Cytogenetic effects of softwood kraft pulp bleaching effluents and methanesulfonyl chloride in Chinese hamster ovary cells

The genotoxicity of effluents collected from a conventional 5-stage softwood kraft pulp bleaching process was studied in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells in vitro. Spent liquor from the first chlorination stage (C/D), where elemental chlorine and chlorine dioxide had been used in equal proportions,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Mutation research 1997-04, Vol.390 (1), p.105-112
Hauptverfasser: Sipi, Pirjo, Rosenberg, Christina, Rudek, Zofia, Jäppinen, Paavo, Vainio, Harri, Norppa, Hannu
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creator Sipi, Pirjo
Rosenberg, Christina
Rudek, Zofia
Jäppinen, Paavo
Vainio, Harri
Norppa, Hannu
description The genotoxicity of effluents collected from a conventional 5-stage softwood kraft pulp bleaching process was studied in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells in vitro. Spent liquor from the first chlorination stage (C/D), where elemental chlorine and chlorine dioxide had been used in equal proportions, was shown to induce a dose-dependent increase in sister chromatid exchanges (SCEs) without metabolic activation (4-h treatment), with a maximum increase of 1.6 times over the control level at 204 μl/ml; this dose also induced 15.5- and 20.5-fold increases in cells with chromatid-type chromosomal aberrations after 4-h and a 20-h treatment, respectively. Another C/D stage spent liquor from a process where the ratio of elemental chlorine and chlorine dioxide had been 9:1 produced a 40.5-fold elevation of cells with chromatid-type aberrations at 204 μl/ml (20-h treatment). This sample clearly increased chromosomal aberrations also when tested as a concentrate (4-h treatment), which showed that the observed clastogenicity was not unspecifically due to the relatively large volumes used in the treatments with the unconcentrated liquors. In general, the use of rat liver S9 mix reduced the genotoxicity of the spent liquors. The results agree with earlier findings on the Salmonella mutagenicity of the same C/D samples: both the prokaryotic and eukaryotic assays showed a reduction in genotoxicity when the amount of elemental chlorine in the bleaching process was reduced. An effluent sample collected from the alkaline stage of the process was not clastogenic with or without metabolic activation. Methanesulfonyl chloride, a new compound identified in bleaching plant air, was found to be induce chromosomal aberrations in the presence of S9 mix.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/S0165-1218(97)00006-2
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Spent liquor from the first chlorination stage (C/D), where elemental chlorine and chlorine dioxide had been used in equal proportions, was shown to induce a dose-dependent increase in sister chromatid exchanges (SCEs) without metabolic activation (4-h treatment), with a maximum increase of 1.6 times over the control level at 204 μl/ml; this dose also induced 15.5- and 20.5-fold increases in cells with chromatid-type chromosomal aberrations after 4-h and a 20-h treatment, respectively. Another C/D stage spent liquor from a process where the ratio of elemental chlorine and chlorine dioxide had been 9:1 produced a 40.5-fold elevation of cells with chromatid-type aberrations at 204 μl/ml (20-h treatment). This sample clearly increased chromosomal aberrations also when tested as a concentrate (4-h treatment), which showed that the observed clastogenicity was not unspecifically due to the relatively large volumes used in the treatments with the unconcentrated liquors. 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Spent liquor from the first chlorination stage (C/D), where elemental chlorine and chlorine dioxide had been used in equal proportions, was shown to induce a dose-dependent increase in sister chromatid exchanges (SCEs) without metabolic activation (4-h treatment), with a maximum increase of 1.6 times over the control level at 204 μl/ml; this dose also induced 15.5- and 20.5-fold increases in cells with chromatid-type chromosomal aberrations after 4-h and a 20-h treatment, respectively. Another C/D stage spent liquor from a process where the ratio of elemental chlorine and chlorine dioxide had been 9:1 produced a 40.5-fold elevation of cells with chromatid-type aberrations at 204 μl/ml (20-h treatment). This sample clearly increased chromosomal aberrations also when tested as a concentrate (4-h treatment), which showed that the observed clastogenicity was not unspecifically due to the relatively large volumes used in the treatments with the unconcentrated liquors. In general, the use of rat liver S9 mix reduced the genotoxicity of the spent liquors. The results agree with earlier findings on the Salmonella mutagenicity of the same C/D samples: both the prokaryotic and eukaryotic assays showed a reduction in genotoxicity when the amount of elemental chlorine in the bleaching process was reduced. An effluent sample collected from the alkaline stage of the process was not clastogenic with or without metabolic activation. Methanesulfonyl chloride, a new compound identified in bleaching plant air, was found to be induce chromosomal aberrations in the presence of S9 mix.</abstract><cop>Netherlands</cop><pub>Elsevier B.V</pub><pmid>9150758</pmid><doi>10.1016/S0165-1218(97)00006-2</doi><tpages>8</tpages></addata></record>
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ispartof Mutation research, 1997-04, Vol.390 (1), p.105-112
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals Complete
subjects Animals
Bleaching
Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell
Chlorinated compound
Chlorine - chemistry
CHO Cells - drug effects
Chromosomal aberration
Chromosome Aberrations
Cricetinae
Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
Ethanol - adverse effects
Ethanol - chemistry
Industry
Male
Mesylates - toxicity
Mutagenicity Tests
Mutagens - toxicity
Osmolar Concentration
Rats
Rats, Wistar
Sister chromatid exchange
Sister Chromatid Exchange - drug effects
Softwood kraft pulp
Wood
title Cytogenetic effects of softwood kraft pulp bleaching effluents and methanesulfonyl chloride in Chinese hamster ovary cells
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