| Literature DB >> 30362096 |
Sergey A Krupenko1,2, Natalia I Krupenko3,4.
Abstract
Epidemiological studies implicate excess ethanol ingestion as a risk factor for several cancers and support the concept of a synergistic effect of chronic alcohol consumption and folate deficiency on carcinogenesis. Alcohol consumption affects folate-related genes and enzymes including two major folate-metabolizing enzymes, ALDH1L1 and ALDH1L2. ALDH1L1 (cytosolic 10-formyltetrahydrofolate dehydrogenase) is a regulatory enzyme in folate metabolism that controls the overall flux of one-carbon groups in folate-dependent biosynthetic pathways. It is strongly and ubiquitously down-regulated in malignant tumors via promoter methylation, and recent studies underscored this enzyme as a candidate tumor suppressor and potential marker of aggressive cancers. A related enzyme, ALDH1L2, is the mitochondrial homolog of ALDH1L1 encoded by a separate gene. In contrast to its cytosolic counterpart, ALDH1L2 is expressed in malignant tumors and cancer cell lines and was implicated in metastasis regulation. This review discusses the link between folate and cancer, modifying effects of alcohol consumption on folate-associated carcinogenesis, and putative roles of ALDH1L1 and ALDH1L2 in this process.Entities:
Keywords: ALDH1L1; ALDH1L2; Alcohol; Cancer; Folate; Methylation; SNPs; Tumor suppressor
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30362096 DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-98788-0_10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Exp Med Biol ISSN: 0065-2598 Impact factor: 2.622