Title of article :
Genetic and nutritional deficiencies in folate metabolism influence tumorigenicity in Apcmin/+ mice
Author/Authors :
Andrea K. Lawrance، نويسنده , , Liyuan Deng، نويسنده , , Lawrence C. Brody، نويسنده , , Richard H. Finnell، نويسنده , , Barry Shane، نويسنده , , Rima Rozen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages :
8
From page :
305
To page :
312
Abstract :
Epidemiological studies indicate that adequate dietary folate is protective against colon cancer, although mechanisms remain largely elusive. We investigated the effects of genetic disruptions of folate transport and metabolism and of dietary folate deficiency in a mouse model of colon cancer, the Apcmin/+ mouse. Apcmin/+ mice with heterozygous knockout of the gene for reduced folate carrier 1 (Rfc1+/−) developed significantly fewer adenomas compared to Rfc1+/+Apcmin/+ mice [30.3±4.6 vs. 60.4±9.4 on a control diet (CD) and 42.6±4.4 vs. 55.8±7.6 on a folate-deficient diet, respectively]. Rfc1+/−Apcmin/+ mice also carried a lower tumor load, an indicator of tumor size as well as of tumor number. In contrast, there were no differences in adenoma formation between Apcmin/+ mice carrying a knockout allele for methionine synthase (Mtr+/−), an enzyme that catalyzes folate-dependent homocysteine remethylation, and Mtr+/+Apcmin/+ mice. However, in both Mtr groups of mice, dietary folate deficiency significantly increased adenoma number (from 32.3±3.8 on a CD to 48.1±4.2 on a folate-deficient diet), increased plasma homocysteine, decreased global DNA methylation in preneoplastic intestines and increased apoptosis in tissues. There were no genotype-associated differences in these parameters in the Rfc1 group, suggesting that the protection conferred by Rfc1 deficiency is carried out through a different mechanism. In conclusion, genetic and nutritional disturbances in folate metabolism can have distinct influences on tumorigenesis in Apcmin/+ mice; altered levels of homocysteine, global DNA methylation and apoptosis may contribute mechanistically to dietary influence.
Keywords :
Intestinal neoplasia , Folate metabolism , Tumorigenesis , Folate transport
Journal title :
The Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry
Serial Year :
2007
Journal title :
The Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry
Record number :
1299309
Link To Document :
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