In vitro toxicity of gentamicin to corneal epithelial cells.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
We report morphologic and viability changes in the rabbit corneal epithelium exposed in vitro to gentamicin sulfate. Rabbit corneal epithelial cells (3 x 10(5)) were seeded in replicate 24-well plates at their first in vitro passage, and gentamicin in concentrations of 0, 50, 250, 500, 1,000, or 5,000 micrograms/ml was added to the tissue culture medium beginning 7 days after subculture. By phase contrast microscopy, changes in cell morphologic appearance, particularly increased cytoplasmic granularity, were observed in the 5,000-micrograms/ml groups as early as 24 h after introduction of the drug. At 48 h, similar findings were observed in the 250-micrograms/ml group and at all higher concentrations. The cytoplasmic granularity was not noted in the 0- or 50-micrograms/ml groups. By electron microscopy, these observations correlated with ultrastructural findings of increased accumulations of intralysosomal bodies beginning in the 250-micrograms/ml group after 48 h of exposure to gentamicin. Furthermore, a statistically significant difference (p = 0.001) was demonstrated between the total number of viable cells in the low-dose group (50-micrograms/ml) and the high-dose groups (greater than or equal to 250-micrograms/ml) for exposure periods of 48 h or more. These findings demonstrate aminoglycoside toxicity to corneal epithelial cells in vitro similar to that seen in the human kidney and conjunctiva.