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High cytotoxicity of betulin towards fish and murine fibroblasts: Is betulin safe for nonneoplastic cells? | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Betulin, found in birch bark, is a natural compound with potential antimicrobial properties and is noted for being toxic to cancer cells while sparing normal cells.
  • The study evaluated the cytotoxic effects of betulin on fish and mouse fibroblast cells using various assays, revealing that mitochondria were especially sensitive to betulin exposure.
  • Results indicated murine fibroblasts were more affected by betulin than fish fibroblasts, prompting a call for further research to confirm betulin's selective toxicity and safety in veterinary applications.

Article Abstract

Background: Betulin, a natural pentacyclic triterpene with the lupane structure that is present in significant amounts in the outer bark of birch, is known for its broad array of biological and pharmacological properties. Betulin has attracted attention as a potential, natural-origin antimicrobial substance. The literature describes it as selectively toxic to neoplastic cells but safe for normal cells. The research aim was to evaluate the basal cytotoxicity of betulin towards fish (BF-2) and murine (NIH/3T3) fibroblasts. We used four colorimetric tests that provide a preliminary evaluation of possible mechanisms of the cytotoxicity of a compound to assess the degree of the toxicity of betulin after 24, 48 and 72 h of incubation with cells: the MTT assay (mitochondrial activity assessment), the NRU assay (lysosomal membrane integrity assessment), the LDH assay (cellular membrane integrity assessment) and the SRB assay (total cellular protein content determination).

Results: The results revealed an exceptionally high sensitivity of mitochondria to the effect of betulin, with the other endpoints being less sensitive. Although murine fibroblasts were more vulnerable to the toxic effect of betulin than fish fibroblasts, the betulin CC values for both cell lines were comparable with analogous IC values determined by other researchers in studies involving cancerous cells.

Conclusions: The results indicate the need to verify the claim about the selective toxicity of betulin towards malignant cells and to conduct safety/toxicity tests before any potential therapeutic use of betulin in veterinary medicine.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8152350PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12917-021-02905-xDOI Listing

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