A red meat-derived glycan promotes inflammation and cancer progression
2015
Abstract A well known, epidemiologically reproducible risk factor for human carcinomas is the long-term consumption of “
red meat” of mammalian origin. Although multiple theories have attempted to explain this human-specific association, none have been conclusively proven. We used an improved method to survey common foods for free and glycosidically bound forms of the nonhuman sialic acid
N-glycolylneuraminic acid(Neu5Gc), showing that it is highly and selectively enriched in
red meat. The bound form of Neu5Gc is
bioavailable, undergoing metabolic incorporation into human tissues, despite being a foreign antigen. Interactions of this antigen with circulating anti-Neu5Gc antibodies could potentially incite inflammation. Indeed, when human-like Neu5Gc-deficient mice were fed
bioavailableNeu5Gc and challenged with anti-Neu5Gc antibodies, they developed evidence of
systemic inflammation. Such mice are already prone to develop occasional tumors of the liver, an organ that can incorporate dietary Neu5Gc. Neu5Gc-deficient mice immunized against Neu5Gc and fed
bioavailableNeu5Gc developed a much higher incidence of hepatocellular carcinomas, with evidence of Neu5Gc accumulation. Taken together, our data provide an unusual mechanistic explanation for the epidemiological association between
red meatconsumption and carcinoma risk. This mechanism might also contribute to other chronic inflammatory processes epidemiologically associated with
red meatconsumption.
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