Fresh and processed cashew (Anacardium occidentale) apple juice (CAJ) are among the most popular drinks in Brazil. Besides their nutritional benefits, these juices have antibacterial and antitumor potential. The chemical constituents of both the fresh juice and the processed juice (cajuina) were analyzed and characterized as complex mixtures containing high concentrations of vitamin C, various carotenoids, phenolic compounds, and metals. In the present study, these beverages exhibited direct and rat liver S9-mediated mutagenicity in the Salmonella/microsome assay with strains TA97a, TA98, and TA100, which detect frameshifts and base pair substitution. No mutagenicity was observed with strain TA102, which detects oxidative and alkylating mutagens and active forms of oxygen. Both CAJ and cajuina showed antioxidant activity as determined by a total radical-trapping potential assay. To test whether this antioxidant potential might result in antimutagenesis, we used a variation of the Salmonella/microsome assay that included pre-, co-, and posttreatment of hydrogen peroxide-exposed Salmonella typhimurium strain TA102 with the juices. CAJ and cajuina protected strain TA102 against mutation by oxidative damage in co- and posttreatments. The antimutagenic effects during cotreatment with hydrogen peroxide may be due to scavenging free radicals and complexing extracellular mutagenic compounds. The protective effects in posttreatment may be due to stimulation of repair and/or reversion of DNA damage. The results indicate that CAJ and cajuina have mutagenic, radical-trapping, antimutagenic, and comutagenic activity and that these properties can be related to the chemical constituents of the juices.
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