TY - JOUR
T1 - A proposed screening strategy for evaluating the genotoxicity potential of botanicals and botanical extracts
AU - Witt, Kristine L.
AU - van Benthem, Jan
AU - Kobets, Tetyana
AU - Chen, Guosheng
AU - Kelber, Olaf
AU - Krzykwa, Julie
AU - MacGregor, James T.
AU - Mei, Nan
AU - Mitchell, Constance A.
AU - Rietjens, Ivonne
AU - Sarigol-Kilic, Zehra
AU - Smith-Roe, Stephanie L.
AU - Stopper, Helga
AU - Thakkar, Yax
AU - Zeiger, Errol
AU - Pfuhler, Stefan
PY - 2025/3
Y1 - 2025/3
N2 - Botanicals have long been used to promote health and treat diseases, but the safety of many currently marketed botanicals has not been adequately evaluated. Given the chemical complexity of botanicals, which often contain numerous unknown constituents, and their widespread use, comprehensive toxicity assessments are needed. The Botanical Safety Consortium was established to address this challenge. This international group of experts in toxicology, chemistry, bioinformatics, and pharmacognosy is developing a toolkit of assays to generate reliable toxicological profiles for botanicals. Genotoxicity assessment is especially critical, because, unlike other toxicities, genotoxicity is not adequately identified by adverse event and history-of-use reports, and genotoxicity is directly linked to health consequences such as cancer and birth defects. The Consortium's Genotoxicity Technical Working Group is exploring a genotoxicity testing strategy based on the use of in silico modeling and the bacterial reverse mutation and in vitro micronucleus assays and including several options for additional tests to further characterize genotoxicity and mode of action when indicated. The effectiveness of this testing strategy is being evaluated using 13 well-characterized botanicals with existing toxicological data as case studies. A brief overview of each of these 13 botanicals is provided. The final strategy for developing comprehensive genotoxicity profiles of botanicals will incorporate published genotoxicity data, chemical composition information, in silico and in vitro test data, and human exposure data, reducing the need for animal testing.
AB - Botanicals have long been used to promote health and treat diseases, but the safety of many currently marketed botanicals has not been adequately evaluated. Given the chemical complexity of botanicals, which often contain numerous unknown constituents, and their widespread use, comprehensive toxicity assessments are needed. The Botanical Safety Consortium was established to address this challenge. This international group of experts in toxicology, chemistry, bioinformatics, and pharmacognosy is developing a toolkit of assays to generate reliable toxicological profiles for botanicals. Genotoxicity assessment is especially critical, because, unlike other toxicities, genotoxicity is not adequately identified by adverse event and history-of-use reports, and genotoxicity is directly linked to health consequences such as cancer and birth defects. The Consortium's Genotoxicity Technical Working Group is exploring a genotoxicity testing strategy based on the use of in silico modeling and the bacterial reverse mutation and in vitro micronucleus assays and including several options for additional tests to further characterize genotoxicity and mode of action when indicated. The effectiveness of this testing strategy is being evaluated using 13 well-characterized botanicals with existing toxicological data as case studies. A brief overview of each of these 13 botanicals is provided. The final strategy for developing comprehensive genotoxicity profiles of botanicals will incorporate published genotoxicity data, chemical composition information, in silico and in vitro test data, and human exposure data, reducing the need for animal testing.
KW - Botanical safety
KW - Dietary supplements
KW - DNA damage
KW - Genetic toxicity
KW - Herbal medicines
KW - In vitro assays
KW - Testing strategy
U2 - 10.1016/j.fct.2025.115277
DO - 10.1016/j.fct.2025.115277
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85216494904
SN - 0278-6915
VL - 197
JO - Food and Chemical Toxicology
JF - Food and Chemical Toxicology
M1 - 115277
ER -