Evaluating genotoxic risks in Brazilian public health agents occupationally exposed to pesticides: a multi-biomarker approach

Environ Sci Pollut Res Int. 2016 Oct;23(19):19723-34. doi: 10.1007/s11356-016-7179-y. Epub 2016 Jul 13.

Abstract

This is the first study demonstrating genotoxic effects and whole transcriptome analysis on community health agents (CHAs) occupationally exposed to pesticides in Central Brazil. For the transcriptome analysis, we found some genes related to Alzheimer's disease (LRP1), an insulin-like growth factor receptor (IGF2R), immunity genes (IGL family and IGJ), two genes related to inflammatory reaction (CXCL5 and CCL3), one gene related to maintenance of cellular morphology (NHS), one gene considered to be a strong apoptosis inductor (LGALS14), and several transcripts of the neuroblastoma breakpoint family (NBPF). Related to comet assay, we demonstrated a significant increase in DNA damage, measured by the olive tail moment (OTM), in the exposed group compared to the control group. Moreover, we also observed a statistically significant difference in OTM values depending on GSTM1 genotypes. Therefore, Brazilian epidemiological surveillance, an organization responsible for the assessment and management of health risks associated to pesticide exposure to CHA, needs to be more proactive and considers the implications of pesticide exposure for CHA procedures and processes.

Keywords: Comet assay; DNA damage; Differential expression panel; GST genotypes; Occupational exposure; Pesticide genotoxicity.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Biomarkers / metabolism
  • Brazil
  • Comet Assay
  • DNA Damage
  • Genotype
  • Glutathione Transferase / genetics
  • Glutathione Transferase / metabolism
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Occupational Exposure / analysis*
  • Occupational Exposure / statistics & numerical data
  • Pesticides / analysis
  • Pesticides / metabolism*
  • Public Health
  • Risk

Substances

  • Biomarkers
  • Pesticides
  • Glutathione Transferase
  • glutathione S-transferase M1