Abstract
The reaction of Paramecium caudatum to solutions containing the ash of cigarette paper was consistent with the response of Paramecium aurelia previously reported. After this confirmation, both these species of Paramecium were used as test organisms during a search for the causative agents for the "Paramecium reaction". A qualitative spectrochemical analysis of cigarette paper ash showed that its chief constituent is calcium (97%) with 12 other detected elements present at levels too low to elicit any response from paramecia. Hydroxyl ions in concentrations equivalent to 0.001 M Ca(OH)2, 0.0008 M KOH, or 0.002 M NaOH simulated but did not duplicate the effect of standard cigarette paper ash solution (as of one cigarette paper in 20 ml water). While neutralization caused the three hydroxide solutions to lose their toxicity, the toxicity of cigarette paper ash solution was not appreciably affected by neutralization. Equivalent solutions of facial tissue, filter paper, and a paper towel, burned the same way as cigarette paper, were used as controls. Each of them affected paramecia differently and none simulated the Paramecium reaction. Further, a comparison between ashes from a paperless cigarette, a whole cigarette, and one with two extra roll-your-own wrappers demonstrated a dependence of the Paramecium reaction on cigarette paper ash as well as a direct correlation between the reaction intensity and the amount of cigarette paper ash present.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Genetics,Molecular Biology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,General Medicine,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
1 articles.
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