| Literature DB >> 23093960 |
Rita Rosati1, Hongzhi Ma, Diane C Cabelof.
Abstract
Fortification of grains has resulted in a positive public health outcome vis-a-vis reduced incidence of neural tube defects. Whether folate has a correspondingly beneficial effect on other disease outcomes is less clear. A role for dietary folate in the prevention of colorectal cancer has been established through epidemiological data. Experimental data aiming to further elucidate this relationship has been somewhat equivocal. Studies report that folate depletion increases DNA damage, mutagenesis, and chromosomal instability, all suggesting inhibited DNA repair. While these data connecting folate depletion and inhibition of DNA repair are convincing, we also present data demonstrating that genetic inhibition of DNA repair is protective in the development of preneoplastic colon lesions, both when folate is depleted and when it is not. The purpose of this paper is to (1) give an overview of the data demonstrating a DNA repair defect in response to folate depletion, and (2) critically compare and contrast the experimental designs utilized in folate/colorectal cancer research and the corresponding impact on tissue folate status and critical colorectal cancer endpoints. Our analysis suggests that there is still an important need for a comprehensive evaluation of the impact of differential dietary prescriptions on blood and tissue folate status.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23093960 PMCID: PMC3474250 DOI: 10.1155/2012/105949
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Oncol ISSN: 1687-8450 Impact factor: 4.375
Figure 1Biochemistry of base excision repair in uracil removal. Uracil removal is carried out as depicted, with initiation of removal by a uracil-excising DNA glycosylase (UDG depicted). All the uracil-excising glycosylases are monofunctional and leave behind an abasic lesion with an intact DNA backbone. An endonuclease (Apex 1) incises the DNA backbone 5′ to the abasic lesion, generating a 3′hydroxyl group and a 5′deoxyribose flap. A DNA polymerase (DNA polymerase β) inserts the correct nucleotide, then, in conjunction with a scaffolding protein (XRCCI), excises the deoxyribose flap. This step represents the rate-determining step in uracil-initiated base excision repair. Ligation of the scission in the phosphodiester backbone (ligase III and Xrcc1) completes repair and restores intact DNA structure. The single-strand break induced by Apex1 persists until ligation is complete and presents a potentially cytotoxic lesion if left incompletely repaired.
Genome instability phenotypes in base excision repair mutant models.
| Gene | Genotype | Phenotype | Genome instability |
|---|---|---|---|
| UNG | Ung−/− | Viable | Uracil accumulation in brain |
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| SMUG | Smugtg/+
| Viable | C to T mutagenesis |
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| OGG1 | Ogg1−/− | Viable | 8-OHdG accumulation |
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| MYH | Myh−/−
| Viable | Spontaneous mutagenesis |
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| AAG | Aag−/− | Viable | Increased mutagenesis |
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| NTH | |||
| [ | Nth1−/−
| Viable | Increased thymine glycol in liver after X-ray irradiation |
| [ | Ogg1−/−Nth−/− mice | Viable | Gamma irradiation-induced DSB |
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| TDG | Tdg−/− | Embryonic lethal | Deficient repair of mtDNA |
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| MBD4 | Mbd4−/−
| Viable | Aberrant chromatin metabolism |
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| FEN | Fen1−/−
| Early embryonic lethal | Microsatellite instability |
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| APE | Ape−/−
| Embryonic lethal | |
| [ | Apex1+/−XPC−/− | Increased UV-induced skin cancer | Increased mutagenicity |
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| XRCC | Xrcc1−/− | Embryonic lethal | |
| [ | Xrcc1+/− | Increased AOM-induced ACF | SCE in embryo and cell lines |
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| Embryonic lethal | DSB accumulation |
| [ |
| Viable | Increased SCE in MEFs |
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| LIGI | Lig−/− | Embryonic lethal defective erythropoiesis | Oxidative stress sensitivity |
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| LIGII | Lig−/− | Embryonic lethal | Elevated SCE |
Impact of experimental design on blood and tissue folate.
| Animal model | Experimental diet | Abx | Wire cages | Length of feeding | In vivo folate levels | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rat studies quantifying impact of dietary intervention on blood and/or tissue folate status | ||||||
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| Sprague-Dawley rats | Amino acid defined (Dyets) | No | Yes | 25 weeks | Folate levels (nmol/g) | [ |
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| Sprague-Dawley rats | Amino acid defined (Dyets) | No | Yes | 8 weeks |
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| Sprague-Dawley rats | AIN-76 semipurified diet | Yes and no | Yes | 12 weeks | Whole blood folate | [ |
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| Sprague-Dawley rats | AIN-76 semipurified diet | Yes and no | Yes | 26 weeks | Whole blood folate | [ |
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| Sprague-Dawley rats | AIN93 (G or M not Specified) | No | No | 20 weeks | Hepatic folate (nmol/g) | [ |
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| Sprague Dawley rats | AIN93 purified diet (G or M not specified) | No | Yes | 20 weeks | Plasma folate | [ |
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| Fischer-344 rats | AIN-93 diet | No | Yes | 11 weeks | Plasma folate | [ |
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| Sprague-Dawley rats | Amino acid defined (Dyets) | Yes | No | 24 weeks | Plasma folate | [ |
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| Male Hooded-Lister | AIN-93G purified diet with vitamin-free casein | No | Yes | 6 weeks | Folate value, ng/mg protein | [ |
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| Mouse studies quantifying impact of dietary intervention on blood and/or tissue folate status | ||||||
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| C57bl/6J mice, APCMin | Amino acid defined (Dyets) | No | No | 3 months; | Serum folate (ng/mL): | [ |
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| C57bl/6 mice, | AIN-93G purified diet with vitamin-free casein | Yes | No | 8 weeks | Serum folate | [ |
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| C57bl/6 mice, Aag−/− | AIN-93G purified diet with vitamin-free casein | Yes | Yes | 4 weeks | Liver folate | [ |
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| C57bl/6 mice, | AIN-93G purified diet | No | Yes | 5 weeks (Apc+/+); 11 weeks (Apcmin/+) | Colon (fmol/ugpro) | [ |
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| C57bl/6J mice, Shmt (+/− and −/−) | AIN-93G purified diet | No | No | 32 weeks |
| [ |
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| C57bl/6 mice, APC1638N | Amino acid defined (Dyets) | No | No | 16 weeks |
| [ |
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| C57bl/6 mice, APC1638N |
| No | No |
| Maternal | [ |
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| Folate depletion studies presenting critical colorectal cancer endpoints, but without folate status information | ||||||
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| Fisher 344 rats | AIN93G | Yes and no | No | 5 weeks | ND | [ |
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| Fisher 344 rats | NIH-31 | No | No | 36 weeks | ND | [ |
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| C57bl/6J mice | Casein/soy based | No | No | 10 weeks | ND | [ |
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| BALB/cAnNCrlBR mice | Amino acid defined (Harlan Teklad) | Yes | No | 12 to 14 months | ND | [ |
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| C57bl/6 mice Bpol+/− | AIN93G (Dyets) | Yes | No | 12 weeks total | ND | [ |
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| Albino rats | AIN93M | No | No | 6 weeks total (4 weeks pre-AOM; 2 weeks post-AOM) | ND | [ |
Values in brackets [] have been calculated from published values for ease of comparison across studies; +/+, +/− and −/− refer to wildtype, heterozygous and null genotypes; ND: not determined.
Impact of experimental design on critical colorectal cancer endpoints.
| Animal model | Carcinogen | CRC-specific endpoints measured |
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| Studies demonstrating beneficial effects of folate on critical colorectal cancer endpoints | ||
| Rat | DMH |
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| Rat | 5-week diet prior to DMH |
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| Rat | DMH |
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| Rat | 3-week diet prior to DMH |
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| Mice | None, diet only |
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| Mice | None, diet and genotype only |
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| Mice | None, diet and genotype only |
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| Mice | None, diet and genotype only |
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| Mice | DMH |
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| Rat | AOM |
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| Rat | AOM |
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| Rat | AOM |
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| Mice | None, diet and genotype only |
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| Mice | DMH |
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~indicates values are approximated from graphical data; N/A: not available; Shmt: serine hydroxyl methyl transferase.
Impact of dietary intervention on blood and colon folate status.
| Percent change in blood folate status by dietary intervention | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| 2 mg/kg to 0 mg/kg | ↓96% | Rat | 20 wk |
| (with either abx or wire bottom cages) | ↓96% | Rat | 11 wk |
| ↓92% | Mouse | 8 wk | |
| [ | ↓50% | Rat | 8 wk |
| ↓81% | Rat | 24 wk | |
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| 2 mg/kg to 0 mg/kg | ↓69% | Mouse | 12 wk |
| (without abx or wire bottom cages) | ↓63%* | Mouse | 5 wk |
| ↓78%* | Mouse | 11 wk | |
| [ | ↓35%** | Mouse | 16 wk |
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| 2 mg/kg to 8 mg/kg | ↑58% | Rat | 20 wk |
| (with either abx or wire bottom cages) | ↑62% | Rat | 8 wk |
| [ | ↑140% | Rat | 24 wk |
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| 2 mg/kg to 8 mg/kg | |||
| (without abx or wire bottom cages) | ↑44% | Mouse | 12 wk |
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| Percent change in colon folate status by dietary intervention | |||
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| 2 mg/kg to 0 mg/kg | ↓72% | Rat | 20 wk |
| (with either abx or wire bottom cages) | ↓35% | Rat | 8 wk |
| [ | |||
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| 2 mg/kg to 0 mg/kg | ↓74%* | Mouse | 5 wk |
| (without abx or wire bottom cages) | ↓40%** | Mouse | 16 wk |
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| 2 mg/kg to 8 mg/kg | ↑19% | Rat | 20 wk |
| (with either abx or wire bottom cages) | ↑66% | Rat | 8 wk |
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| 2 mg/kg to 8 mg/kg | |||
| (without abx or wire bottom cages) | |||
Abx: antibiotics; wk: week; *choline also depleted in this dietary intervention; **riboflavin, B6, and B12 also modified in this dietary intervention.