Carotenoids and the Immune Response
- 1 January 1989
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Elsevier in Journal of Nutrition
- Vol. 119 (1), 112-115
- https://doi.org/10.1093/jn/119.1.112
Abstract
There is growing evidence from in vitro and in vivo laboratory animal studies that β-carotene can protect phagocytic cells from autooxidative damage, enhance T and B lymphocyte proliferative responses, stimulate effector T cell functions, and enhance macrophage, cytotoxic T cell and natural killer cell tumoricidal capacities, as well as increase the production of certain interleukins. Many of these effects have also been seen with carotenoids lacking provitamin A activity but having the antioxidant and singlet oxygen quenching capacities of β-carotene. The association of immunoenhancement with decreased tumor burden in animals given carotenoids suggests a potential explanation for the epidemiological data linking lower carotenoid status with higher incidences of certain cancers. Since vitamin A is a relatively poor antioxidant and cannot quench singlet oxygen, β-carotene may have more importance as a nutrient than simply serving as a precursor of vitamin A.Keywords
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