Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2149211 | Mutation Research/Genetic Toxicology and Environmental Mutagenesis | 2007 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Fish were exposed to Rhine water or to groundwater for 3 and 11 days in flow-through aquaria. Fish exposed for 11 days to Rhine water had a significantly higher number of SCE and an increased comet tail-length compared with control fish exposed to groundwater. After exposure for three days to Rhine water there was no difference in SCE and a slightly increased comet tail-length compared with the control. It was concluded that genotoxins are still present in the river Rhine, but that the genotoxic potential has markedly decreased compared with 27 years ago. Furthermore, the Comet assay appears to be a sensitive assay to measure the genotoxic potential of surface waters in fish.
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Authors
G.M. Alink, J.T.K. Quik, E.J.M. Penders, A. Spenkelink, S.G.P. Rotteveel, J.L. Maas, W. Hoogenboezem,