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Modulation of genotoxic and related effects by carotenoids and vitamin A in experimental models: mechanistic issues
Author(s) -
Silvio De Flora
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
mutagenesis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.723
H-Index - 91
eISSN - 1464-3804
pISSN - 0267-8357
DOI - 10.1093/mutage/14.2.153
Subject(s) - carotenoid , vitamin , retinol , biology , crocetin , clastogen , biochemistry , dna repair , retinoic acid , chemistry , micronucleus test , microbiology and biotechnology , gene , toxicity , organic chemistry
The mechanisms involved in the modulation of genotoxic and related effects by carotenoids and vitamin A were inferred from a critical review of an ad hoc constructed database. Almost 500 results were generated in experimental models evaluating the activity of 32 structurally, metabolically and functionally related nutrients, including beta-carotene and 26 other carotenoids, retinol, retinal, all-trans-retinoic acid and retinyl esters. As many as 67 experimental test systems, either in vitro or in vivo, used a variety of cellular targets and/or end-points suggestive of distinctive mechanisms of action. The bulk of available data support the view that carotenoids and vitamin A do not induce genotoxic effects per se. Even in the absence of any genotoxic agent, these nutrients appeared, on the contrary, to display some mechanisms which play protective roles in tumor promotion and progression, such as inhibition of N-myc gene expression resulting in antiproliferative effects, up-regulation of cell-to-cell communication, an increase in connexin 43 gene expression, a decrease in the 'spontaneous' cell transformation frequency and induction of differentiation in vitro. A large number of studies investigated the modulation by carotenoids and vitamin A of genotoxic and related effects produced by 69 genotoxicants, including biological agents, physical agents, chemical compounds and complex mixtures. In spite of some discrepant data, the general trend was that both carotenoids and vitamin A are poorly effective in acting as nucleophiles, nor do they appear to substantially interfere with the induction or repair of DNA damage produced by direct-acting agents. In contrast vitamin A and carotenoids, irrespective of their provitamin A role, in most studies inhibited those genotoxicants which require metabolic activation to electrophilic derivatives in either bacterial or mammalian cells. Coupled with biochemical data, the distinctive patterns observed with genotoxic agents belonging to different chemical classes suggest a complex modulation of both phase I and phase II enzymes involved in the metabolism of xenobiotics. Furthermore, carotenoids and vitamin A shared other protective mechanisms, such as scavenging of genotoxic oxygen species, modulation of signal transduction pathways, inhibition of cell transformation induced by physical and chemical agents, and facilitation of intercellular communication inhibited by genotoxic compounds. Therefore, carotenoids and vitamin A appear to work via multiple mechanisms, which would support a potential protective role in cancer initiation and in the pathogenesis of other mutation-related diseases. These conclusions are consistent with the recognized cancer-preventive activity of these nutrients in certain animal models and with the evidence provided by observational epidemiological studies, which suggested cancer-protective effects at many sites as related to their dietary intake or plasma levels. However, all these lines of evidence and mechanistically based premises contrast with the unexpected outcome of recent clinical intervention trials, which raised the concern that supplemental use of beta-carotene and vitamin A may increase the risk of lung cancer amongst high risk individuals such as tobacco smokers and asbestos-exposed workers.

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