Abstract

The aim of this study was to investigate if there was any genotoxic effect produced by the antibiotic cycloheximide, widely used as a fungicide in agriculture as well as in everyday laboratory practice. The battery of test systems included the bacterium Salmonella typhimurium (strains TA98 and TAl00), the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae (D7), Allium cepa somatic cells and mouse bone marrow cells. This combination of test systems enabled us to establish possible effects caused by cycloheximide at different levels of the genome and to indicate a possible mechanism of action. The results obtained in experiments showed that cycloheximide did not induce frameshift or base-pair substitution mutations in S. typhimurium regardless of metabolic activation. In S. cerevisiae cycloheximide had only toxic effects but no increase of mitotic gene conversion was noticed under the conditions of the experiment. However, in A. cepa somatic cells as well as in mouse bone marrow cells cycloheximide showed its activity causing different genetic damages, e.g., chromosome breaks, mitotic disturbances and nuclear abnormalities.

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