Formaldehde in the Body



Formaldehyde is a toxin that can damage our DNA. However, our cells have two lines of defense against the danger of formaldehyde. An enzyme can convert the formaldehyde into a less dangerous chemical, formate or DNA damage caused by formaldehyde can be fixed by DNA repair enzymes.

It has been known that we produce formaldehyde in our bodies, but it was not known where it came from. There has been research uncovered that formaldehyde is a by-product of the key process called the ‘one carbon cycle’. The cycle used folate to create DNA and essential amino acids.

These findings may provide a new target for developing cancer drugs, as some types of cancer like BRCA1 and BRCA2 breast cancers, lack the DNA repair enzymes to protect themselves against formaldehyde toxicity. Researchers have found that when treating lab grown bacteria with folate can lead to the release of formaldehyde, which could lethally damage the DNA of the BRCA cancer cells. Although healthy cells would not be damaged because they have functioning DNA repair mechanisms.

It was also found that formaldehyde can also have a positive function in cells. This is because it fuels the one carbon cycle, which is used to create the building blocks of life. This discovery suggests how cancer cells may be able to resist current chemotherapy drugs that block folate going into the one carbon cycle. With the folate pathway blocked, cancer cells may be able to keep functioning by switching to using the formaldehyde pathway to build the DNA and proteins that cancer cells need to multiply.

This study was conducted on laboratory cell cultures dosed with large amounts of folate and altered so that they could not process formaldehyde. So, the researchers caution that no conclusion can be made/drawn about whether these is an effect in a living animal consuming folate. 


















Burgos-Barragan, G., Wit, N., Meiser, J., Dingler, F. A., Pietzke, M., Mulderrig, L., ... & Monks, P. S. (2017). Mammals divert endogenous genotoxic formaldehyde into one-carbon metabolism. Nature, 548(7669), 549-554.


Comments

  1. Your post was very informative. I did not know the possible biological benefits of formaldehyde production prior to reading your post. I think its interesting how the production of formaldehyde can play a part in the destruction of cancerous cells.

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  2. This was actually all completely new to me. I had no idea that formaldehyde was produced in the body or that it could have such an effect on cancer cells. This was a really interesting post!

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  3. I learned a lot from your post, especially that formaldehyde could be used as a cancer treatment. I find it interesting that years ago scientist didn't know where to start to treat cancer, but now there are so many findings that could potentially be the answer. Just shows how much we are expanding on our knowledge about the body! Great post!

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  4. I never knew about all the possible uses formaldehyde could be used for - especially as a cancer treatment. All I knew about formaldehyde before this was how the structure looked (thanks to organic chemistry) and that it caused the awful smell in zoology. It's interesting to know it has many uses and is even produced in our own bodies!

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