Artigo Revisado por pares

INVESTIGATION OF IN VITRO TOXICITY OF JET FUELS JP-8 AND JET A

2000; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 23; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1081/dct-100100115

ISSN

1525-6014

Autores

Geraldine M. Grant, Kara M. Shaffer, Winfred Y. Kao, David A. Stenger, Joseph J. Pancrazio,

Tópico(s)

Cardiac electrophysiology and arrhythmias

Resumo

The in vitro cytotoxicity and electrophysiological toxicity of Jet Propulsion-8 (JP-8 jet fuel) on four cell types: H4IIE liver cell line, NIH Swiss 3T3 cell line, neuroblastoma × glioma NG108-15 cells, and embryonic hippocampal neurons were investigated. H4IIE cells exposed to Jet A (a commercial fuel) and JP-8 demonstrated identical toxicity with an IC50 of 12.6 ± 0.4 μg/ml for the two fuels. Comparison of H4IIE and NIH/3T3 toxicity to JP-8 revealed that NIH/3T3 cells were more sensitive to JP-8 than H4IIE cells, with an IC50 8.5 ± 0.1 μg/ml. JP-8 exposure for the hippocampal neurons proved to be highly toxic (IC50 of <2 μg/ml), while in contrast, the NG108-15 cells were much less sensitive. Electrophysiological examination of NG108-15 cells showed that administration of JP-8 at 1 μg/ml did not alter significantly any of the electrophysiological properties. However, exposure to JP-8 at 10 μg/ml during a current stimulus of +46 pA decreased the amplitude of the action potential to 83 ± 7% (n = 4), the rate of rise, dV/dtMAX to 50 ± 8% (n = 4), and the spiking rate to 25 ± 11% (n = 4) of the corresponding control levels. These results demonstrate JP-8 induced cytotoxic varies among cell types. The possible mechanisms underlying these observations are presented.

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