Developmental and organ-specific toxicity of cucurbit[7]uril: In vivo study on zebrafish models

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Abstract

The macrocyclic molecular container cucurbit[7]uril (CB[7]), the most water-soluble homologue in the cucurbit[n]uril family (n = 5-8, 10, 14), has been evaluated for its in vivo toxicity profile, including its developmental toxicity such as its effect on hatching, growth and survival, as well as its potential organ-specific toxicities such as cardiotoxicity, hepatotoxicity, and locomotion and behavioral toxicity, using zebrafish models. The results revealed that CB[7] has measureable cardiotoxicity and locomotion and behavioral toxicity at concentrations of ∼500 μM or higher, and negligible developmental and hepatotoxicity at concentrations up to 750 μM, although extended exposure to CB[7] in the 500-750 μM concentration range induced the mortality of tested fish. These results demonstrate for the first time with live in vivo animal models that CB[7] has relatively low developmental and organic specific toxicity, and support further exploration of the use of CB[7] in biomedical research at sub-toxic concentrations.

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Chen, H., Chan, J. Y. W., Yang, X., Wyman, I. W., Bardelang, D., MacArtney, D. H., … Wang, R. (2015). Developmental and organ-specific toxicity of cucurbit[7]uril: In vivo study on zebrafish models. RSC Advances, 5(38), 30067–30074. https://doi.org/10.1039/c5ra04335b

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