Abstract

Oxidative stress-mediated genotoxicity of wastewaters taken from two different cities, Saharanpur (SWW) and Aligarh (AWW), were compared with a battery of short-term assays namely the Allium cepa genotoxicity test, the plasmid-nicking assay, and the Ames fluctuation test. Both test-water samples – when used undiluted – increased the frequency of chromosomal abnormalities and/or micronuclei and alterations in the mitotic index of root cells of Allium cepa. Bridges and fragmentation of the chromosome were the predominant effects of the Saharanpur water sample while the Aligarh sample induced mainly chromosome fragmentation. Single- and double-strand breaks were also observed in plasmid DNA treated with these test wastewaters. The plasmid-nicking assay performed on SWW resulted in linearization of plasmid DNA when 18 μl was tested (in a total reaction volume of 20 μl). However, with the same amount of AWW, all three forms of plasmid, viz. supercoiled, open circular and linear were observed. Supplementation with specific scavengers of reactive oxygen species (ROS) caused a significant decline in mutagenicity of test-water samples in all the tests, pointing at oxidative stress as the mediator of the observed genotoxicity. The role of heavy metals in the AWW-induced oxidative stress and that of phenolics in SWW cannot be ruled out.

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