| Literature DB >> 29052471 |
Catherine Caris-Veyrat1,2, Ada L Garcia3, Eric Reynaud1,2, Renata Lucas4,5, Gamze Aydemir5, Ralph Rühl4,6,5.
Abstract
Lycopene is the red pigment in tomatoes and tomato products and is an important dietary carotenoid found in the human organism. Lycopene-isomers, oxidative lycopene metabolites and apo-lycopenoids are found in the food matrix. Lycopene intake derived from tomato consumption is associated with alteration of lipid metabolism and a lower incidence of cardiovascular diseases (CVD). Lycopene is mainly described as a potent antioxidant but novel studies are shifting towards its metabolites and their capacity to mediate nuclear receptor signalling. Di-/tetra-hydro-derivatives of apo-10´-lycopenoic acid and apo-15´-lycopenoic acids are potential novel endogenous mammalian lycopene metabolites which may act as ligands for nuclear hormone mediated activation and signalling. In this review, we postulate that complex lycopene metabolism results in various lycopene metabolites which have the ability to mediate transactivation of various nuclear hormone receptors like RARs, RXRs and PPARs. A new mechanistic explanation of how tomato consumption could positively modulate inflammation and lipid metabolism is discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Lycopene; PPAR; carotene-retinoid; nuclear hormone receptor; retinoic acid
Year: 2017 PMID: 29052471 DOI: 10.1024/0300-9831/a000404
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Vitam Nutr Res ISSN: 0300-9831 Impact factor: 1.784