The study of interactions for those substances which tend to accumulate in food and affect the nervous system appears to be a fundamental point to characterize the combined exposure in vitro. In this study we included two food contaminants which are known neurotoxicants: methyl-mercury (Me-Hg) and the ortho-substituted PCB 153. PC12 cells were treated with Me-Hg (range 1e-7, 2e-6 M) and PCB153 (range 1e-5, 4e-4 M) in single and combined synchronous experiments and a mathematical model was set up according to the Loewe additivity criterion to evaluate the level of interaction between toxicants, using viability as end-point. At some concentrations (Me-Hg 5e-7 M and PCB153 1e-4 and 2e-4 M; Me-Hg 1e-6M and PCB153 5e-5 M; Me-Hg 1e-7 M and PCB153 4e-4 M), a statistically significant antagonist effect was observed. No interaction was observed for other combinations. The analysis of other toxicological parameters known to be modified in single exposure experiments (TBARS and intra-cellular dopamine) confirmed the viability results. The results of our work represent a starting point to generate novel information on the interactions between PCB153 and Me-Hg in vitro, as well as a new relevant experimental and mathematical approach useful to investigate the effects of different toxicant mixtures.

Antagonistic effects of Methyl-Mercury and PCB153 on PC12 cells after a combined and simultaneous exposure / M. V., Vettori; Goldoni, Matteo; A., Caglieri; Poli, Diana; Folesani, Giuseppina; S., Ceccatelli; Mutti, Antonio. - In: FOOD AND CHEMICAL TOXICOLOGY. - ISSN 0278-6915. - 44:9(2006), pp. 1505-1512. [10.1016/j.fct.2006.04.009]

Antagonistic effects of Methyl-Mercury and PCB153 on PC12 cells after a combined and simultaneous exposure

GOLDONI, Matteo;POLI, Diana;FOLESANI, GIUSEPPINA;MUTTI, Antonio
2006-01-01

Abstract

The study of interactions for those substances which tend to accumulate in food and affect the nervous system appears to be a fundamental point to characterize the combined exposure in vitro. In this study we included two food contaminants which are known neurotoxicants: methyl-mercury (Me-Hg) and the ortho-substituted PCB 153. PC12 cells were treated with Me-Hg (range 1e-7, 2e-6 M) and PCB153 (range 1e-5, 4e-4 M) in single and combined synchronous experiments and a mathematical model was set up according to the Loewe additivity criterion to evaluate the level of interaction between toxicants, using viability as end-point. At some concentrations (Me-Hg 5e-7 M and PCB153 1e-4 and 2e-4 M; Me-Hg 1e-6M and PCB153 5e-5 M; Me-Hg 1e-7 M and PCB153 4e-4 M), a statistically significant antagonist effect was observed. No interaction was observed for other combinations. The analysis of other toxicological parameters known to be modified in single exposure experiments (TBARS and intra-cellular dopamine) confirmed the viability results. The results of our work represent a starting point to generate novel information on the interactions between PCB153 and Me-Hg in vitro, as well as a new relevant experimental and mathematical approach useful to investigate the effects of different toxicant mixtures.
2006
Antagonistic effects of Methyl-Mercury and PCB153 on PC12 cells after a combined and simultaneous exposure / M. V., Vettori; Goldoni, Matteo; A., Caglieri; Poli, Diana; Folesani, Giuseppina; S., Ceccatelli; Mutti, Antonio. - In: FOOD AND CHEMICAL TOXICOLOGY. - ISSN 0278-6915. - 44:9(2006), pp. 1505-1512. [10.1016/j.fct.2006.04.009]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11381/1645465
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