## Abstract Three structurally related anticancer drugs, mithramycin, chromomycin A~3~, and olivomycin, showed large unexpected differences (up to more than 1000 fold) in their toxicity towards cultured cells from various species (human, Chinese hamster, Syrian hamster, and mouse). Among the cell t
Species-specific differences in the toxicity of rhodamine 123 toward cultured mammalian cells
β Scribed by Radhey S. Gupta; Anil K. Dudani
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1987
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 724 KB
- Volume
- 130
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9541
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The toxicity of cationic fluorescent dye, rhodamine 123, towards a n u m b e r of independently established cell lines from three different species, namely human, mouse, and Chinese hamster, has been examined. All of the cell lines from any one species that were examined were found to exhibit similar sensitivities towards rhodamine 123 and no appreciable differences were observed between the normal and transformed cell types. However, in comparison to the cells of human origin, mouse and Chinese hamster cell lines exhibited about 10-fold and 70-fold higher resistance, respectively, and these differences appeared to be species related. In contrast to rhodamine 123, no differences in relative toxicities for these cell lines were observed for the structurally related neutral dye, rhodamine B. Fluorescence studies with rhodamine 123 show that in comparison to mouse and Chinese hamster cells, the more sensitive human cells show much higher uptakehinding of the drug, and a good correlation was seen in these studies between the extent of dye uptakeibinding and the relative sensitivities of cell lines to rhodamine 123. These results provide evidence that the observed species-related differences in cellular toxicities are due to differences in the cellular uptake/ binding of the dye.
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