Abstract

This study aimed to analyze the antiproliferative and genotoxic potential of synthetic food flavorings, nature identical passion fruit and artificial vanilla. This assessment used root meristem cells of Allium cepa L., in exposure times of 24 and 48 hours and using doses of 0.2; 0.4 and 0.6 mL. Roots were fixed in Carnoy's solution, hydrolyzed in hydrochloric acid, stained with acetic orcein and analyzed with optical microscope at 400× magnification, 5,000 cells for each treatment. For data analysis, it was used Chi-square test at 5%. Doses of 0.2 mL at ET 48 h; 0.4 and 0.6 mL at ET 24 and 48 h of passion fruit flavor, and the three doses of the vanilla flavor at ET 24 and 48 h significantly reduced the cell division rate in the meristems of roots, proving to be cytotoxic. Doses of 0.2; 0.4 and 0.6 mL of the passion fruit additive, and the three doses of vanilla tested, in the two exposure times, induced mitotic spindle changes and micronuclei formation in the cells of the test organism used, proving to be genotoxic. Therefore, under the studied conditions, flavoring solutions of vanilla and passion fruit, marketed nationally and internationally, significantly altered the functioning of the cell cycle in root meristem cells of A. cepa.

Highlights

  • Flavorings are food additives with aromatic properties capable of providing or enhancing the aroma and flavor of food without nutritional purposes

  • We examined 1,000 cells, totaling 5,000 cells for control, ET 24 and ET 48 hours of each treatment group (TG) analyzed

  • It is important to mention that, according to the Technical Regulation on Flavorings/Aroma approved by ANVISA (Brasil, 1999) and still in force, the formulation of any synthetic food flavoring is standardized worldwide

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Summary

Introduction

Flavorings are food additives with aromatic properties capable of providing or enhancing the aroma and flavor of food without nutritional purposes They are classified as natural, synthetic nature-identical and synthetic artificial (Koca et al, 2015). Toxicity of synthetic food flavorings compounds such as diluents, antioxidants, defoamers, preservatives, emulsifiers, stabilizers, acidity regulators, flavor enhancers, anti-caking agents, dyes, and extraction and processing solvents. Such a composition is approved for use worldwide by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) (Xu et al, 2015) and in Brazil by the National Sanitary Surveillance Agency (ANVISA) (Brasil, 2007)

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