21 research outputs found
DNA damage in children and adolescents with cardiovascular disease risk factors
The risk of developing cardiovascular disease (CVD) is related to lifestyle (e.g. diet, physical activity and smoking) as well as to genetic factors. This study aimed at evaluating the association between CVD risk factors and DNA damage levels in children and adolescents. Anthropometry, diet and serum CVD risk factors were evaluated by standard procedures. DNA damage levels were accessed by the comet assay (Single cell gel electrophoresis; SCGE) and cytokinesis-blocked micronucleus (CBMN) assays in leukocytes. A total of 34 children and adolescents selected from a population sample were divided into three groups according to their level of CVD risk. Moderate and high CVD risk subjects showed significantly higher body fat and serum CVD risk markers than low risk subjects (PO risco de desenvolver doença cardiovascular (DCV) estĂĄ relacionado ao estilo de vida (por exemplo, dieta, atividade fĂsica e tabagismo), bem como a fatores genĂ©ticos. Este estudo teve como objetivo avaliar a associação entre fatores de risco cardiovascular e os nĂveis de danos ao DNA em crianças e adolescentes. Antropometria, dieta e fatores de risco para DCV foram avaliados atravĂ©s de procedimentos padrĂŁo. NĂveis de danos no DNA foram avaliados atravĂ©s do ensaio cometa (eletroforese de cĂ©lula Ășnica; EC) e do teste de micronĂșcleos em leucĂłcitos. Um total de 34 crianças e adolescentes, selecionados a partir de uma amostra populacional, foram divididos em trĂȘs grupos, de acordo com seu nĂvel de risco de DCV. IndivĂduos com nĂveis moderado e alto risco para DCV apresentaram de forma significativa maiores nĂveis de gordura corporal e de marcadores sĂ©ricos de risco cardiovascular que indivĂduos de baixo risco (P <0,05). IndivĂduos de alto risco tambĂ©m mostraram um aumento significativo de danos ao DNA, de acordo com o EC, mas nĂŁo de acordo com o teste de micronĂșcleos, do que indivĂduos de risco baixo e moderado. A vitamina C consumida foi inversamente correlacionada com os danos ao DNA avaliados pelo EC, e o nĂșmero de micronĂșcleos foi inversamente correlacionado com a ingestĂŁo de ĂĄcido fĂłlico. Os resultados obtidos indicam um aumento de danos no DNA que pode ser consequente do estresse oxidativo em indivĂduos jovens com fatores de risco para DCV, indicando que o nĂvel de danos no DNA pode auxiliar na avaliação do risco de DCV
Occupational exposure of workers to pesticides: Toxicogenetics and susceptibility gene polymorphisms
Farm workers are often exposed to pesticides, which are products belonging to a specific chemical group that affects the health of agricultural workers and is mostly recognized as genotoxic and carcinogenic. The exposure of workers from PiauĂ, Brazil, to these hazardous chemicals was assessed and cytogenetic alterations were evaluated using the buccal micronucleus assay, hematological and lipid parameters, butyrylcholinesterase (BChE) activity and genetic polymorphisms of enzymes involved in the metabolism of pesticides, such as PON1, as well as of the DNA repair system (OGG1, XRCC1 and XRCC4). Two groups of farm workers exposed to different types of pesticides were evaluated and compared to matched non-exposed control groups. A significant increase was observed in the frequencies of micronuclei, kariorrhexis, karyolysis and binucleated cells in the exposed groups (n = 100) compared to controls (n = 100). No differences were detected regarding the hematological parameters, lipid profile and BChE activity. No significant difference was observed either regarding DNA damage or nuclear fragmentation when specific metabolizing and DNA repair genotypes were investigated in the exposed groups
Is exposure to formaldehyde in air causally associated with leukemia?âA hypothesis-based weight-of-evidence analysis
Recent scientific debate has focused on the potential for inhaled formaldehyde to cause lymphohematopoietic cancers, particularly leukemias, in humans. The concern stems from certain epidemiology studies reporting an association, although particulars of endpoints and dosimetry are inconsistent across studies and several other studies show no such effects. Animal studies generally report neither hematotoxicity nor leukemia associated with formaldehyde inhalation, and hematotoxicity studies in humans are inconsistent. Formaldehyde's reactivity has been thought to preclude systemic exposure following inhalation, and its apparent inability to reach and affect the target tissues attacked by known leukemogens has, heretofore, led to skepticism regarding its potential to cause human lymphohematopoietic cancers. Recently, however, potential modes of action for formaldehyde leukemogenesis have been hypothesized, and it has been suggested that formaldehyde be identified as a known human leukemogen. In this article, we apply our hypothesis-based weight-of-evidence (HBWoE) approach to evaluate the large body of evidence regarding formaldehyde and leukemogenesis, attending to how human, animal, and mode-of-action results inform one another. We trace the logic of inference within and across all studies, and articulate how one could account for the suite of available observations under the various proposed hypotheses. Upon comparison of alternative proposals regarding what causal processes may have led to the array of observations as we see them, we conclude that the case fora causal association is weak and strains biological plausibility. Instead, apparent association between formaldehyde inhalation and leukemia in some human studies is better interpreted as due to chance or confounding
The encrusting sponge Halisarca laxus: population genetics and association with the ascidian Pyura spinifera
Abstract The encrusting sponge Halisarca laxus forms a seemingly obligate association with the stalked solitary ascidian Pyura spinifera. In 1991 we examined spatial variation and short-term temporal variation in this association at three neighbouring sites in southeastern Australia. This sponge dominated the surface of almost all the 500 individual ascidians examined, with mean cover usually exceeding 90%. This pattern was
consistent among sites and throughout the year of the study. The domination of a small isolated patch of habitable substratum by a sponge is most unusual, given that they are regarded as relatively poor recruiters.
To understand how this association might be
maintained, we determined the underlying genotypic
diversity of the sponge population using starch-gel electrophoresis. P. spinifera is a clump-forming ascidian and usually occurs in clumps of up to 22 individuals. Electrophoretic surveys, based on six variable allozyme loci, revealed that at a total of five plots within three
neighbouring New South Wales populations, single
sponge genotypes may cover entire ascidian clumps;
although a clump sometimes played host to more than one sponge clone. Allele frequencies (averaged across four loci that appear to conform to Mendelian inheritance) showed little variation among populations (standardised genetic variance, Fs~ = 0.013). Nevertheless, sponge populations were genotypically diverse, with samples from 63 of 172 individual clumps displaying unique "clonal" genotypes. Moreover, multi-locus
genotypic diversity within all sites approached the level expected for sexual reproduction with random mating.
Taken together, these data imply that H. laxus produces sexually-derived larvae that are at least moderately widely dispersed. Given the relatively small size of the patches that this sponge inhabits, we also conclude that these larvae are good colonists and good spatial
competitors on their ascidian hosts.A. R. Davis, D. J. Ayre , M. R. Billingham, C. A. Styan, G. A. Whit