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  • Key words Antioxidant – oxidative stress – flavonoids – comet assay – isolated colonocytes  (1)
  • Lycopersicon esculentum  (1)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1436-6215
    Keywords: Key words Antioxidant – oxidative stress – flavonoids – comet assay – isolated colonocytes
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Background: Dietary polyphenols have been reported to have a variety of biological actions, including anti-carcinogenic, antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activities. Aim of the study: In the present study we have evaluated the effect of an oral treatment with complex polyphenols and tannins from red wine and tea on DNA oxidative dammage in the rat colon mucosa. Methods: Isolated colonocytes were prepared from the colon mucosa of rats treated for ten days with either wine complex polyphenols (57.2 mg/kg/d) or thearubigin (40 mg/kg/d) by oral gavage. Colonocyte oxidative DNA damage was analysed at the single cell level using a modification of the comet assay technique. Results: These results show that wine complex polyphenols and tannins induce a significant decrease (−62% for pyrimidine and −57% for purine oxidation) in basal DNA oxidative damage in colon mucosal cells without affecting the basal level of single-strand breaks. On the other hand, tea polyphenols, namely a crude extract of thearubigin, did not affect either strand breaks or pyrimidine oxidation in colon mucosal cells. Conclusions Our experiments are the first demonstration that dietary polyphenols can modulate in vivo oxidative damage in the gastrointestinal tract of rodents. These data support the hypothesis that dietary polyphenols might have both a protective and a therapeutic potential in oxidative damage-related pathologies.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1615-6102
    Keywords: Environment ; Flower development ; Gibberellin ; Lycopersicon esculentum ; Parthenocarpy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Theparthenocarpic fruit (pat) allele causes a complex syndrome affecting different aspects of tomato reproductive development. This mutation affects stamen (reduced length and carpelloidy), ovule (arrested integument growth and unviability), and ovary (autonomous growth, i.e., parthenocarpy) development;pat mutant plants therefore have reduced male and female fertility. We studied the phenotypic expression patterns of thepat gene after treatments with gibberellic acid (GA3) and under different growth seasons (late spring and autumn) and genetic backgrounds (backcross [BC] population after interspecific cross). GA3 treatments were only effective in restoring carpelloid anthers to the wild-type phenotype. Compared to late spring, mutant plants grown in autumn had a lower frequency of carpelloid anthers and aberrant ovules and a higher seed set. Inflorescence position also affected thepat expression; upper inflorescences had low frequency of short anthers and aberrant ovules and an increased tendency to set seeds,pat expressivity was more variable in BC1 plants segregating after interspecific cross withLycopersicon pennellii than in the originalL. esculentum line. Therefore, a role for minor genes that modify the quantitative expression of thepat mutation is postulated and discussed.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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