1.Cellular Toxicity of Surfactants Used as Herbicide Additives.
Ho Yeon SONG ; Young Hee KIM ; Su Jin SEOK ; Hyo Wook GIL ; Jong Oh YANG ; Eun Young LEE ; Sae Yong HONG
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2012;27(1):3-9
The cellular toxicities of surfactants, a solvent, and an antifreeze that are included in herbicide formulations were assessed by measuring their effects on membrane integrity, metabolic activity, mitochondrial activity, and total protein synthesis rate in a cell culture. Polyethylene glycol, propylene glycol, and monoethylene glycol exhibited no cellular toxicity even at a high concentration of 100 mM. Sodium lauryl ether sulfate and polyoxyethylene lauryl ether significantly damaged the membrane, disturbed cellular metabolic activity, and decreased mitochondrial activity and the protein synthesis rate; however, their toxicity was far below those of the severely toxic chemicals at comparable concentrations. The severely toxic category included polyoxypropylene glycol block copolymer, polyoxyethylene tallow amine, and polyoxyethylene lauryl amine ether. These surfactants were cytotoxic between 3.125 microM and 100 microM in a dose-dependent manner. However, the toxicity graph of concentration vs toxicity had a point of inflection at 25 microM. The slope of the toxicity graph was gentle when the concentration was below 25 microM and steep when the concentration was greater than 25 microM. In conclusion, our results suggest that the toxicity of surfactants be taken care of pertinent treatment of acute herbicide intoxication.
Animals
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Cell Line
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Cell Membrane/drug effects
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Herbicides/*chemistry
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Mice
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Mitochondria/drug effects
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Polyethylene Glycols/toxicity
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Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate/toxicity
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Surface-Active Agents/chemistry/*toxicity
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Toxicity Tests