Background
Vitamins A, E and C, and uric acid, which can scavenge free radicals should also protect DNA from the damage. It is reasonable
to assume that agents that decrease oxidative DNA damage should also decrease subsequent cancer development.
Aim of the study
A relationship between basal level of antioxidants (vitamins A, C and E and uric acid) and oxidative DNA damage was assessed.
For the first time, the broad spectrum of oxidative DNA damage biomarkers: urinary excretion of 8-oxodG, 8-oxoGua and 5HMUra
as well as the level of oxidative DNA damage in leukocytes was analyzed in healthy subjects (n = 158).
Methods
Using HPLC prepurification/isotope dilution GC/MS methodology, we examined the amount of oxidative DNA damage products excreted
into urine and the amount of 8-oxodG in leukocytes’ DNA (with HPLC/EC technique). The level of antioxidant vitamins and uric
acid was estimated by HPLC technique with fluorimetric and UV detection.
Results
Analyses of relationship between the most common antioxidants (vitamins A, C, E and uric acid) and oxidative DNA damage products
reveal weak, statistically significant negative correlation between retinol and all the measured parameters except 5HMUra.
Vitamin C negatively correlates with urinary excretion of 8-oxodG and 8-oxoGua. Uric acid revealed statistically significant
negative correlation with 8-oxodG in cellular DNA and urinary excretion of 5HMUra, while α-tocopherol correlates negatively
only with 8-oxodG in cellular DNA. Good, significant (P < 0.0001), positive correlation (r = 0.61) was noted between urinary levels of the base, 8-oxoGua and the deoxynucleoside, 8-oxodG.
Conclusion
Our results suggest that oxidative DNA damage shows limited but significant response to antioxidants analyzed in this study
and is more affected by many other cellular functions like antioxidant enzymes or DNA repair enzymes as well as genetics.
Keywords oxidative DNA damage - DNA repair - antioxidant vitamins