Nutrient-gene interaction: metabolic genotype-phenotype relationship.

J Nutr

Department of Medicine, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, University of California-Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA.

Published: December 2005

AI Article Synopsis

  • The U.S. Dietary Guidelines for Americans provide science-backed advice on diet and physical activity aimed at promoting health and lowering chronic disease risks, including cancer.
  • Genetic factors play a role in individual variations in cancer risk and nutrient balance, but they only account for part of the differences among individuals.
  • Advances in genomics, proteomics, and metabolomics allow for detailed analysis of nutrient-gene interactions, paving the way for personalized dietary recommendations to reduce cancer risk.

Article Abstract

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS)/USDA Dietary Guidelines for Americans is a science and population evidence-based guide on diet and physical activity, providing advice and recommendations to promote a healthier lifestyle and reduce the risk of chronic diseases, including cancer. These recommendations are supported by the comprehensive evidence-based review on diet and cancer prevention conducted by the American Institute for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, World Health Organization/International Agency for Research on Cancer, and others. However, influencing dietary effects are the individual genetic predispositions that are the basis for considerable interindividual variations in cancer risk within the population and in nutrient homeostasis, which is maintained by genomic-nutrient and metabolic-phenotype interactions. Although genetics is an important component, it accounts for only a portion of this variation. An individual's overall phenotype, including health status, is achieved and maintained by the sum of metabolic activities functioning under differing circumstances within the life cycle and the complex interactions among genotype, metabolic phenotype, and the environment. In this postgenomic era, high-throughput groups of technologies in genomics, proteomics, and metabolomics measure and analyze DNA sequences, RNA transcripts, proteins, and nutrient-metabolic fluxes in a single experiment. These advances have transformed biomarker studies on nutrient-gene interactions from a reductionist concept into a holistic practice in which many regulated genes involved in metabolism, along with its metabolic phenotypes, can be measured through functional genomics and metabolic profiling. The overall integration of data and information from the building blocks of metabolism-based nutrient-gene interaction can lead to future individualized dietary recommendations to diminish cancer risk.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jn/135.12.3016SDOI Listing

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