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American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol. 78, No. 2, 201-208, August 2003
© 2003 American Society for Clinical Nutrition


SPECIAL ARTICLE

Nutrition and genetics: an expanding frontier1,2,3,4

Robert H Herman Memorial Award in Clinical Nutrition Lecture, 2002

Robert E Olson

1 From the Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, University of South Florida, Tampa.

The age of molecular biology began in 1953 with the discovery of the structure of DNA. By 1961 the genetic code for the translation of the sequence of bases in DNA to amino acids in proteins was underway, and a model for the genetic regulation of protein synthesis was proposed. My interest in the genetic regulation of nutrient metabolism began in that year during my sabbatical leave in the laboratory of Sir Hans Krebs at Oxford University. In the present article, I describe 2 episodes in my career during which I used genetic concepts to explain a nutritional phenomenon; the first episode occurred before doing the experimental work, and the second occurred after the experimental work was completed. My first brainstorm, which occurred in 1961, was to investigate the hypothesis that all of the fat-soluble vitamins act by the regulation of a cluster of genes. Unfortunately, I selected vitamin K as my model and discovered that it is the only fat-soluble vitamin that does not work in full or in part by the regulation of a set of genes. In 1967 I undertook a second problem, which was to determine the mode of action of polyunsaturated fatty acids in lowering plasma lipid concentrations in humans. We discovered that linoleic acid reduced the storage and enhanced the oxidation of fatty acids. The genetic interpretation of this study has come only recently: polyunsaturated fats have been shown to down-regulate enzymes that accomplish storage of fatty acids and to up-regulate genes that enhance fatty acid oxidation.

Key Words: Fat-soluble vitamins • polyunsaturated fatty acids • fatty acid storage • fatty acid oxidation • transcription factors • genes • obesity • serum lipids




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