Abstract

ABSTRACTIn this research work we developed in vitro tests utilizing mammalian cell cultures, which can rapidly assess effect of exposure of oily sludge-derived chemicals on human and ecological health. Many of these are hazardous to health and environment due to their toxicity and/or accumulation potential in sediments as well as in organisms. Petroleum refinery and petrochemical industry-derived oily sludges contain toxic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), some of which are lipophilic in nature. Risk assessment of environmental samples suffers from inadequate availability of toxicity data, lack of knowledge about behavior of genotoxic substances in complex matrices, paucity of information on synergistic and antagonistic interactions of mixture of components, etc.; the literature describing the behavior of genotoxic substances in complex mixtures is sparse and sometimes contradictory. The present study aims at assessing the genotoxic potential of oily sludges collected from an integrated petroleum refinery and petrochemical industry located in the southwestern part of India and a petrochemical industry located in the western part of India using a battery of genotoxicity assays such as DNA damage/strand break, chromosomal aberration, p53 protein induction, and apoptosis in CHO-K1 cell culture system.Exposure with different dose levels of sludge extracts (25, 50, 100 μL) in CHO-K1 cells could cause statistically significant level of (P < 0.001) DNA damage, chromosomal aberration, p53 protein induction, and apoptosis in comparison to negative control treatment groups, and the genotoxicity was attributed to PAHs present in the sludge as identified by GC-MS. This implies that the sludges are genotoxic in nature in mammalian cells tested, and the exposure to these may pose a potential genotoxic risk to human beings.

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