2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.aquatox.2017.08.013
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Methylisothiazolinone toxicity and inhibition of wound healing and regeneration in planaria

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Cited by 24 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…To assess the role of ROS during wound healing, we amputated planarians in half (bisection) and observed wound morphology every 15 minutes following injury. Consistent with our previous findings 41 , we observed that most animals (70%; n  44) close their wounds by one hour post amputation (Fig. 1A,C), where a lack of wound closure was defined as mesenchymal tissue protruding from the wound site.…”
Section: Ros Accumulate At the Wound Site Soon After Injurysupporting
confidence: 91%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…To assess the role of ROS during wound healing, we amputated planarians in half (bisection) and observed wound morphology every 15 minutes following injury. Consistent with our previous findings 41 , we observed that most animals (70%; n  44) close their wounds by one hour post amputation (Fig. 1A,C), where a lack of wound closure was defined as mesenchymal tissue protruding from the wound site.…”
Section: Ros Accumulate At the Wound Site Soon After Injurysupporting
confidence: 91%
“…We found that DPI concentrations as low as 5 µM and up to 50 µM inhibited wound closure (Fig. 2C), although at higher concentrations, animals were increasingly immobile-a sign of toxicity (see our previous work 41 for examples). We chose 15 µM DPI as our working concentration, as this dose blocked wound healing without affecting normal movement.…”
Section: Ros Are Required For Wound Closuresupporting
confidence: 52%
“…For instance, an acute oral study showed that the median lethal doses (LD50) for male and female rats were 274.6 mg and 105.7 mg/kg of body weight, respectively (Burnett et al 2010). Aquatic toxicity studies showed that MIT is very toxic to aquatic life (Santos et al 2016;Van Huizen et al 2017;Kucera 2019). Van Huizen et al (2017) investigated the effects of MIT exposure on five different planarian species, which are common flatworms found in freshwater streams, lakes, ponds, and rivers.…”
Section: Human and Environmental Health Hazardsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Aquatic toxicity studies showed that MIT is very toxic to aquatic life (Santos et al 2016;Van Huizen et al 2017;Kucera 2019). Van Huizen et al (2017) investigated the effects of MIT exposure on five different planarian species, which are common flatworms found in freshwater streams, lakes, ponds, and rivers. The researchers found that MIT concentrations higher than 4.5 mg/L are lethal to planarians.…”
Section: Human and Environmental Health Hazardsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[15] This organism is used in investigations linked with regeneration due to its ability to produce a new and complete organism from its fragments. [16] It has been used in neuropharmacological studies mainly focusing on drug addiction behavior due to the presence of neurotransmitters, [17][18][19][20][21] as well as in toxicological investigations [22][23][24] and environmental monitoring. [25] The use of planaria is linked with its unique advantages that include 1) easy and cheap maintenance in the laboratory; 2) greater numbers of organisms in assays, enabling significant results to be obtained; 3) greater number of pharmacological assays may be performed; and 4) the use of a whole animal instead of cell culture.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%