First Author | Ford NA | Year | 2010 |
Journal | J Nutr | Volume | 140 |
Issue | 12 | Pages | 2134-8 |
PubMed ID | 20962153 | Mgi Jnum | J:166153 |
Mgi Id | MGI:4839843 | Doi | 10.3945/jn.110.128033 |
Citation | Ford NA, et al. (2010) Loss of carotene-9',10'-monooxygenase expression increases serum and tissue lycopene concentrations in lycopene-fed mice. J Nutr 140(12):2134-8 |
abstractText | Two enzymes have been identified for the oxidative metabolism of carotenoids in mammals. Carotene-15,15'-monooxygenase (CMO-I) primarily centrally cleaves beta,beta-carotene to form vitamin A. We hypothesize that carotene-9',10'-monooxygenase (CMO-II) plays a key role in metabolism of acyclic nonprovitamin A carotenoids such as lycopene. We investigated carotenoid bioaccumulation in young adult, male, wild-type (WT) mice or mice lacking CMO-II (CMO-II KO). Mice were fed an AIN-93G diet or identical diets supplemented with 10% tomato powder, 130 mg lycopene/kg diet (10% lycopene beadlets), or placebo beadlets for 4 or 30 d. Lycopene preferentially accumulated in CMO-II KO mouse tissues and serum compared with WT mouse tissues. beta-Carotene preferentially accumulated in some CMO-II KO mouse tissues compared with WT mouse tissues. Relative tissue mRNA expression of CMO-I and CMO-II was differentially expressed in mouse tissues, and CMO-II, but not CMO-I, was expressed in mouse prostate. In conclusion, the loss of CMO-II expression leads to increased serum and tissue concentrations of lycopene in tomato-fed mice. |