Scientific News Health care Other illnesses and advices VITAMIN C PRODUCES GENE-DAMAGING COMPOUNDS, TEST-TUBE STUDY IN SCIENCE REPORTS
VITAMIN
C PRODUCES GENE-DAMAGING COMPOUNDS, TEST-TUBE STUDY IN SCIENCE REPORTS
Vitamin C, known
to be a DNA-protecting "antioxidant," is a switch hitter, also capable
of inducing the production of DNA-damaging compounds, suggests a study in the 15
June issue of the international journal, Science. Mutations caused by these
compounds have been found in a variety of tumors.
Such mutations can
be repaired, however, and lead author Ian Blair of the Center for Cancer
Pharmacology, at the University of Pennsylvania, cautioned that the study
shouldn't be interpreted as a claim that vitamin C causes cancer. Nor does it
question the wisdom of eating a balanced diet rich in fruits, vegetables, and
whole grains, he said.
The findings,
which come from test-tube experiments (in vitro), may help explain why vitamin C
has thus far shown little effectiveness at preventing cancer in clinical trials,
according to the Science authors.
"It's
possible that vitamin C isn't working in cancer prevention studies because it's
causing as much damage as it's preventing, but that's really speculation at this
point. What we can say is that vitamin C clearly doesn't work when you expect it
to, and now we're in a position to see if that's what's happening in vivo, [or,
in living cells]" Blair said.
Some scientists
have long recommended dietary supplements of vitamin C, particularly for
treating and preventing cancer. But the supplements' effectiveness has been
hotly debated, with critics saying they either have no effect or that they may
be harmful.
"The logic
being used [for vitamin C supplements] is that 'fruits, vegetables, etc. contain
vitamin C; these foods prevent cancer; thus vitamin C prevents cancer,"
Blair said. "But our message is that it's the total diet that's important,
not just one antioxidant in isolation."
Vitamin C is known
to do beneficial work in the body, including acting as an antioxidant that
"disarms" free radicals. These highly reactive ions are produced by
the breakdown of oxygen, which occurs constantly in cells.
In addition to
damaging DNA directly, free radicals can also act indirectly. They begin by
converting linoleic acid, the major polyunsaturated fatty acid in sunflower,
grape, and safflower cooking oils, as well as the major polyunsaturated fatty
acid in human plasma, into another compound called a lipid hydroperoxide. When
certain metal ions are present to act as catalysts, the lipid hydroperoxides
degrade further, into DNA-damaging agents called "genotoxins."
These compounds
react with DNA, switching one base for another in mutations that have been found
in human tumors.
Scientists,
including Blair and his colleagues, have suspected that vitamin C might also be
capable of making lipid hydroperoxides degrade into genotoxins, in place of the
transition metal ions.
To investigate,
the Science authors added vitamin C to solutions of lipid hydroperoxides in the
lab. They used concentrations comparable to those found in the human body,
assuming a person would take 200 milligrams a day.
The vitamin was
more than twice as efficient as transition metal ions at inducing the formation
of genotoxins, including a particularly potent variety.
The researchers'
next step is to see whether vitamin C produces significant amounts of genotoxins
in intact cells, and whether they generate cancer-causing mutations.
The other members of the research
team are Seon Hwa Lee and Tomoyuki Oe, of the Center for Cancer Pharmacology, at
the University of Pennsylvania. Funding for this research was provided by the
National Cancer Institute and the University of Pennsylvania Cancer Center.
Source of the given news and
the copyrights belong to a American
Association for the Advancement of Science.
Contact: Cherita
Gonzales; cgonzale@aaas.org;
202-326-6414;
Publishing date: June 28, 2001
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