4.5 Review

Radioprotectors - the Evergreen Topic

Journal

CHEMISTRY & BIODIVERSITY
Volume 10, Issue 10, Pages 1791-1803

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/cbdv.201300054

Keywords

Radioprotectors; Ionizing radiation; Antioxidant activity; Radical-scavenging activity; Polyphenols

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Environment of the Republic of Serbia [172041, 172043]

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To protect organisms from ionizing radiation (IR), and to reduce morbidity or mortality, various agents, called radioprotectors, have been utilized. Because radiation-induced cellular damage is attributed primarily to the harmful effects of free radicals, molecules with radical-scavenging properties are particularly promising as radioprotectors. Early development of such agents focused on thiol synthetic compounds, known as WR protectors, but only amifostine (WR-2721) has been used in clinical trials as an officially approved radioprotector. Besides thiol compounds, various compounds with different chemical structure were investigated, but an ideal radioprotector has not been found yet. Plants and natural products have been evaluated as promising sources of radioprotectors because of their low toxicity, although they exhibit an inferior protection level compared to synthetic thiol compounds. Active plant constituents seem to exert the radioprotection through antioxidant and free radical-scavenging activities. Our research established that plants containing polyphenolic compounds (raspberry, blueberry, strawberry, grape, etc.) exhibit antioxidative activities and protect genetic material from IR.

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