| Literature DB >> 23965979 |
Maria Teresa Giardi1, Eleftherios Touloupakis, Delfina Bertolotto, Gabriele Mascetti.
Abstract
Humans are constantly exposed to ionizing radiation deriving from outer space sources or activities related to medical care. Absorption of ionizing radiation doses over a prolonged period of time can result in oxidative damage and cellular dysfunction inducing several diseases, especially in ageing subjects. In this report, we analyze the effects of ionizing radiation, particularly at low doses, in relation to a variety of human pathologies, including cancer, and cardiovascular and retinal diseases. We discuss scientific data in support of protection strategies by safe antioxidant formulations that can provide preventive or potential therapeutic value in response to long-term diseases that may develop following exposure.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23965979 PMCID: PMC3759958 DOI: 10.3390/ijms140817168
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Antioxidant effects on gene expression regulation and their preventive or potential therapeutic value in diseases induced by ionizing radiation, especially when combined with ageing.
| Active compounds | Main source | Potential health benefit | Effects on gene expression | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Polyunsaturated fatty acids (arachidonic acid α-Linolenic acid, omega-3) | Fish oil, algae, green vegetables, flaxseed | Decrease of cardiovascular disease risk. Reduction of serum cholesterol and triacylglycerol. Anti-inflammatory, anti-arrhythmic, anti-thrombotic. Induce membrane fluidity. | Affect the expression of several key proteins pertinent to inflammation, lipid metabolism, and energy utilization. | [ |
| Phytosterols | Plants, plant oils | Regulation of cardiovascular disease, anticancer, regulation of serum cholesterol. | Decrease in the expression levels of hepatic genes encoding gluconeogenic enzymes, lipogenic enzymes. Regulation of the expression of gastro-intestinal genes. | [ |
| Polyphenols (flavonols, anthocyanidins, catechins, isoflavonoids, curcumin) | Apples, onion, tea, grapefruit and orange juice, broccoli | Antioxidant, free radical scavenging metal chelating ability. Antiproliferative and anticarcinogenic agents. Anti-inflammatory activity. | Increase in the expression of endothelial NO synthase and endothelin-1. Curcumin inhibits COX-1 and COX-2 enzymes and reduces the activation of nuclear transcription factor NF-κB. | [ |
| Organosulfur compounds (Alliin, allicin) | Garlic, onions | Anti-hypertensive, antithrombotic, anticancer, antimutagenic, antidiabetic, antioxidant, antimicrobial. | Block of the activation of nuclear factor-κB. Blocking the activation of ROS-dependent extracellular regulated kinases (ERK1/2), c-Jun | [ |
| Capsaicinoids (Capsaicin) | Cruciferous vegetables, pepper | Chemopreventive activity, modulation of drug metabolizing enzymes, neuroactivity, apoptotic cell death. | Enhance the transcripts of the proto-oncogenes c- | [ |
| Glucosinolates | Cruciferous plants | Reduce the risk of carcinomas of the lung, stomach, colon and rectum. | Induction of glucoronosyl transferase, glutathione S-transferase, quinone reductase. Induction of cytoprotective genes. | [ |
| Carotenoids (carotenes, xanthophylls) | Tomatoes, spinach, citrus fruits, carrots | Improvement of visual function, protection from photo-induced damage. Reduce heart disease and cancer. | Modulate the expression of inflammation related genes in retinal pigment epithelial cells. | [ |