A Review on Impact of Glyphosate on Development of Cancer

Prasad, Monisha and Rekha, U. Vidhya and Rajagopal, Ponnulakshmi and Sekar, Durairaj and Jayaraman, Selvaraj (2021) A Review on Impact of Glyphosate on Development of Cancer. Journal of Pharmaceutical Research International, 33 (62A). pp. 307-316. ISSN 2456-9119

[thumbnail of 5319-Article Text-7443-1-10-20221006.pdf] Text
5319-Article Text-7443-1-10-20221006.pdf - Published Version

Download (307kB)

Abstract

Pesticides are a vast mixture of compounds used to control pests like plants, moulds, and insects. In agriculture, non-agricultural vegetation management, and crop desiccant harvesting aid, chemicals from every major functional family of pesticides, such as insecticides, herbicides, fungicides, and fumigants, were frequently used. Herbicides are one of the most effective tools for farmers to obtain optimal crop yields when used correctly. Glyphosate (N-(phosphonomethyl) glycine) is a broad-spectrum weed killer that is used all over the world in agriculture and forestry. Glyphosate's herbicidal activity in plants is to disrupt the shikimic acid pathway's generation of branched-chain amino acids by preventing the binding of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) to the enzyme 5-enolpyruvylshikimate 3-phosphate synthase. This causes a deficiency in aromatic amino acid synthesis and, as a result, weeds mortality. Glyphosate exposure through food, drinking water, wind, water erosion, and other environmental pathways has been linked to human health issues as a carcinogen, mutagen, and reproductive toxicity. Glyphosate has a wide range of tumorigenic effects in biological systems, and epidemiological evidence suggests that glyphosate use on crops is linked to a wide range of cancers, including liver cancer, breast cancer, thyroid cancer, pancreatic cancer, kidney cancer, bladder cancer, and myeloid cancer. The shikimate pathway enzymes, intermediates, and derivative amino acids, which have been associated to genotoxicity and carcinogenicity, are thought to have a role in most cancer pathologies. This review summarises glyphosate's function in cancer pathology, including the ability of the glyphosate circuit to induce cancer and implications for future therapeutic methods.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Open Article Repository > Medical Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@openarticledepository.com
Date Deposited: 09 Mar 2023 09:00
Last Modified: 29 Jul 2024 08:07
URI: http://journal.251news.co.in/id/eprint/368

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item