As free-radical-forming poisons build up in our environment and bodies, antioxidants may ward off some of their harmful health effects. But free radicals have a silver lining, and too many antioxidants can do harm, say Cornell researchers. With a $1.4 million grant from the National Institutes of Health, the scientists will explore why in a project that could change preventive strategies and treatments for neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimers and Parkinsons and some forms of cancer. Starting in January, Dr. Carolyn Sevier, assistant professor of molecular medicine at Cornells College of Veterinary Medicine, will use her discovery of a benefit bestowed by oxygen-derived free-radicals to launch a five-year study mapping how cells deal with oxidative stress. Like food spoils when exposed to oxygen, cells suffer oxidative stress when exposed to more reactive oxygen ions called free radicals than they can handle, which they usually manage partly with certain vitamins and minerals dubbed antioxidants. Thats why antioxidants are hot in the popular press and companies push things like pomegranate powder some think consuming tons of antioxidants improves health, but thats not necessarily true, said Sevier. Its true that reducing oxidative stress can lessen cell damage. But were realizing that free radicals serve as useful messengers to cells, and completely quashing them can keep cells from forming their own protective defenses. Free radicals form in the body as products of normal metabolism but also come from outside sources such as smoking, herbicides, pesticides and fatty foods. Their accumulation contributes to aging, cancer and most neurodegenerative disorders. These unstable oxygen remnants have unpaired electrons that seek partners by taking electrons from other compounds, initiating a chain reaction of electron stealing that damages proteins and DNA. Cells usually detoxify with antioxidants and other defense mechanisms that break down or neutralize free radicals by offering a spare electron. Thus theories formed that suggested eating more antioxidants would ward off disease. ''Sadly this is an oversimplification, said Sevier. For every time a study has made adding extra dietary antioxidants look good, another has shown the opposite. Our study seeks to understand this dissonance. Scientists are beginning to realize now that obliterating free radicals with antioxidants can keep cells too complacent to build beneficial protective pathways free radicals normally spur. We want to identify these advantageous pathways.
This beneficial signaling pathway actually helps cells cope with oxidative stress, said Sevier. A drug targeting BiP in disease states could enhance its function and prevent some of the damage in disease. That may be a more selective and better strategy than just dumping in antioxidants. By finding and understanding more about the good pathways free radicals facilitate, we may find ways to improve treatments for a variety of diseases. |
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