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Merck

Dicamba-induced genotoxicity in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells is prevented by vitamin E.

Journal of hazardous materials (2008-08-05)
N V González, S Soloneski, M L Larramendy
ABSTRACT

In the present study the cytogenetic and genotoxic effect of benzoic herbicide dicamba and its Argentinean commercial formulation banvel (57.71% dicamba) was evaluated and whether this effect is mediated through oxidative damage or not. The protective role of vitamin E was also studied. Sister chromatid exchange (SCE) frequency, cell-cycle progression, and cell viability analyses in CHO cells were used as in vitro end-points. Treatments with the test compounds were performed either during 24h (Protocol A) or 12h (Protocol B) before harvesting. Protocol A showed that vitamin E decreased pesticide SCE induction, corrected the cell-cycle delay and partially protected cell-death only in 500 microg/ml dicamba-treated cultures. A similar trend was found in banvel-treated cultures. Protocol B revealed similar protective role of vitamin E only for dicamba-induced geno- and cytotoxicity. Based on these observations it could be suggested that dicamba injures DNA by delivering reactive oxygen species rather than by another type of mechanism/s. Although banvel mimics the effect observed by dicamba, its formulation contains other xenobiotic/s agents able to induce cellular and DNA damage by a different mechanism/s. Further investigations are needed to acquire a comprehensive knowledge of the possible mechanism/s through dicamba and banvel exert their toxic effects.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Dicamba, suitable for plant cell culture, BioReagent
Supelco
Dicamba, PESTANAL®, analytical standard