Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5857355 Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology 2014 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Genotoxicity studies on some cosmetic and food additives.•α-Hexylcinnamaldehyde (HCA) and butylphenyl methylpropional (BMHCA) as additives.•Genotoxicity evaluated in bacteria and in mammalian cells.•Test substances induced neither point mutations, nor micronuclei and strand breaks.•These data reassure about the use of HCA and BMHCA as food and cosmetic additives.

α-Hexylcinnamaldehyde (HCA) and p-tert-butyl-alpha-methylhydrocinnamic aldehyde (BMHCA) are synthetic aldehydes, characterized by a typical floral scent, which makes them suitable to be used as fragrances in personal care (perfumes, creams, shampoos, etc.) and household products, and as flavouring additives in food and pharmaceutical industry. The aldehydic structure suggests the need for a safety assessment for these compounds. Here, HCA and BMHCA were evaluated for their potential genotoxic risk, both at gene level (frameshift or base-substitution mutations) by the bacterial reverse mutation assay (Ames test), and at chromosomal level (clastogenicity and aneuploidy) by the micronucleus test. In order to evaluate a primary and repairable DNA damage, the comet assay has been also included. In spite of their potential hazardous chemical structure, a lack of mutagenicity was observed for both compounds in all bacterial strains tested, also in presence of the exogenous metabolic activator, showing that no genotoxic derivatives were produced by CYP450-mediated biotransformations. Neither genotoxicity at chromosomal level (i.e. clastogenicity or aneuploidy) nor single-strand breaks were observed. These findings will be useful in further assessing the safety of HCA and BMHCA as either flavour or fragrance chemicals.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Environmental Science Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
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