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Journal ArticleDOI

Dietary inhibitors of mutagenesis and carcinogenesis.

Hikoya Hayatsu, +2 more
- 01 Dec 1988 - 
- Vol. 202, Iss: 2, pp 429-446
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TLDR
In this chapter, inhibitors of mutagenesis and carcinogenesis that can arise as components of diet have been reviewed and most of the inhibitors have been demonstrated to be effective against a specific class of mutagens or carcinogens.
Abstract
Dietary inhibitors of mutagenesis and carcinogenesis are of particular interest because they may be useful for human cancer prevention. Several mutagenesis inhibitors have been demonstrated to be carcinogenesis inhibitors also, e.g., ellagic acid, palmitoleic acid, and N-acetylcysteine. This means that the search for mutagenesis inhibitors may be useful for discovering anticarcinogenic agents. Many mutagenesis inhibitors have been discovered by the use of short-term assays, particularly the Ames Salmonella test. This simple in vitro system has provided opportunities to elucidate the mechanisms of inhibition. The elucidation of the mechanism may allow us to infer the possible anticarcinogenic activity of the reagent. In this chapter, inhibitors of mutagenesis and carcinogenesis that can arise as components of diet have been reviewed. Most of the inhibitors have been demonstrated to be effective against a specific class of mutagens or carcinogens. Therefore, it may be argued that these inhibitors are antagonistic only to those particular agents. Here again, understanding of the mechanisms of these inhibitions is necessary for the assessment. Dietary inhibitors reviewed in this article include: (1) as inhibitors of mutagenesis: porphyllins, fatty acids, vitamins, polyphenols, and sulfhydryl compounds, (2) as inhibitors of carcinogenesis: vitamins A, E and C, ellagic acid, sulfhydryl compounds, fats, selenium, calcium, and fiber. Further studies in this area of science appear to help establish the recipe of a healthy diet.

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Citations
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Promotion of Aflatoxin B1 Carcinogenesis by the Natural Tumor Modulator Indole-3-carbinol: Influence of Dose, Duration, and Intermittent Exposure on Indole-3-carbinol Promotional Potency

TL;DR: The results do not support the idea that promotional stimulation in hepatocarcinogenesis is a reversible phenomenon and the potential for 13C as a dietary additive to promote prior hepatic initiation events when fed continuously is approximately as great as its potential to inhibit concurrent AFB1 initiation.
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The evaluation of micronucleus frequency by acridine orange fluorescent staining in peripheral blood of rats treated with lead acetate.

TL;DR: The results show the effects of lead acetate in peripheral blood reticulocytes are both cytotoxic and genotoxic because of a decrease in the number of polychromatic erythrocytes in the peripheral blood and an increase in frequency of micronucleated reticULocytes, respectively.
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Mutagenic and antimutagenic activities of Uncaria tomentosa and its extracts.

TL;DR: The plant extracts and fractions show a protective antimutagenic effect in vitro against photomutagenesis induced by 8-methoxy-psoralen (8-MOP) plus UVA in S. typhimurium TA 102 by the subject's urine.
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Effect of cheddar cheese consumption on plasma conjugated linoleic acid concentrations in men

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of Cheddar cheese consumption (112 g/day) on plasma phospholipid-esterified CLA concentrations, nine healthy men were studied, and they were added to their daily diets for four weeks.
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Natural antioxidants as inhibitors of oxygen species induced mutagenicity.

TL;DR: A ternary antioxidant vitamin mix as well as a rosemary extract with carnosic acid and carnosol as the two major active ingredients were shown to exhibit strong antimutagenic effects in Ames tester strain TA102, concluding that these antioxidants might exhibit anticarcinogenic properties.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Dietary carcinogens and anticarcinogens Oxygen radicals and degenerative diseases

TL;DR: Dietary intake of natural antioxidants could be an important aspect of the body's defense mechanism against these agents of cancer and other age-related diseases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental factors and cancer incidence and mortality in different countries, with special reference to dietary practices

TL;DR: Dietary variables were strongly correlated with several types of cancer, particularly meat consumption with cancer of the colon and fat consumption with cancers of the breast and corpus uteri, suggesting a possible role for dietary factors in modifying the development of cancer at a number of other sites.
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Can dietary beta-carotene materially reduce human cancer rates?

TL;DR: If dietary β-carotene is truly protective—which could be tested by controlled trials—there are a number of theoretical mechanisms whereby it might act, some of which do not directly involve its ‘provitamin A’ activity.
Book

Textbook of Biochemistry With Clinical Correlations

TL;DR: Textbook of biochemistry: with clinical correlations, Textbook of bioinformatics: withclinical correlations, and more.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anticarcinogens from fried ground beef: heat-altered derivatives of linoleic acid.

TL;DR: Fried ground beef contains substances that inhibit mutagenesis in bacteria and the initiation of epidermal carcinogenesis in mice by 7,12-dimethylbenz [a]anthracene (DMBA), and CLA-treated mice developed only about half as many papillomas and exhibited a lower tumor incidence compared with the control mice.
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