Genotoxicity

Genotoxic damage is defined as changes in DNA caused by chemical substances or physical effects (e.g. UV or X-rays). These can result in a gene mutation, e.g. by insertion or deletion of one or more bases. DNA repair enzymes can often repair the effects, so not every genotoxic event results in a change in the base sequence. If this is unsuccessful, a mutation may occur, possibly resulting in cancer (carcinogenesis) and malformations (teratogenesis).

For further literature see:

Bürkle, A., Debiak, M. (2013). Genotoxikologie. In H. Marquardt, S. G. Schäfer & H. Barth (Eds.), Toxikologie (pp. 133–158). Wissenschaftliche Verlagsgesellschaft. https://www.lehmanns.de/shop/naturwissenschaften/47873671-9783804736573-toxikologie

Baum, M. (2006, March). Genotoxizität. In F. Böckler, B. Dill, G. Eisenbrand, F. Faupel, B. Fugmann, T. Gamse, P. Heretsch, R. Matissek, G. Pohnert, A. Rühling, S. Schmidt & G. Sprenger (Eds.), Römpp Online. Thieme. https://roempp.thieme.de/lexicon/RD-07-00729

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