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Nora Benachour

Researcher at University of Caen Lower Normandy

Publications -  7
Citations -  1951

Nora Benachour is an academic researcher from University of Caen Lower Normandy. The author has contributed to research in topics: Endocrine disruptor & Xenobiotic. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 7 publications receiving 1754 citations.

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Glyphosate-based herbicides are toxic and endocrine disruptors in human cell lines.

TL;DR: A real cell impact of glyphosate-based herbicides residues in food, feed or in the environment has thus to be considered, and their classifications as carcinogens/mutagens/reprotoxics is discussed.
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Differential effects of glyphosate and roundup on human placental cells and aromatase.

TL;DR: It is shown that glyphosate is toxic to human placental JEG3 cells within 18 hr with concentrations lower than those found with agricultural use, and this effect increases with concentration and time, and the presence of Roundup adjuvants enhances glyphosate bioavailability and/or bioaccumulation.
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Glyphosate Formulations Induce Apoptosis and Necrosis in Human Umbilical, Embryonic, and Placental Cells

TL;DR: The R adjuvants like POEA change human cell permeability and amplify toxicity induced already by G, through apoptosis and necrosis, on three different human cell types, and clearly confirms that the adjuvant in Roundup formulations are not inert.
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Time- and Dose-Dependent Effects of Roundup on Human Embryonic and Placental Cells

TL;DR: Testing the toxicity and endocrine disruption potential of Roundup on human embryonic 293 and placental-derived JEG3 cells, but also on normal human placenta and equine testis, suggests that Roundup exposure may affect human reproduction and fetal development in case of contamination.
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Toxic effects of low doses of Bisphenol-A on human placental cells.

TL;DR: The findings suggest that exposure of placental cells to low doses of BPA may cause detrimental effects, leading in vivo to adverse pregnancy outcomes such as preeclampsia, intrauterine growth restriction, prematurity and pregnancy loss.