Humphreys Karen J, Conlon Michael A, Young Graeme P, Topping David L, Hu Ying, Winter Jean M, Bird Anthony R, Cobiac Lynne, Kennedy Nicholas A, Michael Michael Z, Le Leu Richard K
Flinders Centre for Innovation in Cancer, School of Medicine, Flinders University, Flinders Medical Centre, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Preventative Health National Research Flagship, CSIRO, and CSIRO Animal, Food and Health Sciences, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Cancer Prev Res (Phila). 2014 Aug;7(8):786-95. doi: 10.1158/1940-6207.CAPR-14-0053.
High red meat (HRM) intake is associated with increased colorectal cancer risk, while resistant starch is probably protective. Resistant starch fermentation produces butyrate, which can alter microRNA (miRNA) levels in colorectal cancer cells in vitro; effects of red meat and resistant starch on miRNA expression in vivo were unknown. This study examined whether a HRM diet altered miRNA expression in rectal mucosa tissue of healthy volunteers, and if supplementation with butyrylated resistant starch (HRM+HAMSB) modified this response. In a randomized cross-over design, 23 volunteers undertook four 4-week dietary interventions; an HRM diet (300 g/day lean red meat) and an HRM+HAMSB diet (HRM with 40 g/day butyrylated high amylose maize starch), preceded by an entry diet and separated by a washout. Fecal butyrate increased with the HRM+HAMSB diet. Levels of oncogenic mature miRNAs, including miR17-92 cluster miRNAs and miR21, increased in the rectal mucosa with the HRM diet, whereas the HRM+HAMSB diet restored miR17-92 miRNAs, but not miR21, to baseline levels. Elevated miR17-92 and miR21 in the HRM diet corresponded with increased cell proliferation, and a decrease in miR17-92 target gene transcript levels, including CDKN1A. The oncogenic miR17-92 cluster is differentially regulated by dietary factors that increase or decrease risk for colorectal cancer, and this may explain, at least in part, the respective risk profiles of HRM and resistant starch. These findings support increased resistant starch consumption as a means of reducing risk associated with an HRM diet.
高红肉摄入量与结直肠癌风险增加相关,而抗性淀粉可能具有保护作用。抗性淀粉发酵产生丁酸,丁酸可在体外改变结直肠癌细胞中的微小RNA(miRNA)水平;红肉和抗性淀粉对体内miRNA表达的影响尚不清楚。本研究探讨了高红肉饮食是否会改变健康志愿者直肠黏膜组织中的miRNA表达,以及补充丁酰化抗性淀粉(高红肉+丁酰化高直链玉米淀粉)是否会改变这种反应。在随机交叉设计中,23名志愿者进行了四项为期4周的饮食干预;一种高红肉饮食(每天300克瘦红肉)和一种高红肉+丁酰化高直链玉米淀粉饮食(高红肉饮食加上每天40克丁酰化高直链玉米淀粉),干预前有一个初始饮食阶段,各阶段之间有一个洗脱期。高红肉+丁酰化高直链玉米淀粉饮食使粪便丁酸增加。高红肉饮食使直肠黏膜中致癌性成熟miRNA水平升高,包括miR17 - 92簇miRNA和miR21,而高红肉+丁酰化高直链玉米淀粉饮食使miR17 - 92 miRNA恢复到基线水平,但miR21未恢复。高红肉饮食中miR17 - 92和miR21升高与细胞增殖增加以及miR17 - 92靶基因转录水平降低相关,包括CDKN1A。致癌性miR17 - 92簇受增加或降低结直肠癌风险的饮食因素差异调节,这可能至少部分解释了高红肉和抗性淀粉各自的风险特征。这些发现支持增加抗性淀粉的摄入量作为降低与高红肉饮食相关风险的一种手段。