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Molecule Found in Meat, Milk and Tumors
Excerpt
by Maggie Fox,
Reuters Health
A non-human molecule found in red meat
and milk makes its way into the human system when eaten -- and
seems to build up especially in tumors, U.S. researchers reported.
The compound, called sialic acid,
is found on the surfaces of animal cells but is not found in people,
and may be one reason why animal-to-human organ and tissue transplants
do not work well. Animals have a version called Neu5Gc, while
humans carry Neu5Ac.
But researchers at the University
of California San Diego found it does show up in the human body,
and showed it can be absorbed from eating red meat and milk.
They also showed that the body
produces an immune response against the molecule.
Dr. Ajit Varki and colleagues,
reporting in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
say it is too soon to make any recommendations based on their
findings.
"Of course, there are already existing
recommendations that people should not consume too much food containing
saturated fats, such as dairy products and red meats," Varki said
in a statement.
"The highest amount (of Neu5Gc)
was found in lamb, pork, and beef (so-called 'red meat')," the
researchers wrote. Levels were very low or undetectable in poultry
and fish, vegetables and hen's eggs.
Varki, who is not a vegetarian,
noted that many studies have linked a diet rich in meat and milk
with cancer, heart disease and other diseases.
AUTOIMMUNE DISEASE
"The small amounts of Neu5Gc in
normal tissues also raise the possibility that anti-Neu5Gc antibodies
are involved in autoimmunity," the researchers said.
Autoimmune disease occur when the
body mistakenly attacks healthy tissue and include type-1 or juvenile
diabetes and some types of arthritis. "In this regard, it is interesting
that vegetarian diet has been suggested to improve rheumatoid
arthritis," they wrote.
But much research has focused on
the fat content of animal fat or byproducts of cooking meat as
the cause of disease.
Varki's collaborator Dr. Elaine
Muchmore developed an antibody -- an immune system targeting protein
-- that would hook onto Neu5Gc. The team found Neu5Gc in human
tumor samples and to a much lower degree in healthy tissue.
More tests showed that most people
had made their own antibodies that recognized Neu5Gc, and thus
could potentially initiate an inflammatory immune response.
Varki and two colleagues drank
Neu5Gc purified from pork sources, and the molecule showed up
in their urine, blood, hair and saliva.
"We need to find out if there is
any association between the presence of Neu5Gc and/or the anti-Neu5Gc
antibodies with any disease," Varki said. "This will require large-scale
population studies."
In some cases the human immune
response was similar to that seen when people are exposed to another
animal molecule, this one a cell surface molecule called alpha
galactose.
Varki noted that the molecule is
almost certainly not immediately toxic to people.
"Meat eating has certainly been
a feature of human ancestors for many hundreds of thousands of
years," he said.
"Thus, it is indeed possible that
humans have developed some kind of tolerance or indifference to
Neu5Gc. However, most humans are continuing to make antibodies
against Neu5Gc."
It could be that the damage only
builds up over years -- and that as people live longer, the consequences
make themselves felt.
"However, we are now living longer
and the question arises whether the gradual accumulation of Neu5Gc
and the simultaneous presence of antibodies against could be involved
in some diseases of later life," he said.
Reference
Source 89
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