INRA, UMR1260 "Lipid Nutrients and Prevention of Metabolic Diseases", Marseille, France.
Mol Nutr Food Res. 2012 Feb;56(2):228-40. doi: 10.1002/mnfr.201100322. Epub 2011 Sep 29.
As shown in most clinical studies dedicated to carotenoids, there is a huge interindividual variability in absorption, and blood and tissue responses, of dietary carotenoids. The recent discovery that several proteins are involved in carotenoid metabolism in humans has prompted a possible explanation for this phenomenon: genetic variants in genes encoding for these proteins may affect their expression or activity, and in turn carotenoid metabolism and carotenoid status. The proteins clearly identified so far are (i) the carotene oxygenases β,β-carotene-15,15'-monooxygenase (BCMO1) and β,β-carotene-9',10'-oxygenase (BCDO2), which are involved in carotenoid cleavage, (ii) scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI), cluster determinant 36 (CD36), and Niemann Pick C1-like 1 (NPC1L1), which are involved in carotenoid uptake by cells, and (iii) glutathione S-transferase Pi 1 (GSTP1) and human retinal lutein-binding protein (HR-LBP), which are involved in the transport of xanthophylls in the retina. Other proteins, such as ATP-binding cassette subfamily G member 5 (ABCG5) and the fatty acid-binding proteins (FABPs) are also apparently involved although firmer evidence is still required. A genome-wide association study, as well as several candidate gene association studies, has shown that groups of subjects bearing different alleles in single nucleotide polymorphisms located in or near several of the above-mentioned genes display different blood and/or tissue concentrations of carotenoids. Further studies are needed to identify all the proteins involved in carotenoid metabolism and assess whether other types of genetic variation, e.g. copy number variants and epigenetic modifications, can modulate carotenoid status. One potential application of such research could be personalized dietary guidelines for carotenoids according to individual genetic characteristics.
如大多数专门针对类胡萝卜素的临床研究所示,膳食类胡萝卜素的吸收、血液和组织反应在个体之间存在巨大的变异性。最近发现,几种蛋白质参与人类类胡萝卜素代谢,这为这一现象提供了一个可能的解释:编码这些蛋白质的基因中的遗传变异可能会影响它们的表达或活性,进而影响类胡萝卜素代谢和类胡萝卜素状态。迄今为止,已明确鉴定出的蛋白质有(i) 类胡萝卜素加氧酶β,β-胡萝卜素-15,15'-单加氧酶(BCMO1)和β,β-胡萝卜素-9',10'-单加氧酶(BCDO2),它们参与类胡萝卜素的裂解,(ii) 清道夫受体 B 类 I 型(SR-BI)、簇分化抗原 36(CD36)和 Niemann Pick C1 样 1(NPC1L1),它们参与细胞对类胡萝卜素的摄取,以及 (iii) 谷胱甘肽 S-转移酶 Pi 1(GSTP1)和人视网膜叶黄素结合蛋白(HR-LBP),它们参与叶黄素在视网膜中的转运。其他蛋白质,如 ATP 结合盒亚家族 G 成员 5(ABCG5)和脂肪酸结合蛋白(FABPs),尽管还需要更确凿的证据,但显然也参与其中。全基因组关联研究以及几项候选基因关联研究表明,在上述基因中的或附近的单核苷酸多态性中具有不同等位基因的不同亚组的受试者表现出不同的血液和/或组织中类胡萝卜素浓度。需要进一步的研究来确定所有参与类胡萝卜素代谢的蛋白质,并评估其他类型的遗传变异(例如,拷贝数变异和表观遗传修饰)是否可以调节类胡萝卜素状态。此类研究的一个潜在应用可能是根据个体遗传特征制定个性化的类胡萝卜素饮食指南。