Pyocyanin induced in vitro oxidative damage and its toxicity level in human, fish and insect cell lines for its selective biological applications

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Abstract

Pyocyanin is a redox active phenazine pigment produced by Pseudomonasaeruginosa, with broad antibiotic activity having pharmacological, aquaculture, agriculture and industrial applications. In the present work cytotoxicity induced by pyocyanin is demonstrated in a human embryonic lung epithelial cell line (L-132), a rainbow trout gonad cell line (RTG-2) and a Spodoptera frugiperda pupal ovarian cell line (Sf9). For toxicity evaluation, cellular morphology, mitochondrial function (XTT), membrane leakage of lactate dehydrogenase, neutral red uptake, affinity of electrostatic binding of protein with sulforhodamine B dyes, glucose metabolism, and reactive oxygen species, were assessed. Results showed that higher pyocyanin concentration is required for eliciting cytotoxicity in L-132, RTG-2 and Sf9. The microscopic studies demonstrated that the cell lines exposed to pyocyanin at higher concentrations alone showed morphological changes such as clumping and necrosis. Among the three cell lines L-132 showed the highest response to pyocyanin than the others. In short, pyocyanin application at concentrations ranging from 5 to 10 mg l−1 were not having any pathological effect in eukaryotic systems and can be used as drug of choice in aquaculture against vibrios in lieu of conventional antibiotics and as biocontrol agent against fungal and bacterial pathogens in agriculture. This is besides its industrial and pharmacological applications.

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Priyaja, P., Jayesh, P., Philip, R., & Bright Singh, I. S. (2016). Pyocyanin induced in vitro oxidative damage and its toxicity level in human, fish and insect cell lines for its selective biological applications. Cytotechnology, 68(1), 143–155. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10616-014-9765-5

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