Hilakivi-Clarke Leena
Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center, Department of Oncology, Georgetown University, Washington DC, USA.
Curr Cancer Drug Targets. 2007 Aug;7(5):465-74. doi: 10.2174/156800907781386641.
Findings with experimental rodent models reveal that exposures to dietary factors during the in utero and pubertal periods when the mammary gland is undergoing extensive modeling and re-modeling, alter susceptibility to develop mammary tumors. Similar observations have been made in humans: childhood exposure to genistein in soy or to some other bioactive food components reduces later breast cancer risk, although they may have no effect if consumed during adulthood. Thus, food components may be more effective in affecting cancer risk in some periods of life than others. Many of these dietary exposures modify fetal and postnatal hormonal environment, including changing the concentrations of estrogens and leptin. The hormonal alterations then may induce persistent epigenetic changes by affecting gene promoter regions or by inducing histone modifications that affect chromatin transcription. The targets of epigenetic changes are likely to be the terminal end buds (TEBs), the structures where carcinogen-induced mammary tumors in rats and mice are initiated. More specifically, the site of these changes in TEBs may be the stem cells and their niche; this might explain how an exposure early in life affects the risk of breast cancer decades later. Similar structures in women, called terminal ductal lobular units, are the sites where most human breast cancers rise. According to this hypothetical model, cancer is initiated only when the epigenetically altered cells are exposed to carcinogens/radiation, etc. during adult life. In a "normal" stem cell or its niche, cancer initiating exposures do not necessarily cause cancer, because the cells can either repair the damage or undergo apoptosis. Thus, the most likely molecular targets of early life dietary exposures are genes that regulate DNA adduct formation, repair DNA damage or induce apoptosis, such as genes affecting cellular metabolism, tumor suppressor genes or genes promoting cell survival. It is possible that some of these epigenetic changes also explain why the number of TEBs generally, but not always, correlates with breast cancer risk. This hypothesis may imply that adult intake of some bioactive dietary components reduces cancer risk increased by early life dietary exposures or inhibits tumor growth by reversing epigenetic changes in various molecular targets.
对实验性啮齿动物模型的研究结果表明,在乳腺经历广泛塑形和重塑的子宫内及青春期期间,暴露于饮食因素会改变患乳腺肿瘤的易感性。在人类中也有类似的观察结果:儿童时期接触大豆中的染料木黄酮或其他一些生物活性食物成分可降低日后患乳腺癌的风险,不过如果在成年期食用可能没有效果。因此,食物成分在生命的某些时期可能比其他时期更有效地影响癌症风险。许多这些饮食暴露会改变胎儿期和出生后的激素环境,包括改变雌激素和瘦素的浓度。然后,激素变化可能通过影响基因启动子区域或诱导影响染色质转录的组蛋白修饰来诱导持续的表观遗传变化。表观遗传变化的靶点可能是终末芽(TEBs),即大鼠和小鼠中致癌物诱导的乳腺肿瘤起始的结构。更具体地说,TEBs中这些变化的位点可能是干细胞及其生态位;这可能解释了生命早期的暴露如何在几十年后影响患乳腺癌的风险。女性中类似的结构称为终末导管小叶单位,是大多数人类乳腺癌发生的部位。根据这个假设模型,只有当表观遗传改变的细胞在成年期暴露于致癌物/辐射等时才会引发癌症。在“正常”干细胞或其生态位中,引发癌症的暴露不一定会导致癌症,因为细胞可以修复损伤或发生凋亡。因此,生命早期饮食暴露最可能的分子靶点是调节DNA加合物形成、修复DNA损伤或诱导凋亡的基因,例如影响细胞代谢的基因、肿瘤抑制基因或促进细胞存活的基因。这些表观遗传变化中的一些也可能解释了为什么TEBs的数量通常(但并非总是)与乳腺癌风险相关。这个假设可能意味着成年期摄入一些生物活性饮食成分可降低生命早期饮食暴露增加的癌症风险,或通过逆转各种分子靶点的表观遗传变化来抑制肿瘤生长。