| Literature DB >> 25125885 |
Abstract
Flavonoids are ubiquitous in nature. They are also in food, providing an essential link between diet and prevention of chronic diseases including cancer. Anticancer effects of these polyphenols depend on several factors: Their chemical structure and concentration, and also on the type of cancer. Malignant cells from different tissues reveal somewhat different sensitivity toward flavonoids and, therefore, the preferences of the most common dietary flavonoids to various human cancer types are analyzed in this review. While luteolin and kaempferol can be considered as promising candidate agents for treatment of gastric and ovarian cancers, respectively, apigenin, chrysin, and luteolin have good perspectives as potent antitumor agents for cervical cancer; cells from main sites of flavonoid metabolism (colon and liver) reveal rather large fluctuations in anticancer activity probably due to exposure to various metabolites with different activities. Anticancer effect of flavonoids toward blood cancer cells depend on their myeloid, lymphoid, or erythroid origin; cytotoxic effects of flavonoids on breast and prostate cancer cells are highly related to the expression of hormone receptors. Different flavonoids are often preferentially present in certain food items, and knowledge about the malignant tissue-specific anticancer effects of flavonoids could be purposely applied both in chemoprevention as well as in cancer treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Diet; flavonoids; human cancers; prevention; treatment
Year: 2014 PMID: 25125885 PMCID: PMC4127821 DOI: 10.4103/0973-7847.134247
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacogn Rev ISSN: 0973-6581
Figure 1Scheme of major flavonoid aglycones and their glycosides
Structures and main food sources of major flavonoid aglycones and their glycosides
Cytotoxicity of flavonoids on human cancer cell lines derived from various organ sites (mean IC50±SE, μM (n)). Cell lines used for assays are presented in Table 3
Human cancer cell lines used for cytotoxicity assays of flavonoids
Figure 2Cytotoxic effect of flavonoids on different human blood cancer cell lines
Figure 3Cytotoxic effect of apigenin on human breast cancer cell lines depending on the expression of estrogen receptors
Figure 4Cytotoxic effect of flavonols on human prostate cancer cell lines depending on the expression of androgen receptors
Figure 5Cytotoxic effect of flavonoids on different human lung cancer cell lines (a), melanoma cell lines (b), and uterine cancer cell lines (c)