Nano-engineered vitamins as a potential epigenetic modifier against environmental air pollutants.
Pooja RatrePrachi ChauhanArpit BhargavaRajnarayan TiwariSuresh TharejaRupesh Kumar SrivastavaPradyumna Kumar MishraPublished in: Reviews on environmental health (2022)
Air pollution has emerged as a serious threat to human health due to close association with spectrum of chronic ailments including cardiovascular disorders, respiratory diseases, nervous system dysfunctions, diabetes and cancer. Exposure to air-borne pollutants along with poor eating behaviours and inferior dietary quality irreversibly impacts epigenomic landscape, leading to aberrant transcriptional control of gene expression which is central to patho-physiology of non-communicable diseases. It is assumed that nutriepigenomic interventions such as vitamins can control such adverse effects through their immediate action on mitochondrial epigenomic-axis. Importantly, the exhaustive clinical utility of vitamins-interceded epigenetic synchronization is not well characterized. Therefore, improving the current limitations linked to stability and bioavailability issues in vitamin formulations is highly warranted. The present review not only sums up the available data on the role of vitamins as potential epigenetic modifiers but also discusses the importance of nano-engineered vitamins as potential epidrugs for dietary and pharmacological intervention to mitigate the long-term effects of air pollution toxicity.
Keyphrases
- human health
- gene expression
- air pollution
- risk assessment
- dna methylation
- climate change
- randomized controlled trial
- particulate matter
- cardiovascular disease
- electronic health record
- lung function
- squamous cell carcinoma
- young adults
- chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- glycemic control
- transcription factor
- quality improvement
- metabolic syndrome
- squamous cell
- data analysis