Background: Folate and vitamin B12 (B12) are cofactors in folate-mediated 1-carbon metabolism (FOCM), a metabolic network that supports synthesis of nucleotides (including thymidylate [dTMP]) and methionine. FOCM impairments such as a deficiency or imbalance of cofactors can perturb dTMP synthesis, causing uracil misincorporation into DNA.
Objective: The purpose of this study was to determine how reduced expression of the B12-dependent enzyme methionine synthase (MTR) and excess dietary folic acid interact to affect folate distribution and markers of genome stability in mouse tissues.
Methods: Heterozygous Mtr knockout mice (Mtr+/-) model the FOCM-specific effects of B12 deficiency. Folate accumulation and vitamer distribution, genomic uracil concentrations, and phosphorylated histone H2AX (γH2AX) immunostaining were measured in male Mtr+/+ and Mtr+/- mice weaned to either a folate-sufficient control (C) diet (2 mg/kg folic acid) or a high folic acid (HFA) diet (20 mg/kg folic acid) for 7 wk.
Results: Exposure to the HFA diet led to tissue-specific patterns of folate accumulation, with plasma, colon, kidney, and skeletal muscle exhibiting increased folate concentrations compared with control. Liver total folate did not differ. Although unmetabolized folic acid (UMFA) increased 10-fold in mouse plasma with HFA diet, UMFA accounted for <0.2% of total folate in liver and colon tissue. Exposure to HFA diet resulted in a shift in folate distribution in colon tissue with higher 5-methyl-THF and lower formyl-THF than in control mice. Mtr heterozygosity did not impact folate accumulation or distribution in any tissue. Mice on HFA diet exhibited higher uracil in genomic DNA and γH2AX foci in colon. Similar differences were not seen in liver.
Conclusions: This study demonstrates that folic acid, even when consumed at high doses, does not meaningfully accumulate in mouse tissues, although high-dose folic acid shifts folate distribution and increases uracil accumulation in genomic DNA in colon tissue.
Keywords: DNA; folate; methionine synthase; unmetabolized folic acid (UMFA); vitamin B12.
Copyright © 2024 American Society for Nutrition. All rights reserved.