Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5551082 Journal of Food and Drug Analysis 2017 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Industrial pollution and food contamination have become increasingly serious due to adverse human health effects.•Natural dietary compounds are potential chemopreventive agents for preventing xenobiotics-induced adverse health effects.•Metabolism of xenobiotics is a critical intervention point for reducing xenobiotics-induced toxicity by phytochemicals.

Contaminants (or pollutants) that affect human health have become an important issue, spawning a myriad of studies on how to prevent harmful contaminant-induced effects. Recently, a variety of biological functions of natural dietary compounds derived from consumed foods and plants have been demonstrated in a number of studies. Natural dietary compounds exhibited several beneficial effects for the prevention of disease and the inhibition of chemically-induced carcinogenesis. Contaminant-induced toxicity and carcinogenesis are mostly attributed to the mutagenic activity of reactive metabolites and the disruption of normal biological functions. Therefore, the metabolic regulation of hazardous chemicals is key to reducing contaminant-induced adverse health effects. Moreover, promoting contaminant excretion from the body through Phase I and II metabolizing enzymes is also a useful strategy for reducing contaminant-induced toxicity. This review focuses on summarizing the natural dietary compounds derived from common dietary foods and plants and their possible mechanisms of action in the prevention/suppression of contaminant-induced toxicity.

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Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Food Science
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