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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Sister-chromatid exchanges in human lymphocytes induced by dimethoate, omethoate, deltamethrin, benomyl and their mixture.

Dimethoate and omethoate, two common organophosphorus insecticides, induced a dose-related increase in the frequency of sister-chromatid exchanges (SCEs) in human lymphocytes in vitro (P of the regression lines less than 0.01). Two other common pesticides, the pyrethroid insecticide deltamethrin and the systemic fungicide benomyl, induced a modest increase in SCEs which bordered on statistical significance (P = 0.053 and 0.055, respectively). Mixtures of the four pesticides at total concentrations of 41.5 and 83 micrograms/ml (composed of 43% dimethoate, 43% omethoate, 12% deltamethrin and 1.2% benomyl) induced a dose-dependent increase in SCEs (P less than 0.01). The effects of these mixtures of pesticides were variable using lymphocytes from different individuals, although these differences did not attain statistical significance. Moreover, low concentrations of the four pesticides that did not increase SCEs significantly when tested alone, were positive for SCE induction when tested as a mixture. The experiments show that sub-threshold doses of pesticides may increase SCEs when present in a mixture.[1]

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