The use of cell cultures as an alternative to live animals in acute fish toxicity testing

The toxicity of various chemicals was investigated in vitro and in vivo in carp ('Cyprinus carpio') and tilapia ('Oreochromis spilurus'). In order to study tilapia in vitro it was necessary to establish and characterise a cell line. A fibroblastic cell line, called TSB cells was...

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Main Author: Parkinson, Christopher
Published: Kingston University 1988
Subjects:
611
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.383734
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-3837342019-01-29T03:18:09ZThe use of cell cultures as an alternative to live animals in acute fish toxicity testingParkinson, Christopher1988The toxicity of various chemicals was investigated in vitro and in vivo in carp ('Cyprinus carpio') and tilapia ('Oreochromis spilurus'). In order to study tilapia in vitro it was necessary to establish and characterise a cell line. A fibroblastic cell line, called TSB cells was derived tilapia brain. A cytotoxicity assay was devised utilising cultures of EPC cells (of carp epithelioma origin) and TSB cells. The effects of the test chemicals were assessed quantitatively by protein assay or lysosomal uptake of Neutral Red dye, and subjectively by light microscopy. The in vivo toxicities of the same chemicals were studied in static 96h LC[sub]50 bioassays. The responses by carp and tilapia to the effects of the chemicals were recorded. In addition, histopathological examination was carried out on a number of tissues of fish employed in the LC[sub]50 tests. From these examinations, further information as to the nature of toxicity caused by each chemical in carp and tilapia was produced. Correlations between in vitro and in vivo acute toxicities were generally good, although the in vitro assays lacked comparable sensitivity. It is therefore not possible at this stage to adequately replace live animals with cell cultures in toxicity testing. However, the results obtained here clearly establish that the use of cell cultures in toxicity assessment programmes could lead to a reduction in the numbers of fish being used. This investigation has also clearly identified the avenues future research has to explore if the use of live fish is to be minimised.611Human anatomy & human histologyKingston Universityhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.383734http://eprints.kingston.ac.uk/20348/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 611
Human anatomy & human histology
spellingShingle 611
Human anatomy & human histology
Parkinson, Christopher
The use of cell cultures as an alternative to live animals in acute fish toxicity testing
description The toxicity of various chemicals was investigated in vitro and in vivo in carp ('Cyprinus carpio') and tilapia ('Oreochromis spilurus'). In order to study tilapia in vitro it was necessary to establish and characterise a cell line. A fibroblastic cell line, called TSB cells was derived tilapia brain. A cytotoxicity assay was devised utilising cultures of EPC cells (of carp epithelioma origin) and TSB cells. The effects of the test chemicals were assessed quantitatively by protein assay or lysosomal uptake of Neutral Red dye, and subjectively by light microscopy. The in vivo toxicities of the same chemicals were studied in static 96h LC[sub]50 bioassays. The responses by carp and tilapia to the effects of the chemicals were recorded. In addition, histopathological examination was carried out on a number of tissues of fish employed in the LC[sub]50 tests. From these examinations, further information as to the nature of toxicity caused by each chemical in carp and tilapia was produced. Correlations between in vitro and in vivo acute toxicities were generally good, although the in vitro assays lacked comparable sensitivity. It is therefore not possible at this stage to adequately replace live animals with cell cultures in toxicity testing. However, the results obtained here clearly establish that the use of cell cultures in toxicity assessment programmes could lead to a reduction in the numbers of fish being used. This investigation has also clearly identified the avenues future research has to explore if the use of live fish is to be minimised.
author Parkinson, Christopher
author_facet Parkinson, Christopher
author_sort Parkinson, Christopher
title The use of cell cultures as an alternative to live animals in acute fish toxicity testing
title_short The use of cell cultures as an alternative to live animals in acute fish toxicity testing
title_full The use of cell cultures as an alternative to live animals in acute fish toxicity testing
title_fullStr The use of cell cultures as an alternative to live animals in acute fish toxicity testing
title_full_unstemmed The use of cell cultures as an alternative to live animals in acute fish toxicity testing
title_sort use of cell cultures as an alternative to live animals in acute fish toxicity testing
publisher Kingston University
publishDate 1988
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.383734
work_keys_str_mv AT parkinsonchristopher theuseofcellculturesasanalternativetoliveanimalsinacutefishtoxicitytesting
AT parkinsonchristopher useofcellculturesasanalternativetoliveanimalsinacutefishtoxicitytesting
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