Published 2008
| Version v1
Publication
Glycotoxins: a possibile threat to health?
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Description
AGEs are produced by a nonenzymatic glycation
process called the Maillard reaction which involves
the condensation of a reducing sugar or an aldehydic
group and a protein amino group, with the formation of a
series of reactive intermediates leading to stable, irreversible,
seldom fluorescent, compounds known as
advanced glycation end-products (AGEs). The reaction
occurs both in food during heating and in animal and
human tissues. During the heating of food containing sugars,
lipids and proteins, nonenzymatic protein browning
reaction occurs, resulting in the formation of a large
series of compounds, which include the melanoidins and
other AGEs. Accumulation of AGEs in the cells and in
the extracellular matrix in animals is also observed; it is
age-dependent, is related to cell or tissue turnover and is
species-specific. These processes are accelerated in
chronic diseases in which the production of pathogenetic
AGEs and their accumulation rate are increased. The two
research fields, the Maillard reaction in food chemistry
and the glycation cascade in medicine, ran in parallel
independently for a long time, but recently a new scientific
society (the International Maillard Reaction Society,
IMARS) has opened the way for an exciting fusion of
knowledge. Pioneering studies resulted in concerns about
the non-negligible bioavailability of dietary AGEs and
related plasma concentrations in humans, and there are
now claims that dietary AGEs may be toxic because of
their bioreactivity in different chronic diseases. This has
been confirmed by several studies in animals and in
humans (AGEs-restricted diets resulted in a reduction of
serum and tissue AGEs, related AGE receptors, inflammatory
cells, and proatherosclerotic factors) and by in
vitro studies on cells in culture. In view of the emerging
evidence of a pathogenetic role of glycotoxins, an assessment
of the benefits of a shift to a specific nutritional
approach (the Mediterranean diet being the healthiest in
terms of the low amount of AGEs and high amount of
antioxidants) and an innovative therapeutic approach,
aimed at directly breaking AGEs molecules or reversing
their impaired gut absorption to favour their renal or faecal
excretion, may be warranted.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/218077
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/218077
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE