4.5 Review

Oxidative Stress, Nutrition and Cancer: Friends or Foes?

Journal

WORLD JOURNAL OF MENS HEALTH
Volume 39, Issue 1, Pages 19-30

Publisher

PUSAN NATL UNIV MEDICAL SCH, DEPT UROLOGY
DOI: 10.5534/wjmh.190167

Keywords

Adipose tissue; Cancer; Lifestyle; Oxidative stress; Redox

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The rapid change in human lifestyle has complex effects on adipocytes, where lipidic signaling language interacts with oxidative stress signaling. These factors may be related to cancer onset, especially when there are significant changes in one's lifestyle and dietary habits.
The relationship between cancer and nutrition, as well as nutrition and oxidative stress, shares puzzling aspects that current research is investigating as the possible components of an intriguing regulating mechanism involving the complex interplay between adipose tissue and other compartments. Along the very recent biological evolution, humans underwent a rapid change in their lifestyles and henceforth the role of the adipocytes earned a much more complex task in the fine tuning of the tissue microenvironment. A lipidic signaling language probably evolved in association with the signaling role of reactive oxygen species, which gained a fundamental part in the regulation of cell stem and plasticity. The possible relationship with cancer onset might have some causative mechanism in the impairment of this complex task, usually deregulated by drastic changes in one's own lifestyle and dietary habit. This review tries to address this issue.

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