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

Further mutagenicity studies on pesticides in bacterial reversion assay systems.

A total of 228 pesticides (88 insecticides, 60 fungicides, 62 herbicides, 12 plant-growth regulators, 3 metabolites and 3 other compounds) was tested for mutagenicity in bacterial reversion-assay systems with 5 strains (TA100, TA98, TA1535, TA1537 and TA1538) of Salmonella typhimurium and a strain (WP2 hcr) of Escherichia coli. 50 pesticides (25 insecticides, 20 fungicides, 3 herbicides, 1 plant-growth regulator and 1 other compound) were found to be mutagenic. 5 of them required metabolic activation (S9 mix) for their activities. Among various chemical groups, organic phosphates, halogenated alkanes and dithiocarbamates showed higher ratios of mutagens. Although 22 of the pesticides tested have been reported to be carcinogenic, 7 of them, i.e., captain, DBCP, EDB, EDC, ETU, HEH and nitrofen, were detected as mutagens in the present assay. Most of the other 15 non-mutagenic carcinogens were organochlorine pesticides such as alpha-BHC, chlorobenzilate, p,p'-DDT, dieldrin and quintozene.[1]

References

  1. Further mutagenicity studies on pesticides in bacterial reversion assay systems. Moriya, M., Ohta, T., Watanabe, K., Miyazawa, T., Kato, K., Shirasu, Y. Mutat. Res. (1983) [Pubmed]
 
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