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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Induction of micronuclei by five pyrethroid insecticides in whole-blood and isolated human lymphocyte cultures.

Five pyrethroid insecticides: cypermethrin, deltamethrin, fenpropathrin, fenvalerate and permethrin, were tested for their ability to induce micronuclei in both whole-blood (WB; three donors) and isolated human lymphocyte (IL, 2 donors) cultures, by using the cytokinesis-block method with 6 micrograms/ml cytochalasin B (Cyt-B). Fenvalerate and permethrin were tested with two different concentrations of Cyt-B (3 and 6 micrograms/ml). At the concentration ranges tested, all the five pyrethroids induced clear dose dependent cytotoxic effects, fenpropathrin being the most toxic. Nuclear division index (NDI) and the newly introduced index of cytotoxicity, the cytokinesis block proliferation index (CBPI), reflected the dose dependency more accurately than the percentage of binucleated cells did. CBPI is similar to NDI except that it estimates the average number of cell divisions that the cell population has gone through, and, therefore, classifies both trinucleate and tetranucleate cells into the same category. Cypermethrin and fenpropathrin slightly increased the number of MN and micronucleated cells in WB lymphocyte cultures from two out of the three donors. Deltamethrin produced a positive response only in WB cultures of one donor and in IL cultures of another donor. Permethrin gave mostly negative results, although it increased the MN frequency in WB cultures of one donor when 6 micrograms/ml Cyt-B was used. Fenvalerate did not significantly induce MN. With certain reservations to the purity and isomer composition of each pesticide, the existing information appears to support the idea that pyrethroid insecticides have a weak (cypermethrin, deltamethrin and fenpropathrin) or nule (fenvalerate and permethrin) genotoxic activity in vitro.[1]

References

  1. Induction of micronuclei by five pyrethroid insecticides in whole-blood and isolated human lymphocyte cultures. Surrallés, J., Xamena, N., Creus, A., Catalán, J., Norppa, H., Marcos, R. Mutat. Res. (1995) [Pubmed]
 
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