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Modification of the chemically induced inflammation assay reveals the Janus face of a phenol rich fulvic acid

Scientific Reports 2022 15 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Thora Lieke, Christian E. W. Steinberg, Werner Kloas Werner Kloas Werner Kloas Thomas Meinelt, Werner Kloas Thora Lieke, Werner Kloas Klaus Knopf, Werner Kloas Werner Kloas Christian E. W. Steinberg, Werner Kloas

Summary

Researchers adapted a zebrafish larvae inflammation test to study fulvic acid — a natural compound found in soil and water — and discovered it has a dual personality: low concentrations protected against inflammation while high concentrations made inflammation worse, showing how the same substance can help or harm depending on dose.

Inflammation is an essential process as a reaction towards infections or wounding. Exposure to hazardous environmental pollutants can lead to chronic inflammations, where the resolving phase is delayed or blocked. Very contradictory studies have been reported on the pro- and anti-inflammatory effects of humic substances (HSs) leading to significant disagreements between researchers. To a certain extent, this can be attributed to the chemical heterogeneity of this group of xenobiotics. Here we show for the first time that pro- and anti-inflammatory effects can occur by one HSs. We adapted an assay that uses green fluorescence-labeled zebrafish larvae and CuSO<sub>4</sub> to indue an inflammation. In wild-type larvae, exposure to 50 µM CuSO<sub>4</sub> for 2 h activated the production of reactive oxygen species, which can be monitored with a fluorescence dye (H2DCFDA) and a microplate reader. This allows not only the use of wild-type fish but also a temporal separation of copper exposure and inflammatory substance while retaining the high throughput. This modified assay was then used to evaluate the inflammatory properties of a fulvic acid (FA). We found, that the aromatic structure of the FA protects from inflammation at 5 and 50 mg C/L, while the persistent free radicals enhance the copper-induced inflammation at ≥ 300 mg C/L.

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