Establishment of Biotesting System to Study Features of Innovative Multifunctional Biotextile

An established biotesting system designed to discover specific features of innovative multifunctional biotextile, encompassing integrated silica dioxide and succinite (Baltic amber) particles, is founded on reproducible, reliable, and relatively fast methods. The main idea starting this study was to...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the Latvian Academy of Sciences. Section B, Natural Sciences Natural Sciences, 2023-08, Vol.77 (3), p.186-192
Hauptverfasser: Grauda, Dace, Butkauskas, Dalius, Vyšniauskienė, Regina, Rančelienė, Vida, KrasņevskA, Nikole, Miķelsone, Andra, Žagata, Kārlis, Gobiņš, Valters, Rashal, Isaak, Rašals, Dāvis, Ignatavičienė, Ieva, Petrosius, Rimantas, Vilcāne, Inese, Ļašenko, Inga
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:An established biotesting system designed to discover specific features of innovative multifunctional biotextile, encompassing integrated silica dioxide and succinite (Baltic amber) particles, is founded on reproducible, reliable, and relatively fast methods. The main idea starting this study was to create a system of test methods devoted to identification of specific features of biotextile materials designed to preserve living organisms from adverse environmental factors like enhanced electromagnetic radiation of different frequencies, without use of vivarium animals. Cultures of the freshwater macrophyte duckweed ( ) line and fruit flies ( ) were chosen as model systems suitable for the study of the influence of electromagnetic field (EMF) radiation. The experiments showed changes of phenotypic features and growth parameters of test objects, as well as induction of point mutations of DNA (for example, insertions or deletions in chloroplast DNA and nucleotide substitutions in nuclear genes). The responses of test organisms induced by EMF were studied using microscopy, flow cytometry, and DNA sequencing methods. On the cell level, a new fast flow cytometry method for biotextile testing was developed: immature gametic (pollen) cell cultures were used as a highly sensitive model system (plant gametic cell response is comparable to human neutrophil response) to study the influence of EMF radiation. The method was based on the measurement of differences of fluorescence intensity between group of cells experimentally affected by EMF radiation and non-affected cells.
ISSN:2255-890X
1407-009X
2255-890X
DOI:10.2478/prolas-2023-0026