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Cytogenetic damage by vanadium(IV) and vanadium(III) on the bone marrow of mice.

Lucila Álvarez-BarreraJuan José Rodríguez-MercadoRodrigo Aníbal Mateos-NavaAdolfo Acosta-San JuanMario Agustín Altamirano-Lozano
Published in: Drug and chemical toxicology (2023)
Vanadium is a strategic metal that has many important industrial applications and is generated by the use of burning fossil fuels, which inevitably leads to their release into the environment, mainly in the form of oxides. The wastes generated by their use represent a major health hazard. Furthermore, it has attracted attention because several genotoxicity studies have shown that some vanadium compounds can affect DNA; among the most studied compounds is vanadium pentoxide, but studies in vivo with oxidation states IV and III are scarce and controversial. In this study, the genotoxic and cytotoxic potential of vanadium oxides was investigated in mouse bone marrow cells using structural chromosomal aberration (SCA) and mitotic index (MI) test systems. Three groups were administered vanadium(IV) tetraoxide (V 2 O 4 ) intraperitoneally at 4.7, 9.4 or 18.8 mg/kg, and three groups were administered vanadium(III) trioxide (V 2 O 3 ) at 4.22, 8.46 or 16.93 mg/kg body weight. The control group was treated with sterile water, and the positive control group was treated with cadmium(II) chloride (CdCl 2 ). After 24 h, all doses of vanadium compounds increased the percentage of cells with SCA and decreased the MI. Our results demonstrated that under the present experimental conditions and doses, treatment with V 2 O 4 and V 2 O 3 induces chromosomal aberrations and alters cell division in the bone marrow of mice.
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