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      The Genoprotective Role of Naringin

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          Abstract

          Since ancient times, fruits and edible plants have played a special role in the human diet for enhancing health and maintaining youthfulness. The aim of our work was to determine the interactions between naringin, a natural ingredient of grapefruits, and DNA using an electrochemical biosensor. Electrochemical methods allow analyzing the damages occurring in the structure of nucleic acids and their interactions with xenobiotics. Our study showed that the changes in the location of electrochemical signals and their intensity resulted from the structural alterations in DNA. The signal of adenine was affected at lower concentrations of naringin, but the signal of guanine was unaffected in the same condition. The dynamics of changes occurring in the peak height and surface of adenine related to naringin concentration was also significantly lower. The complete binding of all adenine bases present in the tested double-stranded DNA solution was observed at naringin concentrations ranging from 8.5 to 10.0 µM. At larger concentrations, this active compound exerted an oxidizing effect on DNA. However, the critical concentrations of naringin were found to be more than twice as high as the dose absorbable in an average human (4 µM). The results of our work might be helpful in the construction of electrochemical sensors for testing the content of polyphenols and would allow determining their genoprotective functionality.

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          Most cited references27

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          Nanocarbons for Biology and Medicine: Sensing, Imaging, and Drug Delivery

          Nanocarbons with different dimensions (e.g., 0D fullerenes and carbon nanodots, 1D carbon nanotubes and graphene nanoribbons, 2D graphene and graphene oxides, and 3D nanodiamonds) have attracted enormous interest for applications ranging from electronics, optoelectronics, and photovoltaics to sensing, bioimaging, and therapeutics due to their unique physical and chemical properties. Among them, nanocarbon-based theranostics (i.e., therapeutics and diagnostics) is one of the most intensively studied applications, as these nanocarbon materials serve as excellent biosensors, versatile drug/gene carriers for specific targeting in vivo, effective photothermal nanoagents for cancer therapy, and promising fluorescent nanolabels for cell and tissue imaging. This review provides a systematic overview of the latest theranostic applications of nanocarbon materials with a comprehensive comparison of the characteristics of different nanocarbon materials and their influences on theranostic applications. We first introduce the different carbon allotropes that can be used for theranostic applications with their respective preparation and surface functionalization approaches as well as their physical and chemical properties. Theranostic applications are described separately for both in vitro and in vivo systems by highlighting the protocols and the studied biosystems, followed by the toxicity and biodegradability implications. Finally, this review outlines the design considerations for nanocarbon materials as the key unifying themes that will serve as a foundational first principle for researchers to study, investigate, and generate effective, biocompatible, and nontoxic nanocarbon materials-based models for cancer theranostics applications. Finally, we summarize the review with an outlook on the challenges and novel theranostic protocols using nanocarbon materials for hard-to-treat cancers and other diseases. This review intends to present a comprehensive guideline for researchers in nanotechnology and biomedicine on the selection strategy of nanocarbon materials according to their specific requirements.
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            Antioxidant properties, radical scavenging activity and biomolecule protection capacity of flavonoid naringenin and its glycoside naringin: a comparative study.

            This study was designed to evaluate and compare antioxidant capacity and radical scavenging activity of naringin and its aglycone by different in vitro assays. The effects of flavanones on lipid peroxidation, glutathione (GSH) oxidation and DNA cleavage were also assessed. The results showed that naringenin exhibited higher antioxidant capacity and hydroxyl and superoxide radical scavenger efficiency than naringin. Our results evidenced that glycosylation attenuated the efficiency in inhibiting the enzyme xanthine oxidase and the aglycone could act like a more active chelator of metallic ions than the glycoside. Additionally, naringenin showed a greater effectiveness in the protection against oxidative damage to lipids in a dose-dependent manner. Both flavanones were equally effective in reducing DNA damage. However, they show no protective effect on oxidation of GSH. The data obtained support the importance of characterizing the ratio naringin/naringenin in foods when they are evaluated for their health benefits.
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              Flavanone absorption after naringin, hesperidin, and citrus administration.

              Disposition of citrus flavonoids was evaluated after single oral doses of pure compounds (500 mg naringin and 500 mg hesperidin) and after multiple doses of combined grapefruit juice and orange juice and of once-daily grapefruit. Cumulative urinary recovery indicated low bioavailability ( < 25%) of naringin and hesperidin. The aglycones naringenin and hesperitin were detected in urine and plasma by positive chemical ionization-collisionally activated dissociation tandem mass spectrometry (PCI-CAD MS/MS). After juice administration, PCI-CAD MS/MS detected naringenin, hesperitin, and four related flavanones, tentatively identified as monomethoxy and dimethoxy derivatives. These methoxyflavanones appear to be absorbed from juice. Absorbed citrus flavanones may undergo glucuronidation before urinary excretion.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Biomolecules
                Biomolecules
                biomolecules
                Biomolecules
                MDPI
                2218-273X
                30 April 2020
                May 2020
                : 10
                : 5
                : 700
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Gastronomy Sciences and Functional Foods, Poznań University of Life Sciences, 60-637 Poznań, Poland; joanna.kobus@ 123456up.poznan.pl (J.K.-C.); marcin.dziedzinski@ 123456up.poznan.pl (M.D.); monika.przeor@ 123456up.poznan.pl (M.P.)
                [2 ]Department of Industrial Products Quality and Packaging Development, Poznań University of Economics and Business, 61-875 Poznań, Poland; marta.ligaj@ 123456ue.poznan.pl (M.L.); mariusz.tichoniuk@ 123456ue.poznan.pl (M.T.)
                [3 ]Department of Agronomy, Poznań University of Life Sciences, 60-637 Poznań, Poland; piotr.szulc@ 123456up.poznan.pl
                Author notes
                [* ]Correspondence: oskar.szczepaniak@ 123456up.poznan.pl ; Tel.: +48-61-848-6330
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9498-819X
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8510-8568
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2834-0405
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2684-950X
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1069-0095
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2600-8935
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9670-3231
                Article
                biomolecules-10-00700
                10.3390/biom10050700
                7277402
                32365989
                7734ad5a-e89d-45be-a060-0d1d02fb26da
                © 2020 by the authors.

                Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 15 February 2020
                : 27 April 2020
                Categories
                Article

                naringin,dna,reactive oxygen species,electrochemical dna biosensor,square-wave voltammetry

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