Radioprotective efficacy of zinc oxide nanoparticles on γ-ray-induced nuclear DNA damage in Vicia faba L. as evaluated by DNA bioassays

Published: 23 August 2020| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/pvs2mmd3hs.1
Contributor:
Nagwa Mohamed Amin Aref

Description

This study aimed to assess the radioprotective efficacy of zinc oxide nanoparticles (nano-ZnO) against γ-radiation-induced DNA lesions in Vicia faba employing flow cytometry (FCM), comet assay, and RAPD-PCR bioassays. Each dose of γ-irradiated seeds was post-treated with three nano-ZnO concentrations. Exposure time pre- and post-ZnO treatments were 24 h. Dose-dependent nano-ZnO and γ-ray treatments showed specific interference with DNA. Three bioassays could successfully detect positive action of two nano-ZnO concentrations (500 and 2000 mg L-1) on DNA compared to control while high concentration nano-ZnO showed a negative interference with DNA. On the contrary, three doses of γ-ray induced major lesions in V. faba DNA. Data obtained illustrated that combination of 2000 mgL-1 nano-ZnO concentration with each γ-ray the dose had a good ability to protect DNA against their damaging when compared to the equivalent γ-ray doses prior to nano-ZnO treatment. This was evident through the significant amelioration of DNA parameters which manifested in increasing nuclear DNA content and genome size, reduction the DNA damage (tail length, Tailed DNA% and tail moment), and scoring new amplified DNA bands and increasing their number. This study concluded that nano-ZnO can be used as potent mutant and an efficient nano-radioprotector for the protection of crop plant DNA.

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Institutions

Ain Shams University, King Saud University, Zagazig University

Categories

Radiation, Molecular Genetics, Zinc Oxide, Radioactive Element, Nanoparticle Toxicology

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