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Journal ArticleDOI

Plant extracts as modulators of genotoxic effects

Debisri Sarkar, +2 more
- 01 Oct 1996 - 
- Vol. 62, Iss: 4, pp 275-300
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TLDR
Higher plants used extensively in traditional medicines are increasingly being screened for their role in modulating the activity of environmental genotoxicants, and plant extracts able to modify the process of mutagenesis, which involves alteration in the genetic material are extended.
Abstract
Higher plants used extensively in traditional medicines are increasingly being screened for their role in modulating the activity of environmental genotoxicants. The property of preventing carcinogenesis has been reported in many plant extracts. The observation of a close association between carcinogenesis and mutagenesis has extended the survey to include plant extracts and plant products able to modify the process of mutagenesis, which involves alteration in the genetic material. Natural plant products may, apart from inducing mutations, modify the action of other known mutagens on the living organisms by 1) activating the existing mutagens within the cell, 2) inhibiting the production of mutagens in the cell, 3) synergising the activity of existing mutagens, or 4) activating the promutagens within the cell into mutagens. This review deals with data obtained in the course of research on the modulatory effects of plant extracts on mutagenesis and clastogenesis, two genotoxic phenomena associated with carcinogenesis.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Broad spectrum antimutagenic activity of antioxidant active fraction of punica granatum L. peel extracts.

TL;DR: High content of ellagitannins is revealed which might be responsible for promising antioxidant and antimutagenic activities of P. granatum peel extract which is to be explored to understand the exact mechanism of action as well as their therapeutic efficacy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inhibitory effect of Emblica officinalis on the in vivo clastogenicity of benzo[a]pyrene and cyclophosphamide in mice.

TL;DR: The data indicate that the possible mechanism of inhibition by plant extract is mediated by its modulatory effect on hepatic activation and disposition processes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Methanol extract from the stem of Cotinus coggygria Scop., and its major bioactive phytochemical constituent myricetin modulate pyrogallol-induced DNA damage and liver injury.

TL;DR: The results suggest that pro-surviving Akt activity and STAT3 protein expression play important roles in decreasing DNA damage and in mediating hepatic protection by the methanol extract of C. coggygria against pyrogallol-induced toxicity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cytogenotoxicity of Cymbopogon citratus (DC) Stapf (lemon grass) aqueous extracts in vegetal test systems

TL;DR: The results showed that the highest concentration of aqueous extracts reduced the mitotic index, the seed germination and the root development of lettuce, and the extracts have also induced chromosome aberrations and cellular death in the roots cells of L. sativa.
Book ChapterDOI

Potential Genotoxic and Cytotoxic Effects of Plant Extracts

TL;DR: The medicinal use of plants is probably as old as human kind itself and many of the plants species used for this purpose have been found to contain therapeutic substances which can be extracted and used in preparation of drugs.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A mutagen precursor in Chinese cabbage, indole-3-acetonitrile, which becomes mutagenic on nitrite treatment.

TL;DR: After treatment with nitrite, Chinese cabbage showed direct-acting mutagenicity on Salmonella typhimurium TA100 inducing 3100 revertants per g and one of the mutagen precursors that became mutagenic after nitrite treatment was isolated, and identified as indole-3-acetonitrile.
Journal ArticleDOI

Protoanemonin, an antimutagen isolated from plants.

TL;DR: Protoanemonin was identified as the factor responsible for the antimutagenicity of Ranunculus and Anemone plants against the strain E. coli B/r WP2 trp.
Journal ArticleDOI

The metabolic activation of 4-nitro-o-phenylenediamine by chlorophyll-containing plant extracts: the relationship between mutagenicity and antimutagenicity.

TL;DR: The balance between chemical mutagen activation and/or enhancement by chlorophyll-containing plant extracts and the potential antimutagenicity of these plant extracts is a function ofchlorophyll concentration.
Journal ArticleDOI

The plant cell/microbe coincubation assay for the analysis of plant-activated promutagens.

TL;DR: The preincubation and suspension procedures of the plant cell/microbe coincubation assay are described and the activation of 2-aminofluorene and m-phenylenediamine by cultured tobacco, cotton, carrot and maize cells is compared.
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