锌作为一种基于机制的金属毒性缓解策略。

IF 7.4 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Laurie G Hudson, Erica J Dashner-Titus, Debra MacKenzie
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引用次数: 0

摘要

综述目的:锌是一种必需的微量营养素,在人体健康中起着无数的关键作用。这篇综述总结了支持锌对金属毒性保护作用的机制数据,并讨论了在金属暴露的美洲原住民社区进行锌补充的干预性临床试验的框架。最近的发现:许多金属具有共同的潜在毒性机制,对人体健康造成不利影响。研究表明,金属中毒的多个方面可归因于基本的锌依赖功能的破坏。多种证据表明,锌可能对混合金属接触人群的金属毒性具有保护作用。思考锌是一项机制知情的锌补充干预研究,以测试锌的潜在益处,同时保持文化反应性的研究方法。目前对多种金属和锌相互作用的了解,加上锌在有毒金属暴露背景下有益的强有力的机制证据,支持了锌补充剂可能减轻慢性混合金属暴露人群和低锌人群中有毒金属暴露影响的假设。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Zinc as a Mechanism-Based Strategy for Mitigation of Metals Toxicity.

Purpose of review: Zinc is an essential micronutrient with a myriad of key roles in human health. This review summarizes mechanistic data supporting the protective effects of zinc on metal toxicity and discusses the framework for an interventional clinical trial of zinc supplementation within a metal exposed Native American community.

Recent findings: Many metals have common underlying mechanisms of toxicity that contribute to adverse human health effects. Studies demonstrate that multiple aspects of metal toxicity can be attributed to disruption of essential zinc-dependent functions. Multiple lines of evidence suggest that zinc may confer protection against metal toxicity in human populations with mixed-metal exposures. Thinking Zinc is a mechanism-informed intervention study of zinc supplementation to test the potential benefits of zinc while maintaining a culturally responsive research approach. The current knowledge of diverse metal and zinc interactions, coupled with strong mechanistic evidence for zinc benefits in the context of toxic metal exposures, supports the hypothesis that zinc supplementation may mitigate the impact of toxic metals exposures in populations with chronic mixed metal exposures and in populations with low zinc status.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
13.60
自引率
1.30%
发文量
47
期刊介绍: Current Environmental Health Reports provides up-to-date expert reviews in environmental health. The goal is to evaluate and synthesize original research in all disciplines relevant for environmental health sciences, including basic research, clinical research, epidemiology, and environmental policy.
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