Exploring Thymol’s Cytocompatibility and Potential Selective Cytotoxicity in Human Primary Gingival Fibroblasts and Pharyngeal Carcinoma Cells: An In Vitro and In Ovo Investigation
Diana Florina Nica, Raluca Mioara Cosoroabă, Ștefania Dinu, Ștefania-Irina Dumitrel, Doina Chioran, Alina Tănase, Mălina Popa

TL;DR
This study investigates thymol's effects on healthy and cancerous oral cells, finding it safe for healthy cells and harmful to cancer cells at higher doses.
Contribution
The study provides new evidence on thymol's selective cytotoxicity and cytocompatibility in oral cell lines.
Findings
Thymol reduced viability of both healthy and cancerous cells, with cancer cells more affected.
Thymol showed no irritation in an in ovo model at 300 µM.
Apoptotic features were more pronounced in pharyngeal carcinoma cells.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Thymol (THY) is widely used in oral care products for its antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory activity, but data on its cytocompatibility, potential differential effects on oropharyngeal-derived cells, and mucosal irritation under prolonged exposure remain limited. This study evaluated THY’s effects on healthy human gingival fibroblasts (HGF-1) and pharyngeal carcinoma (Detroit-562) cells after 24 h exposure, together with its irritation potential in ovo. Methods: Cells were treated with THY (100–300 µM) for 24 h. Cellular viability (MTT), morphology, mitochondrial alterations (MitoTracker™/Hoechst 33342), mitochondrial membrane potential (JC-1), and apoptosis/necrosis (AO/PI) were assessed. Clonogenic assays evaluated long-term proliferative capacity. Lastly, irritation score was examined using the HET-CAM assay at 300 µM. Results: THY produced a dose-dependent…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOral microbiology and periodontitis research · Immunotoxicology and immune responses · Inhalation and Respiratory Drug Delivery
