NUTRITIONAL GENOMICS
Jose M. Ordovas1 and Dolores Corella1,2 1Nutrition and Genomics Laboratory, Jean Mayer–U.S. Department of Agriculture, Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University, Boston, Massachusetts; email:
jose.ordovas@tufts.edu 2Genetic and Molecular Epidemiology Unit, School of Medicine, University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain
▪ Abstract
Nutritional genomics has tremendous potential to change the future of dietary guidelines and personal recommendations. Nutrigenetics will provide the basis for personalized dietary recommendations based on the individual's genetic make up. This approach has been used for decades for certain monogenic diseases; however, the challenge is to implement a similar concept for common multifactorial disorders and to develop tools to detect genetic predisposition and to prevent common disorders decades before their manifestation. The preliminary results involving gene-diet interactions for cardiovascular diseases and cancer are promising, but mostly inconclusive. Success in this area will require the integration of different disciplines and investigators working on large population studies designed to adequately investigate gene-environment interactions. Despite the current difficulties, preliminary evidence strongly suggests that the concept should work and that we will be able to harness the information contained in our genomes to achieve successful aging using behavioral changes; nutrition will be the cornerstone of this endeavor.
Most recent citing papers (via CrossRef)
Diet-gene interactions between dietary fat intake and common polymorphisms in determining lipid metabolism
Grasas y Aceites 60(1) (2009)
Genotype–Phenotype Associations: Modulation by Diet and Obesity
Obesity 16:S40-S46 (2009)
The good life: living for health and a life without risks? On a prominent script of nutrigenomics
British Journal of Nutrition:1 (2008)
Nutrigenomics and personalized nutrition: science and concept
Personalized Medicine 5(5):447-455 (2008)
Gene–Environment Interactions and Susceptibility to Metabolic Syndrome and Other Chronic Diseases
Journal of Periodontology 79(8S):1508-1513 (2008)