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Cytogenetic effects from exposure to mixed pesticides and the influence from genetic susceptibility.

Exposure to pesticides remains a major environmental health problem. Health risk from such exposure needs to be more precisely understood. We conducted three different cytogenetic assays to elucidate the biological effects of exposure to mixed pesticides in 20 Costa Rica farmers (all nonsmokers) com...

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Autores principales: Au, W W, Sierra-Torres, C H, Cajas-Salazar, N, Shipp, B K, Legator, M S
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1999
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1566563/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10339452
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author Au, W W
Sierra-Torres, C H
Cajas-Salazar, N
Shipp, B K
Legator, M S
author_facet Au, W W
Sierra-Torres, C H
Cajas-Salazar, N
Shipp, B K
Legator, M S
author_sort Au, W W
collection PubMed
description Exposure to pesticides remains a major environmental health problem. Health risk from such exposure needs to be more precisely understood. We conducted three different cytogenetic assays to elucidate the biological effects of exposure to mixed pesticides in 20 Costa Rica farmers (all nonsmokers) compared with 20 matched controls. The farmers were also exposed to dibromochloropropane during the early employment years, and most of them experienced sterility/fertility problems. Our data show that the farmers had consistently higher frequencies of chromosome aberrations, as determined by the standard chromosome aberration assay, and significantly abnormal DNA repair responses (p < 0.05), as determined by the challenge assay, but no statistically significant differences in the tandem-probe fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) assay (p > 0.05). Genotype analysis indicates that farmers with certain "unfavorable" versions of polymorphic metabolizing genes (cytochrome P4502E1, the glutathione S-transferases mu and theta, and the paraoxonase genes) had significantly more biological effects, as determined by all three cytogenetic assays, than both the farmers with the "favorable" alleles and the matched controls. A unique observation is that, in individuals who had inherited any of the mentioned "unfavorable" alleles, farmers were consistently underrepresented. In conclusion, the Costa Rican farmers were exposed to genotoxic agents, most likely pesticides, which expressed the induction of biological and adverse health effects. The farmers who had inherited "unfavorable" metabolizing alleles were more susceptible to genotoxic effects than those with "favorable" alleles. Our genotype data suggest that the well-recognized "healthy worker effect" may be influenced by unrecognized occupational selection pressure against genetically susceptible individuals.
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spelling pubmed-15665632006-09-19 Cytogenetic effects from exposure to mixed pesticides and the influence from genetic susceptibility. Au, W W Sierra-Torres, C H Cajas-Salazar, N Shipp, B K Legator, M S Environ Health Perspect Research Article Exposure to pesticides remains a major environmental health problem. Health risk from such exposure needs to be more precisely understood. We conducted three different cytogenetic assays to elucidate the biological effects of exposure to mixed pesticides in 20 Costa Rica farmers (all nonsmokers) compared with 20 matched controls. The farmers were also exposed to dibromochloropropane during the early employment years, and most of them experienced sterility/fertility problems. Our data show that the farmers had consistently higher frequencies of chromosome aberrations, as determined by the standard chromosome aberration assay, and significantly abnormal DNA repair responses (p < 0.05), as determined by the challenge assay, but no statistically significant differences in the tandem-probe fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) assay (p > 0.05). Genotype analysis indicates that farmers with certain "unfavorable" versions of polymorphic metabolizing genes (cytochrome P4502E1, the glutathione S-transferases mu and theta, and the paraoxonase genes) had significantly more biological effects, as determined by all three cytogenetic assays, than both the farmers with the "favorable" alleles and the matched controls. A unique observation is that, in individuals who had inherited any of the mentioned "unfavorable" alleles, farmers were consistently underrepresented. In conclusion, the Costa Rican farmers were exposed to genotoxic agents, most likely pesticides, which expressed the induction of biological and adverse health effects. The farmers who had inherited "unfavorable" metabolizing alleles were more susceptible to genotoxic effects than those with "favorable" alleles. Our genotype data suggest that the well-recognized "healthy worker effect" may be influenced by unrecognized occupational selection pressure against genetically susceptible individuals. 1999-06 /pmc/articles/PMC1566563/ /pubmed/10339452 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Au, W W
Sierra-Torres, C H
Cajas-Salazar, N
Shipp, B K
Legator, M S
Cytogenetic effects from exposure to mixed pesticides and the influence from genetic susceptibility.
title Cytogenetic effects from exposure to mixed pesticides and the influence from genetic susceptibility.
title_full Cytogenetic effects from exposure to mixed pesticides and the influence from genetic susceptibility.
title_fullStr Cytogenetic effects from exposure to mixed pesticides and the influence from genetic susceptibility.
title_full_unstemmed Cytogenetic effects from exposure to mixed pesticides and the influence from genetic susceptibility.
title_short Cytogenetic effects from exposure to mixed pesticides and the influence from genetic susceptibility.
title_sort cytogenetic effects from exposure to mixed pesticides and the influence from genetic susceptibility.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1566563/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10339452
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