1. Red Wine and Pomegranate Extracts Suppress Cured Meat Promotion of Colonic Mucin-Depleted Foci in Carcinogen-Induced Rats.
- Author
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Bastide NM, Naud N, Nassy G, Vendeuvre JL, Taché S, Guéraud F, Hobbs DA, Kuhnle GG, Corpet DE, and Pierre FH
- Subjects
- Animals, Biomarkers urine, Colonic Neoplasms chemically induced, Colonic Neoplasms prevention & control, Feces, Gastric Mucins metabolism, Lipid Peroxidation, Male, Meat analysis, Precancerous Conditions chemically induced, Rats, Inbred F344, alpha-Tocopherol pharmacology, Lythraceae chemistry, Meat adverse effects, Plant Extracts pharmacology, Precancerous Conditions diet therapy, Wine
- Abstract
Processed meat intake is carcinogenic to humans. We have shown that intake of a workshop-made cured meat with erythorbate promotes colon carcinogenesis in rats. We speculated that polyphenols could inhibit this effect by limitation of endogenous lipid peroxidation and nitrosation. Polyphenol-rich plant extracts were added to the workshop-made cured meat and given for 14 days to rats and 100 days to azoxymethane-induced rats to evaluate the inhibition of preneoplastic lesions. Colons of 100-d study were scored for precancerous lesions (mucin-depleted foci, MDF), and biochemical end points of peroxidation and nitrosation were measured in urinary and fecal samples. In comparison with cured meat-fed rats, dried red wine, pomegranate extract, α-tocopherol added at one dose to cured meat and withdrawal of erythorbate significantly decreased the number of MDF per colon (but white grape and rosemary extracts did not). This protection was associated with the full suppression of fecal excretion of nitrosyl iron, suggesting that this nitroso compound might be a promoter of carcinogenesis. At optimized concentrations, the incorporation of these plant extracts in cured meat might reduce the risk of colorectal cancer associated with processed meat consumption.
- Published
- 2017
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