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Original Research Article | OPEN ACCESS

Studies on the Genotoxic and Mutagenic Potentials of Mefloquine

John O Akerele , Emmanuel E Obaseiki-Ebor

Department of Pharmaceutical Microbiology, University of Benin, PMB 1154, Benin City, Nigeria;

For correspondence:-  John Akerele   Email: akerelej@uniben.edu

Published: 23 December 2002

Citation: Akerele JO, Obaseiki-Ebor EE. Studies on the Genotoxic and Mutagenic Potentials of Mefloquine. Trop J Pharm Res 2002; 1(2):91-98 doi: 10.4314/tjpr.v1i2.6

© 2002 The authors.
This is an Open Access article that uses a funding model which does not charge readers or their institutions for access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0) and the Budapest Open Access Initiative (http://www.budapestopenaccessinitiative.org/read), which permit unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited..

Abstract

Purpose:  The detection of  mefloquine  mutagenicity  has  not  been achieved by  the use of Salmonella  typhimurium  his  TA1535,  TA1537 as  tester  strains.  With  the  introduction of improved and  more  sensitive  strains,  it  is  of  interest to evaluate  the  current  mutagenic  and genotoxic status  of the drug.  This study  presents  data on  the  in-vitro  mutagenic  and genotoxic potentials of mefloquine hydrochloride clinically used as an antimalarial agent.
Method:  The  mutagenicity  potentials  was  investigated  in  the  Escherichia  coli  WP2  trp and WP2  uvrA  trp  tester  strains containing  the plasmids,  pEB017 and pKM101,  and  the Salmonella typhimurium TA97 containing pKM101.  The genotoxicity potential  was determined using the microscreen phage-induction assay.
Results:  The presence of  plasmids  pEBO17 and pKM101 enhanced  the detection of mutagenicity  of  mefloquine.  Microsomal-activated  mefloquine unequivocally  elicited base-pair substitution  mutagenicity.  The genotoxicity  test  indicated  that  mefloquine  was  generally  not genotoxic but was of the same potential mutagenicity as chloroquine phosphate.
Conclusion:  Melfloquine hydrochloride exhibits  base pair  substitution  mutagenesis,  but  not  potentially genotoxic,  even though it  showed concentration dependent  cytotoxicity. Its use as a last line antimalarial agent should still be  ncouraged.

Keywords: Base-pair substitution, genotoxicity, mefloquine hydrochloride, mutagenicity, Rplasmid pEB017

Impact Factor
Thompson Reuters (ISI): 0.523 (2021)
H-5 index (Google Scholar): 39 (2021)

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