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Mutagenicity testing of some commonly used dyes.

King-Thom Chung, +2 more
- 01 Oct 1981 - 
- Vol. 42, Iss: 4, pp 641-648
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TLDR
Seventeen commonly used dyes and 16 of their metabolites or derivatives were tested in the Salmonella-mammalian microsome mutagenicity test and none of them were mutagenic.
Abstract
Seventeen commonly used dyes and 16 of their metabolites or derivatives were tested in the Salmonella-mammalian microsome mutagenicity test. Mutagens active with and without added Aroclor-induced rat liver microsome preparations (S9) were 3-aminopyrene, lithol red, methylene blue (USP), methyl yellow, neutral red, and phenol red. Those mutagenic only with S9 activation were 4-aminopyrazolone, 2,4-dimethylaniline, N,N-dimethyl-p-phenylenediamine, methyl red, and 4-phenyl-azo-1-naphthylamine. Orange II was mutagenic only without added S9. Nonmutagenic azo dyes were allura red, amaranth, ponceau R, ponceau SX, sunset yellow, and tartrazine. Miscellaneous dyes not mutagenic were methyl green, methyl violet 2B, and nigrosin. Metabolites of the azo dyes that were not mutagenic were 1-amino-2-naphthol hydrochloride, aniline, anthranilic acid, cresidine salt, pyrazolone T,R-amino salt (1-amino-2-naphthol-3,6-disulfonic disodium salt), R-salt, Schaeffer9s salt (2-naphthol-6-sulfonic acid, sodium salt), sodium naphthionate, sulfanilamide, and sulfanilic acid. 4-Amino-1-naphthalenesulfonic acid sodium salt was also not mutagenic. Fusobacterium sp. 2 could reductively cleave methyl yellow to N,N-dimethyl-p-phenylenediamine which was then activated to a mutagen.

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Azo dyes and human health: A review.

TL;DR: It is discovered that the antimicrobial effect of red azo dye Prontosil was caused by the reductively cleaved (azo reduction) product sulfanilamide, and the significance of azo reduction is revealed.
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The Reduction of Azo Dyes by the Intestinal Microflora

TL;DR: The azoreductase activity in a variety of intestinal preparations was affected by various dietary factors such as cellulose, proteins, fibers, antibiotics, or supplementation with live cultures of lactobacilli.
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Degradation azo dyes by environmental microorganisms and helminths

TL;DR: The degradation of azo dyes by environmental microorganisms, fungi, and helminths is reviewed and a possible degradation pathway for the mineralized azo dye is proposed and future research needs are discussed.
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Adsorption studies on the removal of coloring agent phenol red from wastewater using waste materials as adsorbents

TL;DR: In this paper, bottom ash and deoiled soya were used for removal and recovery of hazardous phenol red dye from wastewaters, and the results showed that the column regeneration characteristic has been also investigated and recovery percentage greater than 90% was obtained for both adsorbents by utilizing acidic eluent.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mutagenicity of azo dyes: structure-activity relationships.

TL;DR: The chemical structure of many mutagenic azo dyes was reviewed, and it was found that the biologically active dyes are mainly limited to those compounds containing p-phenylenediamine and benzidine moieties.
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