4.5 Article

Oxidative stress resulting from exposure of a human salivary gland cells to paraoxon: An in vitro model for organophosphate oral exposure

Journal

TOXICOLOGY IN VITRO
Volume 28, Issue 5, Pages 715-721

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.tiv.2014.01.009

Keywords

Paraoxon; HSG cells; Oxidative stress; Organophosphate; MTT; DNA fragmentation

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [UO1ES016102, P30NS0 55022]
  2. National Center for Research Resources [P20RR017670, P20RR015583]

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Organophosphate (OP) compounds are used as insecticides, acaricides, and chemical agents and share a common neurotoxic mechanism of action. The biochemical alterations leading to many of the deleterious effects have been studied in neuronal cell lines, however, non-neuronal toxic effects of OPs are far less well characterized in vitro, and specifically in cell lines representing oral routes of exposure. To address this void, the human salivary gland (HSG) cell line, representing likely interactions in the oral cavity, was exposed to the representative OP paraoxon (PX; O,O-diethyl-p-nitrophenoxy phosphate) over a range of concentrations (0.01-100 mu M) and analyzed for cytotoxicity. PX induced cytotoxicity in HSG cells at most of the exposure concentrations as revealed by MTT assay, however, the release of LDH only occurred at the highest concentration of PX tested (100 mu M) at 48 h. Slight increases in cellular ATP levels were measured in PX-exposed (10 mu M) HSG cells at 24 h. Exposing HSG cells to 10 mu M PX also led to an increase in DNA fragmentation prior to loss of cellular membrane integrity implicating reactive oxygen species (ROS) as a trigger of toxicity. The ROS genes gss, gstm2, gstt2 and sod2 were upregulated, and the presence of superoxide following 10 mu M PX exposure was determined via dihydroethidium fluorescence studies further implicating PX-induced oxidative stress in HSG cells. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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