, Anees P07-22 Siddiqui, Anees A P07-05 Silingardi, Paola P12-17 Silva, Ana L. D. P24-13 Silva, Fabio F. P09-11 Silva, Renata P13-16, P14-18 Silva, Susana P02-08 Simoneau, Catherine P09-12 Sims, Jennifer S01-5 Singer, Thomas S01-1, P12-35, P13-04, P18-16 Sirivarasai, Jintana P02-03 Sitarik, Alexandra P08-32 Skalicka-Wozniak, Krystyna P12-77 144 Skinner, Matt S14-5, P22-04 Skochova, Hana P08-21, P08-41 Skov, Kasper P21-01 Smerdova, Lenka P03-06 Šmerdová, Lenka P03-11 Smiesko, Martin W16-4 Smirnova, Lena P12-04, P12-54 Smith, Thomas P18-27 Smits, Mieke P11-02 Snel, Cor P07-33 Soares, Stellamaris P20-37 Sohn, Changhwan P02-18, P04-09 Solano, Enrique P08-16, P08-19, P08-18 Solecki, Roland R01-4 Son, Hwa-Young P01-01 Sone, Hideko P24-04 Sonne, Christian P08-59 Sonnemans, Marc P01-03, P01-04, P19-05 Soraci, Aleajandro Luis P09-25 Sorg, Olivier P02-12, P04-04, P23-04, P23-16 Sornat, Robert P15-28, P18-22 Sostare, Jelena P12-11 Soulaymani, Abdelmajid P25-20 Soulaymani-Bencheikh, Rachida P25-20 Sousa, Emília P14-18 Souza, Samira P20-37 Söderberg, Magnus S05-4 Söylemez Gökyer, Derya P16-08 Söylemez, Esma P10-06, P10-07, P10-08, P13-03, P14-05, P14-14, P14-15, P15-23, P16-14 Soylemezoglu, Tulin P25-03 Söylemezoglu, Tülin P10-06, P10-07, P10-08, P08-36, P13-03, P14-05, P14-14, P14-15, P15-23, P16-08, P16-14, P25-11, P25-12 Spence, Fiona P13-21 Spezia, François P19-08 Spiekstra, Sander P11-02 Spjuth, Linda P18-23 Spratt, Maureen P12-03 Spronck, Lisa P01-03, P01-04, P19-05 Srisala, Supanart P03-12 St Pierre, Liam P16-07 Stahlmann, Ralf P05-18 Stampfl, Melinda P12-86 Starke, Richard P12-84 Starkey-Lewis, Philip W13-1, W13-3 Stawiarska-Pieta, Barbara P04-11, P08-53 Steger-Hartmann, Thomas S12-3 Steigerwalt, Ronald W06-3 P01-05 P08-40 W16-2 P12-66 P13-08 W15-2 P07-02 P22-05 P09-18 P07-03 P03-10 P04-10 W10-3, W13-1 P10-19 P09-01, P17-07, P17-18, P23-10 P12-62 P12-26, P19-12 S15-2, S16-4 P16-05 P19-03 P24-10 P24-01 P03-10 P08-47 P08-13 P24-02 P23-08 P15-20 P10-11 P24-23 S01-3 P02-22 P12-25 P03-06 P18-22 T Taalab, Yasmeen P07-32 Tachiki, Hidehisa P16-06 Tagliati, Carlos P12-08, P13-05, P20-37 Tailhardat, Magalie P18-09 Takahashi, Masayuki P15-06 Takano, Hirohisa P11-05, P25-15 Takawale, Pradeep P25-06 Takezawa, Toshiaki P12-89, P11-08, P15-03, P15-04 Tamaki, Toshiaki P08-13 Tami, Cecilia S06-1 Taner, Gökçe P10-01, P10-15, P10-16, P12-19 Tang, Huan P24-20 Tani, Niina P14-24 Tapia, Maria Ofelia P09-25 Taquahashi, Yuhji P16-11 Taslak, Hatice P16-14 Tassone, Paola P24-18 Tate, Rothwelle J P04-05 Tavcar, Robert P15-01 Tavladaki, Georgia P17-13 Taxvig, Camilla P12-15, P21-01, P17-09 Taylor, Ian P18-26 Taylor, James S P06-04 Taysse, Laurent P25-23 Teasdale, Andrew S09-4, P25-27 Teixeira, João Paulo P02-08 Teixeira, Mariana P12-21 Teles, Alessandra P15-17 Tencalla, Francesca P20-34, P18-18 Terranova, R W10-3, W13-1 Terry, Claire P18-01, P18-02 Teschke, Rolf P20-27 Testai, Emanuela S03-1, S03-3 Teubner, Wera P18-03, P18-04 Teunis, Marc P11-02, P15-24, P19-13 Tezuka, Masakatsu P24-11 Thannimalay, Letchumi P20-01 Theil, D W13-1 Theobald, Anne P20-12 Theodoropoulou, Eleftheria P07-19, P14-17 Theunissen, Peter P19-13 Thomas, Luc P04-04 Thompson, Karol W13-5, P02-16 Thomson, J W10-3 Thuilliez, Céline P19-16 Thünemann, Andreas P24-19 Tielen, Frans P11-04 Tiilikkala, Kari P17-14 Tjalkens, Ronald S18-4 Tlaskalova-Hogenova, Helena P14-19 Tluczkiewicz, Inga P20-38 Togawa, Masako P25-16 Tokgoz, Orhan P25-04 Tolosa, Josefa P09-16 Tomasi, Giorgio P16-02 Toner, Frank P20-02 Tonk, Elisa CM S11-2, W14-3 Topinka, Jan P03-06, P03-09, P12-25 Totty, M. P12-39 Tournaye, Herman P19-04 Toutain, Pierre-Louis P19-01 Traebert, Martin W06-2 Trendelenburg, Christian W06-2 Tranfo, Giovanna P02-02, P20-07 Trantakis, Ioannis P24-10 Tripathi, Ashok K P17-08 Tritscher, Angelika S05-5 Troeller, Silke P12-04, P15-12 Tropsha, Alexander W16-5 Truisi, Germaine L P12-56 Truong, Thoa P12-58 Tsakiris, Ioannis P09-01, P17-12, P17-13 Tsakovska, Ivanka P05-05, P05-06, P05-16, P05-23 Posters Steinbach, Christoph Steiner, Konstanze Steinmetz, F Steinritz, Dirk Stenius, Ulla Stephan-Gueldner, Markus Stéphanie, Boudon Sternberg, Jan Stevens, Christian Stevens, Zachary Stiborova, Marie Stieger, Bruno Stiehl, D Stintzing, Florian Stivaktakis, Polychronis Stöber, Regina Stoppini, Luc Strauss, Volker Strigun, Alexander Ströbel, Simon Sturla, Shana Suarez-Merino, Blanca Sulc, Miroslav Sulova, Zdena Summers, Fiona Sun, Zhi-Wei Sun, Zu-yue Sung- Hoon, Ahn Sungur, Mehmet Suppi, Sandra Sutter, Andreas Suzen, Sinan H Svecova, Vlasta Svobodova, Jana Szewczyk, Aleksandra 145 Tsarouhas, Konstantinos Tsatsakis, Aristidis Tsitoglou, Kyriakos Tsitsimpikou, Christina Tsuboy, Marcela Tsuchiya, Hironori Tsuda, Hiroyuki Tsujimura, Noriyuki Tsunoda, Shin-ichi Tsutsumi, Hideki Tsutsumi, Yasuo Tuncer, A.Murat Tunctan, Bahar Turek, Claudia Türksoy, Vugar Ali Tutkun, Engin Twisk, Jaap Tyndale, Rachel Tzardi, Maria Tzatzarakis, Manolis P23-10 W02-1, P02-14, P06-01, P07-13, P07-19, P09-01, P14-17, P17-07, P17-12, P17-13, P17-18, P23-10 P06-01 P02-14, P07-19, P17-07, P23-10 P10-05 P07-26 S02-5 P15-06 P14-28 P03-13 S02-5, P14-28 P02-15 P08-15 P10-19 P08-36, P14-14, P25-11, P25-12 P10-08, P08-35, P25-11 P01-04 P14-24 P23-10 P06-01, P07-13, P07-19, P09-01, P14-17,P17-12, P17-18 U Uang, Shi-nian Uchino, Tadashi Uji, Miyuki Ukairo, Okechukwu Ulukaya, Engin Ulicny, Boris Unlusayin, Irfan Unterberger, E Unzu, Carmen Urani, Chiara Urano, Koji Urban, Laszlo Urbaszek, Piotr Ursini, Cinzia L. Ustundag, Aylin Uteng, Marianne Uter, Wolfgang Uysal, Cem P02-09 P11-08 P14-28 P04-14 P03-14 P07-30 P08-15 W10-3, W13-1 P01-03 P24-08 P03-13 S14-2 P24-24 P02-02, P24-18 P12-69 P12-13, P12-20 W17-3 P25-04 V Vaccari, Monica Vacchi-Suzzi, C Vadillo-Ortega, Felipe Vahabzadeh, Maryam Vakonaki, Elena Valdivia-Flores, Arturo Valente, Angelica 146 P12-17 W13-1 P08-32 P07-23 P07-13, P07-19, P14-17, P17-07 P02-07 P14-17 Valentin, Jean-Pierre S14-3, S14-5, P22-04 Valzacchi, Sandro P09-12 van Bilsen, JHM P09-23 van Broekhoven, Sarah P09-09 van de Water, Bob P10-03, P12-02 van Delft, Joost P10-20, P12-02, P12-45 van der Bijl, Henk P12-63 Van der Valk, Jan P15-24 van Goethem, F W11-4 Van Gompel, J W11-4 van Hoffen, Els P09-09 Van Larebeke, Nicolas P19-04 van Loveren, Henk S11-2, W01-1, W14-3, P11-11 van Mierlo, Geertje P11-04 van Nimwegen, E W10-3 van Oorschot, Arie P01-04 van Ravenzwaay, Bennard S15-2, S16-4, P15-14, P16-05, P18-03, P18-04, P19-14, P23-13 van Vugt, Harmke P25-01 van Vugt-Lussenburg, Barbara P12-15 Vandebriel, Rob P15-24 Vanhecke, Dimitri P12-29 Vargas, Hugo P22-04 Vasconcelos, Vitor M P08-17 Vasilaki, Fotini P17-07, P23-10 Vavrova, Aneta P18-24 Vazquez-Lopez, Ines P08-32 Vecchio, Sarah P04-01, P04-03, P04-02 Vedani, Angelo W16-4 Vega, Elizabeth P08-32 Velisek, Josef P01-05 Venancio, Vinicius Paula P10-14 Vergauwen, Lucia P08-20 Verhé, Roland P09-18 Verhoeckx, Kitty P09-09 Verma, Nitin P25-17, P25-18 Vermeulen, Nico PE S17-3 Verstraelen, Sandra P08-20 Verwei, M W04-3 Vianello, Giorgio W02-3 Vicart, Axel P12-61 Vidry, Stephane P05-06 Vieira, Andrea P13-05, P20-37 Vieira, Rafael P13-05 Vignand, Philippe P15-26 Viguié, Catherine P19-01 Vilas-Boas, Vânia P14-18 Villalba-Benito, Leticia P09-24 Villeneuve, Daniel L. P08-20 Viluksela, Matti P08-11 Vincenti, Marco P02-21 Vinggaard, Anne Marie P12-15, P21-01, P17-09 Vinken, Mathieu W07-1 Visetpanit, Yupin P03-12 W Wagemaker, Tais P21-03 Wagner, Sandra P12-75, P16-13 Waisman, Ari P03-07 Walk, Tilmann S16-4, P16-05 Walker Junker, Ursula P13-21 Walker, Paul P12-18, P12-55, P12-75 Wallace, Heather M W09-2 Walles, Heike P12-10 Wananukul, Winai P02-03 Wang, Haifang P24-20 Wang, Haishan P23-02 Wang, Hui-Min P07-01 Wang, Liming S02-2 Wang, Xiaobo P12-86 Wang, Xingang P23-02 Wang, Ying-Jan P08-55 Warren, Simon P18-20 Watanabe, Wataru P11-15 Watts, Chris S15-3 Watzinger, Malene P03-03 Weaver, Richard J W06-5 Weber, Klaus P02-06 Webley, Lisa P18-26 Wedebye, Eva Bay P05-14 Wehrli, Bernhard P24-27 Weidmann, Katharina P15-07, P25-06 Weidolf, Lars Weinbauer, Gerhad F Weisensee, Dirk Weiser, Thomas Weiss, Dieter G Weisschu, Timo Werner, Inge Wesolek, Nathalie Wess, Ralf Arno Westerholm, Emma Wheate, Nial Whiteley, Christopher Wichers, Harry Wick, Peter Wiegand, Rolly Wielette, Elizabeth Wiemer, J Wilks, Martin F Willard, James Williams, Faith M Williams, Philip Win-Shwe, Tin-Tin Winter, Matthew J Wisialowski, Todd Witters, Hilda Woitkowiak, Claudia Wolf, Armin Wolterbeek, André Wong, Victor Woodhouse, Heather Worth, Andrew Woutersen, Ruud Wright, Jayne Wroblova, Katerina Wrzesinski, Krzysztof Wu, Chih-Hsiung Wu, Jianyao Wu, Pei-Rung Wu, Weija Wuillemin, Natascha Würtzen, G Wyszynska, Magdalena P14-25 W15-4 P16-13 S01-1, P23-02 S03-1 P23-13 S12-2, W18-2 P20-17 P08-39 P20-35 P07-16 P24-14 P09-09 P12-29, P24-26 P13-12 S04-2 S16-4 S12-1, S12-4 P22-04 W04-3 P11-09 P24-04, P25-15 W11-3 P22-04 W11-1, P08-20, P12-57, P24-07 P19-14 S03-1, P12-13, P12-20, P12-61, P13-21 W11-4, P07-33 P10-18 P12-18, P12-75 W04-2, P05-07, P05-06, P05-12, P05-13, P05-16, P05-23, P18-04 P15-24 P13-12 P07-30 P12-51 P08-55 P20-35 P03-04 P24-09 P13-11, P20-21 W04-5 P08-53 X Xhau, Kong-Nan Xie, Luke Xu, Li Xu, Xiao Xu, Yingying P16-07 W15-1 P23-08 P12-86 P24-20 Y Yalin, Serap Yamada, Jun P10-11 P05-10 147 Posters Vitcheva, Vessela W04-2, P05-05, P05-06, P05-23 Vitry, V W10-3 Vitula, Frantisek P08-12 Vlachou, Maria P09-01 Vlckova, Stepanka P02-12 Vögele, Peter P10-19 Vojtech, Adam P08-12 Vojtisek-Lom, Michal P12-25 Volders, Paul GA S14-4 Volger, Oscar L W01-1, P11-11 Vollmer, Günther P19-14 Volmer, Dietrich P08-33 Volz, Nadine P18-06 von Mandach, Ursula P24-26 von Moos, Lea P24-10 Vondrácek, Jan P03-06, P03-09, P03-11 Vonteru, Kavitha P08-04 Vorkamp, Katrin P08-59 Voronina, Alla P13-10, P13-18, P19-07 Vrbova, Martina P07-04 Vrieling, Harry P10-03, P24-21 Vrzal, Radim P07-08, P18-24 Vucinic, Slavica P20-13 Vulic, Ana P23-05 Vuorinen, Anna P05-20 Vynias, Dionisios P17-12 Vynias, Dionisis P17-18 As a global pharmaceutical company, AstraZeneca has a key contribution to make by providing medicines for some of the world’s most devastating diseases. Come and hear our AstraZeneca scientists presenting their work here in Interlaken: Sept 1st: 15:00 Tommy Anderson, ‘Human 3D tissue cultures to assess metabolism of drugs’ Sept 2nd: 13:55 Guy Healing ‘Practical aspects of performing carcinogenicity studies’; 14:45 Magnus Söderberg, ‘Renal Toxicity in Drug Attrition’; 16:00 Sally Robinson ‘Strategies in Preclinical Safety’, Sept 3rd: 10:00 Peter Newham, ‘Modifying the riskbenefit ratio using drug delivery’; 10:25 Mark Pinches, ‘Classical, qualified and exploratory renal biomarkers’; 11:15 Ruth Roberts, ‘Genetic Susceptibility: relevance to ADRs; 17:40 JP Valentin, ‘Translational cardiovascular safety’. Together we can make a meaningful difference to the lives of patients now and in the future, because Health Connects Us All. The Nestlé Research Center (NRC) in Lausanne, Switzerland, a centre of fundamental scientific research and innovation within Nestlé. We drive science and technology, from basic nutrition and health research, to applied research for product development and application, to ensuring the utmost quality and safety of Nestlé products. The scientific excellence and technical knowledge of Nestlé Research helps fulfill Nestlé’s vision of Good Food, Good Life for all consumers. To learn more about the Nestlé Research Center and our research activities, visit: www.research.nestle.com. BASF SE – Experimental Toxicology and Ecology Established in 1986, ILSI Europe fosters collaboration among the best scientists to provide evidence-based scientific consensus in the areas of nutrition, food safety, toxicology, risk assessment, and the environment. By facilitating their collaboration, ILSI Europe helps scientists from many sectors of society – public and private – to best address complex science and health issues by sharing their unique knowledge and perspectives. ILSI Europe advances the understanding and resolution of scientific issues through expert groups, workshops, symposia and resulting publications. The ultimate goal of ILSI Europe is the improvement of public health. www.ilsi.eu 148 BASF experimental toxicology and ecology with decades of experience offers a complete range of regulatory studies in the field of toxicology and ecology in accordance with the most stringent standards demanded by authorities globally. The studies are conducted in AAALAC certified laboratories in compliance with OECD, EC, EPA, MHLW/METI, J/MAFF, FDA guidelines, current animal protection regulations, and Good Laboratory Practice (GLP), with a clear commitment to quality and continuous improvement. Since more than 20 years BASF’s experimental toxicology and Ecology actively promotes and develops alternative methods for toxicological testing according to the 3R’s principle. Yüksel, Bayram Yun, Hyo-In Yun, James Yuta, Kohtaro Yuta, Kohtaro P25-11 P25-24 P20-21 P05-21 P05-09 Z Zacarias, Cyro P15-29 Zaki, Hala P25-02 Zaldivar Comenges, José Manuel P05-12, P05-13 Zalejska-Fiolka, Jolanta P04-11, P08-53 Zaugg, Daniela P18-16 Zeneli, Lulzim P02-04, P08-34 Zetterberg, Charlotta P18-15 Zhang, Xiao-kun S18-3 Zhang, Xiaoyu P22-01 Zhao, Bin P14-24 Zhao, Hui P24-12 Zhitkovich, Anatoly P10-18 Zhou, Haojin P05-02 Zhou, Shaoying P20-02 Zhou, Zhou P12-53 Zhu, Zheying P16-09 Zierau, Oliver P19-14 Zilliacus, Johanna P20-23 Zimmermann, Michael P24-10 Zlabek, Vladimir P01-05, P12-76 Zuang, Valérie P18-09 Zufferey, Fanny P12-83 Zürich, Marie-G S03-1 Posters Yamada, Takashi P05-10 Yamaguchi, Hiroyuki P12-89 Yamaguchi, Manami P14-28 Yamashita, Kunihiko P11-08 Yanagisawa, Rie P11-05, P25-15 Yang, Chihae W04-2, W04-3, P05-02, P05-05, P05-07, P05-06, P05-08, P05-23 Yang, Jian-yan P23-08 Yang, Raymond SH W09-4 Yang, Xing P24-12 Yassin, Nemat P23-11 Yasuda, Satoshi P03-13 Yavas, Guler P07-10 Yavuz, Oguzhan P09-12 Yerly, Daniel P13-11, P20-21 Yildiz, Ferah P07-10 Yildiz, Oguzhan P07-09, P07-10, P07-11 Yilmaz, Hinc P08-35, P25-12 Yilmaz, Veysel T. P03-14 Yilmazer, Meltem P02-22 Yonekura, Kazuhiko P23-09 Yoshida, Hiroki P11-15 Yoshimi, Shimizu P24-11 Yoshino, Tomoko P15-06 Yoshioka, Yasuo S02-5, P14-28 Young, Robert P10-17 Yousef, Mokhtar Ibrahim P19-17 Yu, Ho-Sung P25-24 Yu, Yongbo P24-02 Yu, Zhengping P12-53 Yuen, Peter W13-5, P02-16 149 SWISS – the airline of Switzerland Swiss International Air Lines serves 74 destinations in 38 countries all over the world from its Zurich hub and the further Swiss international airports of Basel and Geneva with a fleet of 92 aircraft. As the airline of Switzerland, SWISS is a byword for traditional Swiss values. True to its roots, the company is dedicated to providing the highest possible quality in all its products and services. With its manageable medium size, SWISS is also optimally equipped to remain as close as possible to its customers and meet their individual needs. As part of the Lufthansa Group and a member of Star Alliance, SWISS remains true to its mission of providing quality air services that link Switzerland with Europe and the world. SWISS understands the full depth and breadth of its customers’ requirements, whether it is the luxury of a long-haul flight in SWISS First, for business travellers the comfort and peace of SWISS Business or simply the friendliness of the service provided in SWISS Economy. No matter which of these you book, you can be sure of receiving just the kind of personalized service of which we are so proud. We are committed to taking care of your needs from the moment you book your flight right up to your arrival at your destination. As the official carrier to 49th EUROTOX Congress in Interlaken, Swiss International Air Lines wishes all participants a fruitful meeting and a pleasant stay in Interlaken. 150 Exhibitors & Exhibitors Booth Map Booth 1: Eurotox 2014 The 50th Congress of the European Societies of Toxicology will be held at the Edinburgh International Conference Centre, Edinburgh from the 7th to the 10th September 2014. The organising committee is pleased to announce an exciting innovative congress, with sound scientific presentations covering a wide range of topics representing the latest scientific and regulatory development. Contact: Colette Bowditch 4 – 6 Oak Lane, Edinburgh EH12 6XH Scotland E-Mail: eurotox2014@in-conference.org.uk Web:www.eurotox2014.com Booth 2: Bioagri Bioagri – a Mérieux NutriSciences Company – is the largest and the most complete private group of analytical laboratories in Latin America, with 16 units distributed in 10 states in Brazil. Being the leading CRO offers high quality analysis to the agrochemical, chemical, cosmetic, food and pharmaceutical industries. Services encompass physico-chemical, toxicological (Acute, Chronic, Repro-Tox and In-Vivo/ In-Vitro), analytical and microbiological studies, ecotoxicity, five-batch and residues analysis under applicable regulatory guidelines. Located in Brazil, BIOAGRI labs are GLP-certified since 2002, ISO 17025, accredited by AAALAC and employ the most current equipment and technologies. Exhibitors & maps Contact: Dr. Jean-Luc GARRIGUE, MD, PhD, EUROTOX Toxicologist Director Scientific Affairs Europe Phone: +33 (0)437 418 336 Mobile: +33 (0)607 493 701 Fax: +33 (0)472 590 038 E-Mail: jlgarrigue@bioagri.fr Web: www.bioagri.com.br, www.merieuxnutrisciences.com 151 Booth 3: B‘SYS As a contract research organization B‘SYS provides assistance to pharmaceutical settings in Ion Channel Discovery. Biological Monitoring Systems offers ion channel services (QPatch automated and manual patch clamping, including Dynaflow and RSC, Fluorescence assays using Flexstation/FLIPR) for determination of biophysics, mechanism, screening services, and expression stability studies. Ion channel cell line design and FACS sorting services support the activities. The company based in Switzerland focuses on the fast screening of new substances on ion channel drug targets. B’SYS is a GLP compliant facility and equipped with state of the art devices for test item analysis. Contact: Dr. Daniel Konrad, CEO Phone: +41 61 721 77 44 Mobile: +41 79 348 45 04 E-Mail: daniel.konrad@bsys.ch Web:www.bsys.ch Booth 4: Cultex Laboratories In the field of inhalation toxicology Cultex Laboratories is the platform for the in-vitro analysis of airborne substances, such as particles, gases, volatile compounds and complex gas mixtures under realistic atmospheric conditions. We developed a wide range of exposure systems, like the CULTEX® RFS, for the direct exposure of cultivated cells to test atmospheres. We accept R&D contracts from the industrial and public sector. Our consulting services support project planning and implementation. Contact: Prof. Dr. rer. nat. Michaela Aufderheide Feodor-Lynen-Strasse 21 30625 Hannover Germany Phone: +49 511 563586-0 E-Mail: info@cultex-laboratories.com Web:www.cultex-laboratories.com 152 Booth 5: Lhasa Lhasa Limited is an educational charity and leading supplier of in silico knowledge based software and databases including; • Derek Nexus: For predicting toxicity • Meteor: For predicting metabolic fate • Zeneth: For predicting chemical degradation pathways • Vitic Nexus: Toxicity database and management system Lhasa Limited is an active research organisation with an enviable reputation for collaborative work and the promotion of data sharing. We work closely with our members in the research and development of software for the chemical and bio-molecular sciences. Members include the world’s top 20 pharmaceutical companies, leading consumer products manufacturers, academics, regulatory bodies and government organisations. Phone: +44 (0)113 394 6020 E-Mail: info@lhasalimited.org Web:www.lhasalimited.org Booth 6: Bucher Biotec/ACEA Biosciences Contact: Bucher Biotec AG Viaduktstrasse 42 4051 Basel Switzerland Phone: +41 61 269 1111 E-Mail: Info@bucher.ch Web: www.bucher.ch ACEA Biosciences launched its first product for real-time, label-free cell-based assays based on a microelectronic readout in 2004. Today, the company has a portfolio of six instruments which utilize this technology with different functional- 153 Exhibitors & maps Bucher Biotec AG is a privately held Swiss distributor company representing some of the most advanced US and European manufacturers of highly innovative life science research instrumentation, associated reagents and consumables. We are extremely proud of our distinguished customer base in the pharmaceutical, biotechnology, agricultural, food and related industries, in all life science research oriented academic institutions, in numerous governmental, clinical and environmental labs and in all of the university hospitals. Our highly competent, well educated team is focused on understanding our customer’s needs in order to be able to propose optimal solutions for the demanding research tasks, and in order to help to accelerate scientific exploration. ities and throughputs, enabling different types of cell-based applications. The application range is broad and diverse, covering all aspects of pre-clinical drug discovery and development as well as toxicity and safety pharmacology. The instruments are well utilized in basic academic research. The citation of the systems in over 400 peer reviewed publications from the pharmaceutical industry and academia is a testament to the success and uptake of this platform. Web: www.aceabio.com Booth 7: Huntingdon Life Sciences Huntingdon Life Sciences, an international Contract Research Organisation offers a comprehensive range of development services to pharmaceutical and biopharmaceutical companies around the world. Our world renowned scientific, technical, and regulatory experts have the breadth and depth of experience to ensure you deliver your R&D milestones. We set the highest standards and offer a broad range of practical support, consultancy and problem solving, all of which can be tailored to meet your specific needs. We are committed to providing you with a customised service, from outsourced single studies, through management of complex programmes, to the development of long-term strategic partnerships. E-Mail:catalinal@ukorg.huntingdon.com Web:www.huntingdon.com Booth 8: Cellular Dynamics Cellular Dynamics International is a leading developer of fully functional human cells derived from induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells. Our iCell® and MyCell® product lines provide industrial quantities of high quality, highly pure human cells enabling disease modeling, drug discovery, toxicity testing, and regenerative medicine research. Contact: Media Relations Joleen Rau, Senior Director of Marketing & Communication Phone: +1 608 310-5142 Web: www.cellulardynamics.com 154 Booth 9: Instech Solomon Instech Solomon is a leader in laboratory animal infusion and sampling, with a focus on products that improve operational efficiency and adherence to the 3Rs. • PinPort™ streamlines access to externalized catheters • Plastic feeding tubes minimize trauma during oral gavage • Vascular Access Harnesses™ simplify the connection of tethered mice and rats • ABS2™ automates the collection of blood samples from mice, rats and large animals • Orchesta™ pump software automates large GLP infusion studies. Contact: Edwin N. Spoelstra, M.Sc. Instech Solomon PO Box 2 9950 AA Winsum The Netherlands Phone: +31 (0)594 769026 Mobile: +31 (0)6 81294900 Fax: +1 610 941 0134 E-Mail: espoelstra@instechlabs.com Web: www.instechlabs.com Booth 10: InSphero/Cyprotex Contact: InSphero AG Wagistrasse 27 8952 Schlieren Switzerland Phone: +41 (0)44 515 04 90 E-Mail:info@insphero.com Web: www.insphero.com Cyprotex, an AIM-listed company (CRX), was founded in 1999 and specialises in ADME-Tox. We have facilities in the UK and the US. As well as offering routine and customised physicochemical, ADME and toxicity screening services, Cyprotex has in silico QSAR and PBPK modelling expertise. We have developed several novel technologies including CellCiphr® Premier for prediction of hepatotoxicity, eCiphrCardio for prediction of cardiotoxicity and Cloe® PK for estimating whole- 155 Exhibitors & maps InSphero 3D InSight™ Liver Microtissues enable more biologically relevant in vitro testing of lead compounds, including long-term and inflammation-mediated toxicity. The portfolio currently comprises rat and human liver microtissues, with additional models in the pipeline. InSphero’s robust and consistent 3D microtissues meet the exacting needs and high expectations of today’s pharmaceutical, cosmetics and chemical industry. InSphero is certified to the ISO 9001:2008 standard. body exposure using PBPK modelling. Cyprotex’s services take a consultative, collaborative approach that includes custom assay development and high quality data generation and interpretation. Contact: Dr. Bodo Spoeri, MBA, Executive Director, Business Development Cyprotex Discovery Limited 15 Beech Lane Macclesfield, Cheshire, SK10 2DR United Kingdom Phone: +44 (0)7502 40 90 10 Fax: +44 (0)1625 50 51 99 E-Mail: b.spori@cyprotex.com Web: www.cyprotex.com Booth 11: Bertin Pharma/Chemie Brunschwig Bertin Pharma is a French company that: • develops, manufactures and distributes a wide and unique range of bioreagents (pre-analytical products, assays, antibodies and biochemicals) for various therapeutic areas such as inflammation diseases, endocrinology, diabetes, obesity, hypertension, psychopharmacology, cancer, asthma, prion diseases, etc. and in the fields of pharmacokinetic, metabolism e.g. SPI-Bio – MS2Plex assays and toxicology, and • is a global R&D service provider throughout the whole drug development process: Pre-clinical & clinical including ADME-T, Biosafety, Pharmaceutical development & clinical supplies thanks to adequate quality standard environments (GLP, GMP, GDP). E-Mail: info@bertinpharma.com Web: www.bertinpharma.com Since its foundation in 1948, Chemie Brunschwig AG has specialised in Switzerland in promoting and marketing more than 700,000 products to laboratories for R&D, analysis and production. Our product range is based in three main areas: chemistry, life sciences and labware. Chemie Brunschwig your partner for: • Organic Chemistry • Biochemistry • Inorganic Chemistry • Molecular Biology • Analytical Chemistry • Cell Biology • Chromatography • Microbiology • Liquid Scintillation • Histology/Cytology/IHC Our business consists of giving to Swiss customers the benefit of our expertise and service by offering them products that are adapted to their needs, and sourced from many different manufacturers from all over the world. E-Mail: epicard@brunschwig-ch.com Web: www.brunschwig-ch.com 156 Booth 12: MicroMatrices Associates MicroMatrices Associates deliver preclinical and research solutions for mechanismbased risk assessment and mode of action studies. Services include: histopathology evaluation, imaging, laser dissection; biomarker identification; genomics/pathways analysis; scientific interpretation; manuscript/ formal report preparation. MicroMatrices have a unique methodology for analyzing archival FFPE tissue blocks for mechanistic toxicity endpoints, allowing for retrospective cell-type specific risk assessment. MicroMatrices are also developing CellMatricesTM, a highly adaptable human-relevant in vitro testing system, based upon nanowire biosensor detector technology. We work with clients on an interactive basis, starting with pilot projects, which are scalable or can form the basis of larger research programs. Contact: Simon Plummer, Managing Director MicroMatrices Associates Ltd Dundee University Incubator James Lindsay Place Dundee DD1 5JJ United Kingdom Phone: +44 1382 322909 Web: www.micromatrices.com Booth 13: Philips Designed around the needs of pathologists, Philips offers an integrated Digital Pathology Solution. The solution comprises of the Philips Ultra Fast Scanner (UFS) and Image Management System (IMS). The UFS is easy to use and creates whole slide images of exceptional quality in less than 60 seconds per slide (40x equivalent, 15 x 15 mm scan area). The IMS is designed for speed and ease of use: supports fast and efficient workflow with bi-directional integration of the Laboratory Information System. Visit us and learn more about powerful sharing tools that allow real-time collaboration with colleagues anywhere in the world. Exhibitors & maps Contact: Dr. Christian Tank, Director Sales Digital Pathology Solutions DACH Philips GmbH, Unternehmensbereich Digital Pathology Lübeckertordamm 5 20099 Hamburg Germany Phone: +49 1525 7966778 Web: www.philips.com/digitalpathology 157 Booth 14: EPL Archives EPL Archives, a globally recognized leader in the research archiving and biorepository field for more than three decades, provides secure GLP, GCP and GMP (collectively GxP) storage for research materials. Our services include packaging, transportation, inventory, and specialized archival of wet tissue, blocks, slides, paper, electronic media, test articles & samples. Standard and custom environments are available including Controlled Room Temperature, refrigerated, frozen and cryogenic. Specialized conditions for paper storage are also offered. The facility and staff are certified to handle radioactive and controlled substances. Rapid retrieval and Scan-On-Demand services ensure client materials are available when needed. EPL Archives’ facilities located in Sterling, VA and Nice, France, provide in excess of 1 000 000 cubic feet of secure space, as well as the capacity to archive several hundred cryo freezers. Phone: +1 703 435-8780 E-Mail: info@eplarchives.com Web: www.eplarchives.com Booth 15: European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) EFSA is the keystone of European Union (EU) risk assessment regarding food and feed safety. In close collaboration with national authorities and in open consultation with its stakeholders, EFSA provides independent scientific advice and clear communication on existing and emerging risks. EFSA was set up in January 2002, following a series of food crises in the late 1990s. EFSA’s independent scientific advice underpins the European food safety system. Thanks to this system, European consumers are among the best protected and best informed in the world as regards risks in the food chain. Web: www.efsa.europa.eu Booth 16: EBSCO Expert Publishing (ExPub) is the world’s leading provider of up-to-date toxicology and chemical hazard information. ExPub databases provide access to millions of documents containing comprehensive human and/or environmental hazard data needed to manage the impact of chemicals in the workplace or on the environment. ExPub consists of more than 150 databases with access to millions of documents from government and licensed sources. It covers approximately 410,000 unique substances and accessible via more than 2.4 million chemical names and synonyms. Databases include: ChemEXPERT™, ReproEXPERT™, ListEXPERT™, DrugEXPERT™ and MSDSonline®. Web: 158 www.ebsco.com Booth 17: ADR-AC ADR-AC GmbH is a spin-off company of the University of Bern, Switzerland, focusing on drug hypersensitivity research, diagnosis and consulting. It is based on the extensive laboratory and clinical experience of its scientific director, Prof. Werner J. Pichler. ADR-AC offers pharmaceutical companies clinical and experimental expertise on allergic/immune mediated reactions to small drugs and biologicals. For diagnosis of drug hypersensitivity in e.g. phase III studies, ADR-AC offers its clinical expertise and combines a multitude of tests to pinpoint the relevant drug. For risk assessment of drugs in development, ADR-AC has established systems to evaluate the immune stimulatory potential of drugs. Contact: ADR-AC GmbH Holligenstr. 91 3008 Bern Switzerland E-Mail: tatjana.petkovic@adr-ac.ch werner.pichler@adr-ac.ch Web: www.adr-ac.ch Booth 18: Comet BioTech Comet BioTech (CBT) was founded in 2010, and is based on the core research by some of its leading scientists; Maria Dusinska, Gunnar Brunborg and Andrew Collins. CBT provides the latest, state-of-the-art, high throughput assays targeted at the chemical industry, food safety, cosmetic and pharmaceutical companies, regulatory bodies, the REACH programme, basic genome research and biomonitoring projects. While the core interest of the company is the comet assay, we also offer a range of genotoxicity and cytotoxicity assays (e.g. Ames, micronucleus, chromosome aberration, mutation assay), as well as new methods development, expertise, consulting and training. Exhibitors & maps Contact: Comet BioTech PO Box 100 2027 Kjeller Norway E-Mail: info@cometbiotech.com Web: www.cometbiotech.com 159 Booth 19: Swiss BioAnalytics/Confarma Swiss BioAnalytics is a bioanalytical Contract Research Organization based in Basel, Switzerland, and provides bioanalytical services for the pharmaceutical industry across all phases of the drug development and registration process. This includes • pharmacokinetic and toxicokinetic studies in preclinical and clinical trials • bioanalysis for bioequivalence studies • metabolite profiling and metabolite identification • total mass balance studies (ADME) • identification of impurities, degradation products etc. The company was founded in 1999 and has conducted much more than 1000 studies, about half of them under GLP. Currently the facility operates 11 HPLC-MS/MS workplaces, including a high resolution LTQ-Orbitrap. Contact: Dr. Winfried Wagner-Redeker Swiss BioAnalytics AG Sternenfeldstrasse 14 4127 Birsfelden Switzerland Phone: +41 61 317 23 90 E-Mail:w.redeker@swissbioanalytics.com Web: www.swissbioanalytics.com CONFARMA is a CRO since 1972, specialized in R&D, CMC and studies. Activities: Analytical chemistry, Galenics, Stability studies, Microbiology, Biochemistry, Biology, Immunology, Molecular Biology, Pharmacology-Toxicology Phases of development: R&D (contract research), Preclinical, Clinical (only analytics), Commercial (CMC) Markets: Academic Research Institutions, EU collaborative projects, Biotech, Biopharma, Vaccines, Pharma, Medical Devices Certification: GMP, c-GMP (FDA), GLP, ISO9001, ISO14001, ISO17025, OHSAS18001, FDA registered DUNS number 49-273-8125 • Preclinical studies for safety and efficacy • Small and large molecules • In-vitro, ex-vivo and in-vivo platforms • Pharmacology, Pharmacokinetics, Toxicokinetics, ADME • Toxicology: acute, sub-acute, sub-chronic, chronic, reproduction • Hematology, clinical chemistry, Pathology • Biocompatibility, Genotoxicity, Hemocompatibility Contact: Ralf Holzinger, Director Science, Sales & Marketing CONFARMA FRANCE SARL ZI, rue du canal d’Alsace 68490 Hombourg France Phone: +33 389 83 37 20 Fax: +33 389 83 37 29 Mobile: +33 689 51 03 19 E-Mail: rholzinger@confarma.fr Web: www.confarma.eu 160 Booth 20: VITROCELL© Systems VITROCELL© is specialized in the development of advanced in vitro exposure systems. VITROCELL© realizes turnkey installations for in vitro inhalation toxicology in which gases, environmental atmospheres, nanoparticles and complex mixtures are analyzed on lung cells at the air/liquid interface. VITROCELL© Skin modules and the VITROCELL© Skin Autosampler are specially designed for the exposure of tissue. The customers of VITROCELL Systems GmbH are leading research institutes, contract research organisations, regulatory authorities as well as the pharmaceutical and other industries throughout the world Contact: Tobias Krebs Fabrik Sonntag 3 79183 Waldkirch Germany Phone: +49 (0) 7681 497 79 50 E-Mail: info@vitrocell.com Web: www.vitrocell.com Booth 21: MatTek MatTek has been a world leader in the field of tissue engineering for the past 20 years. Using state-of-the-art GMP facilities in the USA (Ashland, MA) and EU (Bratislava, Slovakia), we produce cutting edge 3D reconstructed human tissue equivalents for the cosmetic, personal care, household product, chemical and pharmaceutical industries. MatTek tissues have been cited in over 700 technical articles and 300 patents related to product development, toxicology, safety assessment, claims substantiation and drug discovery. Our tradition of scientific and technological innovation remains strong as we continue to develop and validate new in vitro assays and human cells based tissue models. MatTek IVLSL Mlynské Nivy 73 821 05 Bratislava Slovakia +421-2-3280-7401 +421-2-3280-7404 information@mattek.com www.mattek.com Exhibitors & maps Contact: MatTek Corporation 200 Homer Ave. 01721 Ashland, MA United States of America Phone: +1-508-881-6771 Fax: +1-508-879-1532 E-Mail: information@mattek.com Web: www.mattek.com 161 Booth 22: Institute of Industrial Organic Chemistry The Institute of Industrial Organic Chemistry (IPO), Branch Pszczyna is a contract research organization with more than 65 years of tradition. As a GLP-certified Institute, it performs a wide variety of toxicological and ecotoxicological studies of plant protection products, pharmaceutical products, veterinary medicinal products, food and feed additives, industrial chemicals, biocides and industrial wastes. The Institute is the first in Poland to hold the Statement of GLP Compliance for all offered tests. The GLP Certificate guarantees that the studies are accepted worldwide, and their results are of great practical and scientific value. Contact: Institute of Industrial Organic Chemistry, Branch Pszczyna Doświadczalna 27 43 – 200 Pszczyna Poland Phone: +48 32 210 30 81 Fax: +48 32 210 35 37 E-Mail: ipo@ipo-pszczyna.pl Web: www.ipo-pszczyna.pl Booth 23: BSL BIOSERVICE Safety and Activity Testing Services – BSL BIOSERVICE, based in Munich, is an internationally recognized Contract Research Organization (CRO) and a member of a worldwide laboratory network. We have more than 25 years of experience in biological safety and activity testing for Pharmaceuticals, Medical Devices, Chemicals/ REACH, Agrochemicals, Cosmetics and Food. BSL BIOSERVICE has been certified in accordance with GLP as well as being accredited with DIN EN ISO 17025 for biocompatibility of medical devices. In addition BSL BIOSERVICE holds a GMP certificate and is listed by the World Health Organization (WHO) and has also passed two FDA inspections successfully. Contact: BSL BIOSERVICE Scientific Laboratories GmbH Behringstraße 6/8 82152 Planegg/Munich Germany Phone: +49 89 89 96 50-0 Fax: +49 89 89 96 50-11 E-Mail: info@bioservice.com Web: www.bioservice.com 162 Booth 24: Medicyte Medicyte has developed unique and proprietary cell proliferation platforms that form the basis for novel cell-based research and drug development tools and future cell therapy products. upcyte® Hepatocytes are human cell strains which are manipulated into controlled proliferation, without being immortalized or changing the typical phenotype. Therefore, upcyte® Hepatocytes are available in virtually unlimited quantities with a consistently high quality. upcyte® Hepatocytes – the alternative to conventional ADME/Tox models: • Proliferating without being immortalized • Available in virtually unlimited amounts • Retaining primary donor characteristics • >90 % attachment efficiency • Available from multiple donors • Cytotoxicity qualified • Genotoxicity qualified • Express drug transporters • CYP induction qualified Exhibitors & maps Contact: Marion Dumitraskovic Medicyte GmbH Im Neuenheimer Feld 581 69120 Heidelberg Germany Phone: +49 6221 72925-34 E-Mail: sales@medicyte.com Web: www.medicyte.com 163 Booth 25/26: WIL Research WIL Research is a global CRO dedicated to listening to customer needs. We custom design product safety toxicological research, bioanalytical, & formulation services for pharmaceutical, biotechnology, chemical, agrochemical, & food companies. WIL Research also recently acquired Ricerca Biosciences’ pharmaceutical services business located in Lyon, France. The addition of the 18,000-square meter facility fortifies WIL Research’s service offerings in Europe, strengthens its nonclinical safety assessment capability, and expands its portfolio of innovative specialty services Over the past 45 years, the Lyon facility has developed a strong scientific reputation with European pharmaceutical clients in safety pharmacology and specialized services including continuous infusion and developmental and reproductive toxicology. With approximately 1,200 staff worldwide and 63,000 square meters of laboratory space, located throughout the world, WIL Research offers technological expertise, flexible study design, & quality results. Contact: WIL Research 1407 George Road Ashland Ohio, 44805 United States of America Phone: +1-419-289-8700 Web: www.wilresearch.com Booth 27: WUXI AppTec St. Paul, MN and Suzhou, China – WuXi AppTec provides a full-range of in vivo and in vitro preclinical safety evaluation studies which are part of our integrated portfolio of drug discovery and development services. By focusing on quality, scientific expertise, flexibility and responsiveness, WuXi partners with our Sponsors to provide a wide range of IND/NDA enabling toxicology and laboratory services that meet global regulatory standards. Our services are designed to help our worldwide customers shorten the time and lower the cost of drug and medical device R&D through cost-effective and efficient outsourcing solutions. Contact: WuXi AppTec (Suzhou) Co., Ltd. 1318 Wuzhong Avenue Wuzhong District Suzhou 215104 China Phone: +86 (512) 6883-7321 Fax: +86 (512) 6883-7303 Web: www.wuxiapptec.com 164 Booth 28/29: CiToxLAB CiToxLAB is an international CRO (France, Canada, Denmark and Hungary) that offers non clinical in vitro and in vivo safety studies. World-wide based pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies take advantage of more than 40 years of experience and experience in toxicology studies in rodents, dogs, primates and minipigs, inhalation and infusion studies, safety and general pharmacology, genetic toxicology, genomics, reproductive toxicology, immunotoxicology, pathology, juvenile studies and carcinogenicity testing, along with ADME and bioanalysis. Our facilities are GLP and AAALAC certified in order to provide full non-clinical development programs in support of IND and later-stage regulatory submissions. Contact our experts at www.citoxlab.com. Web: www.citoxlab.com Booth 30: CXR Biosciences CXR Biosciences uses its collaborative approach and toxicological expertise to help customers of all sizes solve issues relating to the safety of compounds or selection of drug candidates. CXR Biosciences offers tailored preclinical services in the areas of investigative toxicology, exploratory & discovery toxicology and drug development. Our customers include leading pharmaceutical, agrochemical, chemical and biotechnology companies. CXR is located in Dundee, Scotland, United Kingdom. Exhibitors & maps Contact: Carol Ann Sutton, Business Support Manager CXR Biosciences Ltd 2 James Lindsay Place Dundee DD1 5JJ Scotland Phone: +44 1382 432163 Fax: +44 1382 432153 E-Mail:info@cxrbiosciences.com Web: www.cxrbiosciences.com 165 Booth 31: TierPathologisches Labor Dr. Helmut Laaff Animal pathology with a clear aim – Dr. Laaff’s AnimalPathology Laboratory is a privately owned company, active as a histology laboratory for over 20 years; our partners include surgeons and other practicing physicians, universities and research institutes. This experience forms the basis of our work in animal pathology, and we have a clear corporate policy: we offer our clients rapid and efficient service at reliable conditions. Dr. Laaff’s AnimalPathology Laboratory is one of the few GLP-certified, privately owned and managed laboratories in Europe. We can thus offer a quality assurance system whose excellence is recognized in all OECD countries. Contact: TierPathologisches Labor Dr. Helmut Laaff Sasbacher Strasse 10 79111 Freiburg Germany Phone: +49 761 120 3626 Fax: +49 761 120 3615 E-Mail:info@tpl-freiburg.de Web:www.tpl-freiburg.de Booth 32: Rhenovia Pharma RhenoviaPharma is a biotechnology company specialized in the development of innovative solutions to improve the prevention and the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases of the central/peripheral nervous system. Rhenovia approaches the complexity of biological systems with a unique technology of modeling and simulation of the neuronal communication mechanism, from molecular/ cellular level up to neuronal network. If its biosimulation technology primarily applies to the discovery of new medications, it has been oriented towards the toxicological field too regarding the urgent need for the development of innovative technologies aiming at detecting early enough the risks for the population to exposure to neurotoxic agents. Contact: Dr Serge Bischoff, CEO Rhenovia Pharma 20c rue de Chemnitz 68200 Mulhouse France Phone: +33 3 89 32 11 80 Fax: +33 3 89 55 51 45 Web: www.rhenovia.com 166 Booth 33: Toxi-Coop Toxi-Coop performs GLP-compliant pre-clinical and regulatory in vivo and in vitro testing of pharmaceuticals, medical devices, chemicals (REACH), agrochemicals, cosmetics, biocides, food ingredients/additives. Services include acute, repeated dose and chronic toxicology, genetic toxicology, ecotoxicology, reproductive toxicology testings in a broad range of species. Our staff has typically 10 or more years of expertise with the studies. The services fulfill high quality requirements and are delivered on time at competitive prices. We meet the criterias of expertise, flexibility and timeliness. Contact: Dr. Josef P. Magyar, Director Global Business Development Toxi-Coop Research Services, BD Weltistrasse 11 5000 Aarau Switzerland Phone: +41 (0)62 535 535 4 Mobile: +41 (0)79 771 61 96 E-Mail: jmagyar@toxicoop.ch Web: www.toxicoop.ch Booth 34/35: Harlan Laboratories Harlan Laboratories is a global provider of non-clinical contract research, research models, animal diets, and services to the pharmaceutical, biotech, medical device, agrochemical and chemical industries, including academic and government organizations. We focus on providing customers with products and services to optimize the discovery and safety of new medicines and compounds. Exhibitors & maps Contact: Harlan Laboratories Ltd. Zelgliweg 1 4452 Itingen Switzerland Phone: +41 (0)61 975 11 11 Fax: +41 (0)61 971 52 84 E-Mail: crs.eu@harlan.com Web: www.harlan.com 167 Booth 36: Myriad RBM Myriad RBM, Inc. is the world’s leading multiplexed immunoassay testing laboratory, providing comprehensive protein biomarker services based on its Multi-Analyte Profiling (MAP) technology platform. This platform provides pre-clinical and clinical researchers with reproducible and quantitative data for a few or hundreds of proteins in a cost-effective manner. To learn more, visit www.myriadrbm.com. Phone: +1 866 726-6277 E-Mail: info@myriadrbm.com Web: www.myriadrbm.com Booth 37: Enzo Life Sciences Enzo Life Sciences is a recognized leader in technologies for genomics, cellular analysis, immunoassays, assay development, proteostasis, epigenetics, and small molecule chemistry. Our diverse portfolio of fluorescent labels & dyes, ELISA and enzyme activity assays, biochemicals, antibodies, and proteins serves the life sciences research, drug development, and clinical research markets. Our products facilitate discovery in cancer, neuroscience, cellular stress, immunology, toxicology, bioprocess optimization, screening and lead identification, and clinical diagnostics. We are scientists enabling scientists™. Contact: Enzo Life Sciences (ELS) AG Industriestrasse 17 CH-4415 Lausen Switzerland Phone: +41 61 926 89 89 Fax: +41 61 926 89 79 E-Mail: info-ch@enzolifesciences.com Web: www.enzolifesciences.com 168 Booth 38: Elsevier Explore Elsevier’s high-impact toxicology journals and books. Learn the latest in research news from journals such as Toxicology and Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology. Our exciting books on display include A Comprehensive Guide to Toxicology in Preclinical Drug Development, Haschek, Rousseaux’s Handbook of Toxicologic Pathology and Computational Toxicology. Discover our electronic research and solution tools, ScienceDirect and PharmaPendium. Contact: Jolanda Grondman-de Rijk, Exhibitions Department ELSEVIER B.V. Radarweg 29 1043 NX Amsterdam The Netherlands Phone: +31 20 485 3798 Fax: +31 20 485 3228 E-Mail: j.grondman@elsevier.com Web: www.store.elsevier.com Booth 39: InnoStar Founded in 1993, Shanghai InnoStar Biotech Co., Ltd (also known as National Shanghai Center for New Drug Safety Evaluation and Research) is a leading preclinical CRO in China. As the first CFDA- and OECD-certified Chinese GLP lab, we provide a full spectrum of the preclinical safety evaluation including GLP studies in general toxicology, genetic toxicology, reproductive & developmental toxicology and safety pharmacology, early drug screening, toxicity prediction, and regulatory services. We have successfully submitted safety studies and IND packages to both CFDA and US FDA and have evaluated over 400 drug candidates to date (348 small molecules, 62 biologics and 18 herbs). Exhibitors & maps Contact: Joanne Jiang, Marketing/Project Manager Phone: +86 21-5080-0333, ext. 117 E-Mail: xjiang@ncdser.com Web: www.ncdser-innostar.com 169 Booth 40: Accelera Accelera as Drug Development Partner of choice collaborates with international pharmaceutical & biotech companies providing optimal quality at competitive prices. We offer a unique range of integrated and tailored services: • Attrition Reducing Technologies • IND-enabling packages • Translational sciences • Regulatory Toxicology (incl. NHP) • Assay development for small molecules, biologics and biomarkers • Safety Pharmacology • Developmental and Reproductive Toxicology • Preclinical and Clinical Bioanalysis and PK • ADME studies (incl. preparation of radiolabelled compounds) • Regulatory Consultancy and documentation Accelera is uniquely able to provide mainstream pharma capabilities and experience in response to your preclinical development needs. Contact: Raphaela Schnurbus, Business Development Viale Pasteur 10 – CP 11 20014 Nerviano, Milan Italy Mobile: +39-334-6537744 E-Mail: raphaela.schnurbus@accelera.org Web: www.accelera.org Booth 41: MPI Research MPI Research, with global headquarters in Mattawan, Michigan, provides discovery, safety evaluation, bioanalytical, surgical services, medical device evaluation, and analytical services to the biopharmaceutical, medical device, animal health, and chemical industries. We exceed expectations through consistency and quality, with a commitment to communication and innovation, delivering benefits throughout all phases of development. MPI Research is a high-quality organization that is committed to bringing safer and more effective products to the world. Learn how we can go beyond for you at www.mpiresearch.com. Contact: Phone: +1 269 668-3336 Fax: +1 269 668-4151 E-Mail:info@mpiresearch.com Web: www.mpiresearch.com 170 Booth 42/43: RTC RTC leading CRO in Europe with 40 years of experience providing high quality in nonclinical research to national and international pharmaceutical companies and health-related organizations. RTC has been fully accredited by AAALAC. The company offers a full range of experimental and consultancy services, performed by experts in the development and safety assessment of: Pharmaceuticals (Small molecules, Biologicals), Medical Devices, Veterinary Drugs, Food Products, Chemicals, Agrochemicals, Biocides. Contact: RTC S.p.A. via Tito Speri 12/14 00040 Pomezia, RM Italy Phone: +39 06-91095.1 Fax: +39 06-9105737 Web: www.rtc.it Booth 44/45: BioReliance BioReliance is a leading contract services company in the area of product safety. We specialize in genetic toxicology screening and GLP assays, as well as transgenic mouse carcinogenicity testing. Other services offered include Tk/Pk analysis, clinical pathology, and animal health assessment. BioReliance has all the experience and expertise needed to design and execute a toxicology testing program to meet your needs. Exhibitors & maps Contact: Des Cave, European Account Manager, Toxicology Phone: +44 1368 860 398 Mobile: +44 7771 864 986 E-Mail: des.cave@bioreliance.com Web: www.bioreliance.com 171 Booth 46: Instem Instem is a leading provider of pre-clinical IT solutions to the Life Sciences. Instem offers Provantis®, a fully integrated tox/path software solution. Provantis enables data to be collected, analysed and shared across an organisation, from compound receipt through to final report production. Provantis serves organisations of all sizes with on-site or Software as a Service (SaaS) solutions. Instem also offers submit™, the proven SEND solution for converting, viewing, sharing and exchanging study data and SENDView™, a tool that simplifies the review of SEND datasets. Visit booth 46 to find out more. Contact: Julie Jones Stone, Staffordshire ST15 0SD United Kingdom Phone: +44 1785 825600 E-Mail: Julie.jones@instem.com Web: www.instem.com Booth 47: SNBL SNBL offers toxicology and pharmacology research services in a range of study models with a specialisation in non-human primates, including reproduction toxicology and disease modelling, supported by comprehensive in-house analytical and pathology services, including analytical cytology and immunology. Contact: Stephen Kern PO Box 182 Wetherby, West Yorkshire LS22 7TB United Kingdom Phone: +44 1937 587345 E-Mail: snbl.europe@dial.pipex.com Web: www.snbl.com 172 Booth 48: N ational Institute of Technology and Evaluation (NITE) National Institute of Technology and Evaluation (NITE) is an Incorporated Administrative Agency in Japan for supporting economic and industrial administrations such as chemical management, consumer product safety, biotechnology and accreditation from a technological perspective. NITE has developed Hazard Evaluation Support System (HESS) for supporting the evaluation of repeated dose toxicity by category approach, which was developed by a Japanese national project, and has released for free last year. In our booth, we will provide introduction of HESS and user support. E-Mail: hess@nite.go.jp Web: www.safe.nite.go.jp/english/kasinn/qsar/hess-e.html Booth 49: Xenometrix Xenometrix introduces a new product line including different ex vivo human skins “XenoSkin H”. Xenometrix also offers the bioassay with yeast cells “Xenoscreen YES/YAS” with stably transfected human estrogen and androgen receptors detecting compounds with agonistic and antagonistic hormonal activity on both receptors in the same kit. Standardized, ready to use Ames mutagenicity assay kits “Ames MPF” and “Ames II” in an automatable liquid microplate format (microfluctuation assay) with significantly less compound consumption, less S9 and less hands on time are presented. Genotoxic compounds can also be detected within 6 hrs using the SOS response-based umuC Easy kit. www.xenometrix.ch Exhibitors & maps Web: 173 Booth 50: Brixham Environmental Laboratory Brixham Environmental Laboratory (BEL) located in Devon, England provides a specialised service to the chemical industry. BEL can perform the full range of environmental testing required for REACH registration, plus Chemical Safety Report preparation. We offer innovative approaches together with intelligent laboratory based testing required for assessing environmental effects, ecotoxicity and environmental fate of new and existing substances in support of the necessary notification dossiers. Our laboratory expertise ranges from standard notification studies to collaborative research programmes. We offer modelling, consultancy and information services, plus analysis for Occupational Exposure Limits, and analysis of biological samples with metabolite identification. Contact: Brixham Environmental Laboratory Freshwater Quarry Brixham, Devon TQ5 8BA United Kingdom Phone: +44 (0)1803 884 400 (Business queries) +44 (0)1803 882 882 (Main switchboard) E-Mail: infomaster.brixham@astrazeneca.com Web: www.brixham-lab.com Booth 51: Leadscope Leadscope licenses high quality statistical-based QSAR models developed through our Research Collaboration Agreement with the U.S. Food & Drug Administration. Leadscope’s Genetox QSAR Suite meets the requirements of ICH M7 draft Guidance on testing of impurities for statistical-based models. Leadscope’s models follow the validation principles set forth by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). Leadscope’s QSAR models allow scientists to predict the potential toxicity of pharmaceuticals (including impurities), cosmetics, foods and chemical products. Leadscope’s models provide additional supportive evidence through analog searching of Leadscope’s SAR Genetox database. Reports are automatically generated. The QSAR models are easy-to-use and inexpensive. Contact: Leadscope, Inc. 1393 Dublin Road Columbus, Ohio 43215 United States of America Loftus Lucas, CEO Phone: +1 614 340-1399 E-Mail: llucas@leadscope.com Dr. Glenn Myatt Phone: +1 614 675-3731 E-Mail:gmyatt@leadscope.com 174 Booth 52: TRINOVA Biochem TRINOVA Biochem offers products for mutagenicity tests: Salmonella and E. Coli WP2 mutagenicity tests (Ames Test) comply with OECD Guideline 471, Fluctuation tests (Moltox® FT™ tests) and BioReliance Ames IITM test kit. Umu Genotoxicity Test and Media for water testing. All reagents for Genetic and in vitro Toxicology in European stock: MUTAZMYE™ complete S9 incl. all Co-Factors, lyophilized and frozen metabolic activation products S9 (human, rat, mouse and hamster), Salmonella and E-Coli tester strains, Minimal Glucose Agar Plates, Controlchem™ positive control chemicals, NADPH Regenerating System Reagents. E-Mail:info@trinova.de Web:www.trinova.de Booth 53: TAP Biosystems TAP Biosystems provides advanced automated systems for cell culture scale-up and manufacture. TAP will be showcasing the RAFT™ system for producing biomimetic 3D cell cultures in standard plate formats. TAP’s RAFT Development Director Grant Cameron will be available to discuss the use of RAFT in toxicology screens and studies. Contact: Europe & Rest of World North America TAP Biosystems York Way Royston, Herts, SG8 5WY United Kingdom Phone: +44 1763 227200 Fax: +44 1763 227201 TAP Biosystems 20 Montchanin Road, Suite 10 Greenville DE 19807 United States of America +1 302 478 9060 +1 302 478 9575 Exhibitors & maps E-Mail:info@tapbiosystems.com Web: www.tapbiosystems.com 175 Booth 54: CERB CERB is an international preclinical Contract Research Organization. CERB provides research and development services for pharmaceutical, chemical and agro-chemical industries in toxicology, pharmacology and analytical chemistry. CERB offers safety evaluation in toxicology and pharmacology as required for Phase 1 clinical trials. CERB is highly specialized in cardiovascular pharmacology, telemetry, electrophysiology and central nervous system. In addition CERB provides numerous models for evaluation of primary and secondary pharmacology functions in other fields. In order to keep up with the most recent, interlinked advances in biomedical sciences, CERB has elaborated a network of experts being outstanding in their respective supplementary working disciplines. Contact: Dr. Serge Richard Scientific and Managing Director Phone: +33 (248) 230023 E-mail:serge.richard@cerb.fr Web:www.cerb.fr Booth 55: IUTOX The mission of the International Union of Toxicology (IUTOX) is to improve human health through the science and practice of toxicology world-wide. IUTOX achieves its vision by fostering international scientific cooperation for the global acquisition and utilization of knowledge in toxicology for improvement of the health of humans and their environment. IUTOX seeks to increase knowledge of toxicological issues and extend this knowledge to developing societies and nations. Founded in 1980, IUTOX has 61 affiliated societies representing six continents and over 20,000 toxicologists from industry, academia and government; offering a diverse and challenging perspective on issues relating to the profession. E-mail: iutoxhq@iutox.org Web:www.iutox.org 176 Booth 56: vivo Science vivo Science is a privately owned, independent CRO focused on toxicology and immunologic studies, as well as adventitious virus testing. Toxicity and safety testing of chemicals and new drug candidates will be performed according to the appropriate guidelines of the regulating agencies such as OECD, FDA or EMA. These include, among others, the panel of OECD toxicity tests (REACH) or testing for immunotoxicity (ICH-S8) and immunogenicity (ICH-S6). vivo Science offers assays as required by guidelines using both in vitro and in vivo methods that are GLP-compliant. vivo Science also performs the immunological testing and standard toxicity testing for medical products. Web:www.vivoscience.de Booth 57: Ingenuity Systems Founded in 1998 by Stanford graduate students, Ingenuity® Systems is a leading provider of biomedical information and analysis solutions for the exploration, interpretation and analysis of complex biological systems. Ingenuity has invested years in the innovation of semantic search, ontology, and software development to create ground breaking technologies that help researchers more effectively search, explore, visualize, analyze and interpret biological and chemical findings related to genes, proteins and small molecules. In April 2013, Ingenuity Systems became part of the QIAGEN family, and together are developing a combined NGS sample to insight workflow. Exhibitors & maps Web:www.ingenuity.com 177 Exhibitors Booth:Company: Booth:Company: 40 Accelera S.r.l 6 ACEA Biosciences Inc. 17 ADR-AC GmbH 11 Bertin Pharma 2Bioagri 44/45BioReliance 50 Brixham Environmental Laboratory 23 BSL Bioservice GmbH 3B’SYS 6 Bucher Biotec AG 8 Cellular Dynamics Intl. 54CERB 11 Chemie Brunschwig 28/29 CiToxLAB 18 Comet Biotech AS 19Confarma 4 Cultex Laboratories GmbH 30 CXR Biosciences 10Cyprotex 16 EBSCO Expert Publishing 38Elsevier 37 Enzo Life Sciences 14 EPL Archives 15 European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) 1European Society of Toxicology (Eurotox 2014) 34/35 Harlan Laboratories Ltd. 7 Huntingdon Life Sciences 57 Ingenuity Systems 39Innostar 10 InSphero AG 9 Instech Solomon 46Instem 22 Institute of Industrial Organic Chemistry (IPO) 55IUTOX 51 Leadscope Inc. 5 Lhasa Ltd. 21MatTek 24Medicyte 12 MicroMatrices Associates 41 MPI Research 36 Myriad RBM Inc. 48National Institute of Technology and Evaluation (NITE) 13 Philips Digital Pathology 42/43 Research Toxicology Centre (RTC) 32 Rhenovia Pharma 47 SNBL 19 Swiss BioAnalytics 53 TAP Biosystems 31 Tierpathologisches Labor Dr. Helmut Laaff 33Toxi-Coop 52 Trinova Biochem GmbH 20 Vitrocell Systems GmbH 56 vivo Science GmbH 25/26 WIL Research 27 WuXi AppTec 49Xenometrix 178 Exhibitors Booth Map Club Casino Concert Hall 50 49 48 54 55 56 57 45 46 40 F&B Zone 33 34 32 35 31 44 47 39 41 38 42 37 43 23 36 30 22 21 29 28 27 26 25 24 52 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 13 53 51 12 Entrance 1 F&B Zone 2 11 3 9 8 7 6 5 4 Exhibitors & maps 10 179 EUROTOX Congress Awards 1. Young Scientist Poster Awards EUROTOX Gerhard-Zbinden Award (EUR 2000) for drug-oriented toxicological research: • The winner will receive EUR 1000 in cash at the congress. • The winner may use the remaining EUR 1000 to cover expenses (hotel, accommodation, transfer, etc) to attend the successive congress edition. The claim should be made directly to the EUROTOX Treasurer using the form obtained from the EUROTOX Secretariat (secretariat@eurotox.com). ECETOC (European Centre for Ecotoxicology and Toxicology of Chemicals) Award (EUR 2000) for toxicological research into mechanisms and risk assessment: • The winner will receive EUR 1000 in cash at the congress. • The winner may use the remaining EUR 1000 to cover expenses (hotel, accommodation, transfer, etc) to attend the successive congress edition. The claim should be made directly to the EUROTOX Treasurer using the form obtained from the EUROTOX Secretariat (secretariat@eurotox.com). The registration fee for Young Scientist Award recipients to attend the successive congress will be waived by the organiser of the next congress. To be eligible for these awards, the candidate must • be the presenting author of the abstract. • under 35 years of age as of December 31, 2013. • present a photo ID on site at the registration desk. • present a letter of recommendation written by his/her supervisor. • have successfully paid the congress registration fee. 180 2. The Bo Holmstedt Memorial Foundation (BHMF) Poster Award A Bo Holmstedt Poster Award is awarded for describing a feasible method for the solution of a toxicological problem under maximum respect of the 3R-principle (Reduce, Refine, Replace animal testing). Any author who has an abstract accepted for poster presentation in the topic “In vitro toxicology” will be automatically eligible to be candidate to the award. The winner will receive the award in the amount of EUR 1000 in cash at the congress. 3. ESTIV Poster Award ESTIV (European Society for Toxicology in vitro) Award (EUR 500) for in vitro/in silico Toxicology: • The winner will receive EUR 500 (per bank transfer after the Congress). • The winner will be entitled to one year (2014) free ESTIV-membership, with all its benefits. • The winner must contact the ESTIV treasurer (treasurer@estiv.org) after the congress to claim the award. Eligibility criteria for the ESTIV award: • All posters presented in the sessions “in vitro Toxicology” or “Computational Toxicology” • The winner will be selected based on scientific merit as judged by a committee assigned by the ESTIV scientific board. • The winner will be the presenting author of the selected poster. Exhibitors & maps • The winner (or a clearly assigned representative) must be present at the EUROTOX closing ceremony. 181 182