Nutrigenetics。

Ahmed El-Sohemy
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引用次数: 1

摘要

营养物质与人类基因组相互作用,调节可能被破坏的分子途径,导致患各种慢性疾病的风险增加。遗传多态性影响饮食因子的代谢,进而影响参与一些重要代谢过程的基因的表达。影响营养代谢的遗传多态性可以解释有关饮食与慢性疾病(如癌症、糖尿病、风湿性关节炎、骨质疏松症和心血管疾病)之间的一些不一致的流行病学研究。了解遗传变异如何影响营养物质的消化、吸收、运输、生物转化、摄取和消除,将提供更准确的测量摄入的生物活性食品成分的暴露程度。此外,营养作用靶点(如受体、酶或转运体)的遗传多态性可能改变影响饮食干预生理反应的分子途径。在具有影响营养代谢的功能变异的候选基因中,那些编码异种代谢酶(也称为药物代谢酶)的基因。这些酶参与I期和II期生物转化反应,产生与母体化合物相比生物活性增加或降低的代谢物。已知有许多饮食因素会改变这些基因的表达,而这些基因反过来又会代谢大量外来化学物质,包括抗氧化剂、维生素、植物化学物质、咖啡因、固醇、脂肪酸和酒精等饮食因素。了解对这些饮食因素反应变异性的遗传基础,将有助于更准确地测量目标组织对这些化合物及其代谢物的暴露。“慢”和“快”代谢物对相同饮食暴露的不同反应的例子将被讨论。确定相关的饮食-基因相互作用将有利于寻求个性化饮食建议的个人,并通过提供将饮食与健康联系起来的可靠科学证据来改进公共卫生建议。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Nutrigenetics.

Nutrients interact with the human genome to modulate molecular pathways that may become disrupted, resulting in an increased risk of developing various chronic diseases. Genetic polymorphisms affect the metabolism of dietary factors, which in turn affects the expression of genes involved in a number of important metabolic processes. Genetic polymorphisms affecting nutrient metabolism may explain some of the inconsistencies among epidemiological studies relating diet to chronic diseases such as cancer, diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, osteoporosis and cardiovascular disease. Understanding how genetic variations influence nutrient digestion, absorption, transport, biotransformation, uptake and elimination will provide a more accurate measure of exposure to the bioactive food ingredients ingested. Furthermore, genetic polymorphisms in the targets of nutrient action such as receptors, enzymes or transporters could alter molecular pathways that influence the physiological response to dietary interventions. Among the candidate genes with functional variants that affect nutrient metabolism are those that code for xenobiotic-metabolizing enzymes (also called drug-metabolizing enzymes). These enzymes are involved in the phase I and II biotransformation reactions that produce metabolites with either increased or decreased biological activity compared to the parent compound. A number of dietary factors are known to alter the expression of these genes that, in turn, metabolize a vast array of foreign chemicals including dietary factors such as antioxidants, vitamins, phytochemicals, caffeine, sterols, fatty acids and alcohol. Knowledge of the genetic basis for the variability in response to these dietary factors should result in a more accurate measure of exposure of target tissues of interest to these compounds and their metabolites. Examples of how 'slow' and 'fast' metabolizers respond differently to the same dietary exposures will be discussed. Identifying relevant diet-gene interactions will benefit individuals seeking personalized dietary advice as well as improve public health recommendations by providing sound scientific evidence linking diet and health.

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