Toxic potential assessment of hair dye developer 2,4,5,6-tetraaminopyrimidine sulfate exposed under ambient UVB radiation

Author:

Shukla Saumya12ORCID,Chauhan Priyanka34,Gaur Prakriti1,Rana Priyanka13,Patel Sunil Kumar13,Chopra Deepti1,Vikram Apeksha13,Prajapati Gaurav13,Yadav Akhilesh Kumar35,Kotian Sumana Y35,Bala Lakshmi2,Dwivedi Ashish13,Mishra Aradhana34

Affiliation:

1. Photobiology Laboratory, Systems Toxicology and Health Risk Assessment Group, CSIR-Indian Institute of Toxicology Research (CSIR-IITR), Lucknow, India

2. Department of Biochemistry, College of Dental Sciences, Babu Banarasi Das University, Lucknow, India

3. Academy of Scientific and Innovative Research, AcSIR Headquarters, CSIR-HRDC Campus, Ghaziabad, India

4. Division of Microbial Technology, CSIR-National Botanical Research Institute Lucknow, India

5. Analytical Chemistry Laboratory, Regulatory Toxicology Group, CSIR-Indian Institute of Toxicology Research(CSIR-IITR), Lucknow, India

Abstract

Synthetic cosmetics, particularly hair dyes, are becoming increasingly popular among people of all ages and genders. 2,4,5,6-tetraaminopyrimidine sulfate (TAPS) is a key component of oxidative hair dyes and is used as a developer in several hair dyes. TAPS has previously been shown to absorb UVB strongly and degrade in a time-dependent manner, causing phototoxicity in human skin cells. However, the toxic effects of UVB-degraded TAPS are not explored in comparison to parent TAPS. Therefore, this research work aims to assess the toxicity of UVB-degraded TAPS than TAPS on two different test systems, that is, HaCaT (mammalian cell) and Staphylococcus aureus (a bacterial cell). Our result on HaCaT has illustrated that UVB-degraded TAPS is less toxic than parent TAPS. Additionally, UVB-exposed TAPS and parent TAPS were given to S. aureus, and the bacterial growth and their metabolic activity were assessed via CFU and phenotype microarray. The findings demonstrated that parent TAPS reduced bacterial growth via decreased metabolic activity; however, bacteria easily utilized the degraded TAPS. Thus, this study suggests that the products generated after UVB irradiation of TAPS is considered to be safer than their parent TAPS.

Funder

Department of Science and Technology India

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Toxicology

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