| Literature DB >> 24566317 |
Omotayo O Erejuwa1, Siti A Sulaiman2, Mohd S Ab Wahab3.
Abstract
Honey is a natural product known for its varied biological or pharmacological activities-ranging from anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, antibacterial, antihypertensive to hypoglycemic effects. This review article focuses on the role of honey in modulating the development and progression of tumors or cancers. It reviews available evidence (some of which is very recent) with regards to the antimetastatic, antiproliferative and anticancer effects of honey in various forms of cancer. These effects of honey have been thoroughly investigated in certain cancers such as breast, liver and colorectal cancer cell lines. In contrast, limited but promising data are available for other forms of cancers including prostate, bladder, endometrial, kidney, skin, cervical, oral and bone cancer cells. The article also underscores the various possible mechanisms by which honey may inhibit growth and proliferation of tumors or cancers. These include regulation of cell cycle, activation of mitochondrial pathway, induction of mitochondrial outer membrane permeabilization, induction of apoptosis, modulation of oxidative stress, amelioration of inflammation, modulation of insulin signaling and inhibition of angiogenesis. Honey is highly cytotoxic against tumor or cancer cells while it is non-cytotoxic to normal cells. The data indicate that honey can inhibit carcinogenesis by modulating the molecular processes of initiation, promotion, and progression stages. Thus, it may serve as a potential and promising anticancer agent which warrants further experimental and clinical studies.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24566317 PMCID: PMC6270987 DOI: 10.3390/molecules19022497
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Chemical structures of flavonoids in honey.
Figure 2Chemical structure of the endogenous estrogen 17-β-estradiol.
Figure 3Chemical structures of phenolic acids in honey.
Effects of honey on the development and progression of tumor and cancer cells.
| Type of tumor/cancer and cancer cell type | Effects of honey (key findings) | References |
|---|---|---|
| Human breast cancer (MCF-7 & MDA-MB-231) | Antagonizes estrogen activity, inhibits cell proliferation, induces apoptosis, reduces mitochondrial membrane potential | [ |
| Human liver cancer (HepG2) | Inhibits cell proliferation, suppresses angiogenesis, induces apoptosis, protects against mutagen-induced DNA damage | [ |
| Human colorectal cancer (HT 29, HCT 15 & CT 26) | Inhibits cell proliferation, induces apoptosis, arrests cell cycle, reduces mitochondrial membrane potential, increases generation of ROS, depletes intracellular non-protein thiols, induces DNA damage, suppresses inflammation | [ |
| Human prostate cancer (PC-3) | Inhibits cell proliferation, induces apoptosis | [ |
| Human bladder cancer (T24, 253J, RT4 & MBT-2) | Inhibits cell proliferation | [ |
| Human kidney cancer (Renal cancer cell line) | Induces apoptosis | [ |
| Human oral cancer (Oral carcinoma) | Inhibits cell proliferation | [ |
| Human bone cancer (Osteosarcoma) | Inhibits cell proliferation | [ |
| Human skin cancer (Melanoma cells) | Inhibits cell proliferation, arrests cell cycle | [ |
| Human leukemia | Induces apoptosis | [ |
| Human endometrial cancer | Inhibits cell proliferation | [ |
| Human lung cancer NCI-H460 | Inhibits cell proliferation | [ |
| Human cervical cancer | Induces apoptosis, disrupts mitochondrial membrane potential | [ |
| Walker 256 carcinoma | Inhibits cell proliferation, arrests cell cycle, induces apoptosis | [ |
| DMBA-induced breast cancer in rats | Delays the development of tumors, reduces the number and size of tumors, prevents the development of high grade cancer | [ |
| Rats with DEN-induced hepatic cancer | Protects against transformation of normal liver cells to neoplastic hepatic cells, restores the PCNA and P53 expression | [ |
| Mice/rats with colon carcinoma or adenocarcinoma | Inhibits formation of metastases and tumor growth | [ |
| Mice implanted with bladder cancer cells | Inhibits tumor growth | [ |
| Mice with melanoma | Inhibits tumor growth, induces apoptosis | [ |
Figure 4Honey blockage of the 3 stages of cancerogenesis.
Figure 5Molecular mechanisms/targets mediating the antiproliferative, antitumor, antimetastatic and anticancer effects of honey.