AI Article Synopsis

  • High-temperature cooking of food produces small molecules that can damage healthy DNA, raising concerns about health risks.
  • Researchers hypothesized that the DNA in cooked food might also be harmful, as it could be damaged during cooking and transferred to human cells.
  • Experiments showed that cooked foods had significant DNA damage, which, when consumed, led to increased DNA damage and repair responses in cultured cells and caused genetic harm in mice.

Article Abstract

The consumption of foods prepared at high temperatures has been associated with numerous health risks. To date, the chief identified source of risk has been small molecules produced in trace levels by cooking and reacting with healthy DNA upon consumption. Here, we considered whether the DNA in food itself also presents a hazard. We hypothesize that high-temperature cooking may cause significant damage to the DNA in food, and this damage might find its way into cellular DNA by metabolic salvage. We tested cooked and raw foods and found high levels of hydrolytic and oxidative damage to all four DNA bases upon cooking. Exposing cultured cells to damaged 2'-deoxynucleosides (particularly pyrimidines) resulted in elevated DNA damage and repair responses in the cells. Feeding a deaminated 2'-deoxynucleoside (2'-deoxyuridine), and DNA containing it, to mice resulted in substantial uptake into intestinal genomic DNA and promoted double-strand chromosomal breaks there. The results suggest the possibility of a previously unrecognized pathway whereby high-temperature cooking may contribute to genetic risks.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10311654PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acscentsci.2c01247DOI Listing

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