| Literature DB >> 25918934 |
Massimo Fantini1, Monica Benvenuto2, Laura Masuelli3, Giovanni Vanni Frajese4, Ilaria Tresoldi5, Andrea Modesti6, Roberto Bei7.
Abstract
Carcinogenesis is a multistep process triggered by genetic alterations that activate different signal transduction pathways and cause the progressive transformation of a normal cell into a cancer cell. Polyphenols, compounds ubiquitously expressed in plants, have anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, antiviral, anticancer, and immunomodulatory properties, all of which are beneficial to human health. Due to their ability to modulate the activity of multiple targets involved in carcinogenesis through direct interaction or modulation of gene expression, polyphenols can be employed to inhibit the growth of cancer cells. However, the main problem related to the use of polyphenols as anticancer agents is their poor bioavailability, which might hinder the in vivo effects of the single compound. In fact, polyphenols have a poor absorption and biodistribution, but also a fast metabolism and excretion in the human body. The poor bioavailability of a polyphenol will affect the effective dose delivered to cancer cells. One way to counteract this drawback could be combination treatment with different polyphenols or with polyphenols and other anti-cancer drugs, which can lead to more effective antitumor effects than treatment using only one of the compounds. This report reviews current knowledge on the anticancer effects of combinations of polyphenols or polyphenols and anticancer drugs, with a focus on their ability to modulate multiple signaling transduction pathways involved in cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25918934 PMCID: PMC4463587 DOI: 10.3390/ijms16059236
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Structure of the major classes of polyphenols. Panel A: Flavonoids; Panel B: Phenolic acids; Panel C: Stilbenes. The figure shows the main member, resveratrol; Panel D: Other polyphenols. The figure shows curcumin.
Modulation of ErbB receptors, NF-κB and HH/GLI signaling pathways by polyphenols in cancer cells.
| Signaling Pathway | Treatment | Antitumoral Effects | Reference | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ErbB receptors | CUR | MDA-MB-468 breast cancer cells (40 µM) | ↓ EGFR phosphorylation
| [ | |
| MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells (30–50 µM) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |||
| Breast cancer cells (6–50 µM) | BALB- | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ | ||
| Gastric cancer cells (1–100 µM) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |||
| LNCaP, C4-2B prostate cancer cells (0–100 µM) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |||
| Pancreatic and lung cancer cells (0–50 µM) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |||
| HEY ovarian cancer cells (2.5–160 µM) | ↓ Bcl-2, Akt expression
| [ | |||
| ErbB receptors | EGCG | MCF-7 breast cancer cells (5–20 µM) | ↓ ErbB2, ErbB3 phosphorylation
| [ | |
| mammary tumor NF639 and SMF cells (0–80 µg/mL) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |||
| HNSCC (10 µg/mL), breast cancer cells (30 µg/mL) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |||
| SW837 colon carcinoma cells (30 µg/mL) | ↓ EGFR, ErbB2 and ErbB3 cellular levels | [ | |||
| RES | HepG2 liver cancer cells (50–300 µM) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | ||
| A431 epidermoid carcinoma cells (0–100 µM) | ↓ Cyclin D1, MEK1, ERK1/2 expression | [ | |||
| HT-29 colon cancer cells (25 µM) | ↓ JACK-STAT pathway
| [ | |||
| Quercetin | SKBR3 breast cancer cells (100–200 µM) | ↓ ErbB2 tyrosin kinase activity
| [ | ||
| HepG2 liver cancer cells (50 µM) | ↓ ERK1/2, Akt phosphorylation
| [ | |||
| A549 lung cancer cells (0–58 µM) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |||
| Apigenin | PC-3, LNCaP prostate cancer cells (5–40 µM) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | ||
| HNSCC cells (6–100 µM) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |||
| NF-κB | EGCG | A431 epidermoid carcinoma cells (10–40 µg/mL) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |
| Delphinidin | PC-3 prostate cancer cells (30–180 µM) | Athymic (nu/nu) nude mice bearing prostate cancer tumors (2 mg i.p. thrice weekly) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ | |
| HCT-116 colon cancer cells (30–240 µM) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |||
| Anthocyanin | rats with esophagus tumor (3.8 μmol/g/day p.o.) | ↓ Tumor development
| [ | ||
| CAL-27 oral cancer cells (0–500 µg/mL) | ↓ Cell proliferation, metastasis
| [ | |||
| CA, CAPE | HepG2 liver cancer cells (CA 100 µg/mL; CAPE 5 µg/mL) | nude mice injected with HepG2 cells (CA + CAPE 5 mg/kg s.c thrice weekly; CA + CAPE 20 mg/kg/day p.o. for 5 weeks) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ | |
| CUR | Cervical cancer cells (5–60 µM) | ↓ IκB-α phosphorylation
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| ICR mice (1–25 µM) | ↓ COX-2 expression
| [ | |||
| NF-κB | RES | MCF-7 breast cancer cells (50–150 µM) | ↓ Cell proliferation
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| OCIM2, OCI/AML3 myeloid leukemia cells (5–75 µM) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |||
| HH/GLI | CUR | medulloblastoma cancer cells (40 µM) | ↓ SHH, GLI1, PTCH1 expression
| [ | |
| EGCG | SW1353, CRL-7891 chondrosarcoma cells (0–4 µM) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | ||
| pancreatic cancer stem cells (20–60 µM) | ↓ Cell proliferation, invasion
| [ | |||
| Apigein, baicalein, CUR, RES EGCG, genistein, quercetin | Pancreatic cancer stem cells, prostate cancer cells (20–30 µM) | ↓ GLI1 expression | [ |
Abbreviations: p.o., per os; i.p., intraperitoneally; i.t., intratumorally; i.v., intravenously; s.c., subcutaneously.
In vitro and in vivo antitumoral effects of combinations of polyphenols.
| Treatment | Antitumoral Effects | Reference | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pterostilbene + quercetin (s) | B16M-F10 melanoma cells (40 µM pterostilbene + 20 µM quercetin) | C57BL/6J mice bearing B16M-F10 cells (20 mg/kg/day of each polyphenol i.v.) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ |
| Thearubigin + genistein (s) | PC-3 prostate cancer cells (0.125–0.5 µg/mL thearubricin + 5–20 µg/mL genistein) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |
| Genistein + RES | SV40 rats bearing prostate cancer (83–250 mg/kg/day of each polyphenols p.o) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ | |
| Quercetin + EGCG (a) | PC-3, LNCaP prostate cancer cells (10–20 µM of each polyphenol) | SCID mice bearing LAPC-4 prostate cancer cells (0.2%–0.4% of each polyphenol/day p.o) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ |
| CUR + EGCG (s) | A549, NCI-460NSCLC cells (10–20 µM of each polyphenol) | Lung cancer xenograft node mouse model (20 mg/kg/day of each polyphenol i.p.) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ |
| MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells (2–3 µM CUR + 20–25 µM EGCG) | Athymic nude mice implanted with MDA-MB-231 cells (200 mg/kg/day CUR p.o. + 25 mg/kg/day EGCG i.p.) | ↓ Tumor volume
| [ | |
| Arc + CUR + EGCG (s) | LNCaP prostate cancer cells, MCF-7 breast cancer cells (1 μM Arc + 5–10 μM CUR + 40 μM EGCG) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |
| Luteolin + EGCG (s) | HNSCC and lung cancer cells (10 μM luteolin + 30 μM EGCG) | Athymic nude mice implanted with HNSCC and lung cancer cells (125 mg/kg luteolin + 10 mg/kg EGCG p.o. 5 days a week) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ |
| Ellagic acid + quercetin; Ellagic acid + RES; quercetin + RES (s) | MOLT-4 leukemia cells (ellagic acid + quercetin 0–40 μM; Ellagic acid + RES, quercetin + RES 0–140 mM) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |
| RES + CUR | NUB-7, LAN-5, IMR-32, SK-N-BE neuroblastoma cells (0–100 μM CUR + 0–200 μM RES) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |
| SJ-RH4, RD/18 rhabdomyosarcoma cells, Saos-2 osteosarcoma cells (6–50 μM of each polyphenol) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | ||
| CAL-27, SCC-15, FaDu, SALTO HNSCCcells (6–50 μM of each polyphenol) (a) | BALB/c mice implanted with SALTO cells (2 mg of each polyphenol in 50 μL of corn oil p.o. thrice weekly) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ | |
| HCT-116 colon cancer cells (0–50 μM of each polyphenol) (s) | SCID mice implanted with HCT-116 cells (150 mg/kg/day RES + 500 mg/kg/day CUR p.o. for 3 weeks) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ |
Abbreviations: (s), synergic effect; (a), additive effect; p.o., per os; i.p., intraperitoneally; i.t., intratumorally; i.v., intravenously; s.c., subcutaneously.
In vitro and in vivo antitumoral effects of polyphenols in combination with anticancer drugs.
| Treatment | Antitumoral Effects | Reference | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CUR + 5-FU | HCT-116 colon cancer cells (5 µM CUR + 0–5 µM 5-FU) | ↓ IC50 of 5-FU
| [ | |
| CUR + cisplatin | UM-SCC-74B, UM-SCC-29 HNSCC cells (0.3–5 µM CUR + 3–50 µM cisplatin) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |
| CUR + gemcitabine (a) | P34, Panc-1 pancreatic cancer cells. (10–15 µM CUR + 0.1–0.5 µM gemcitabine) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |
| BxPC-3, MIA PaCa-2, Panc-1 pancreatic cancer cells (10 µM CUR + 50 nM gemcitabine) | Mice bearing pancreatic tumors (1 g/kg/day CUR p.o. + 25 mg/kg gemcitabine i.p. twice weekly) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ | |
| CUR + celecoxib (s) | P-34, MIA PaCa, Panc-1 pancreatic cancer cells (15 µM CUR + 25 µM celecoxib) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |
| CUR + RSE + NLE + radiotherapy | BxPC-3, MIA PaCa-2, Panc-1 pancreatic cancer cells (100 nM CUR + 1 µg RSE+ 0.01% NLE + 10 Gy radiotherapy) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |
| CUR + BCG | MBT-2, 253J-BV, KU-7, RT4V6 bladder cancer cells (0–25 µM CUR + 106 CFU BCG) | Syngeneic mice implanted with MBT-2 cells (1 g/kg/day CUR p.o. + 106 CFU BCG i.t. once weekly) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ |
| CUR + paclitaxel | MDA-MB-231breast cancer cells (0.01–10 µM CUR + 0.2–100 µM paclitaxel) | Athymic nude mice implanted with MDA-MB-231 cells (100 mg/kg/day CUR p.o. + 7 mg/kg paclitaxel i.p. weekly) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ |
| RES + CUR + CC | MCF-7, MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells (10–100 µM RES + 10–30 µM CUR + 10 µM CC) | ↑ Proportion of cells in G0/G1-phase
| [ | |
| RES + gemcitabine (s) | ASPC-1, MIA PaCa-2, Panc-1 pancreatic cancer cells (10 µM RES + 100 nM gemcitabine) | Athymic nude mice implanted with MIA PaCa-2 cells (40 mg/kg /day RES p.o. + 25 mg/kg gemcitabine i.p. twice weekly) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ |
| RES + rapamycin (a) | MCF-7, MDA-MB-231, BT-549 breast cancer cells (10–50 µM RES + 0–10,000 nM rapamycin) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |
| RES metabolites + SN38 or oxaliplatin (s) | SW480, SW620 colon cancercells (0–60 µM RES + 50 nM SN38 or 500 nM oxaliplatin) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |
| EVOO + trastuzumab (s) | MCF-7, SKBR3 breast cancer cells (50 µM EVOO + 100 µg/mL trastuzumab) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |
| EGCG + tamoxifen or sulindac (s) | PC-9 lung cancer cells (75 µM EGCG + 0–20 µM tamoxifen or 0–200 µM sulindac) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |
| EGCG+ celecoxib (s) | PC-9, A549, ChaGo K-1 lung cancer cells (100 µM EGCG + 1–50 µM celecoxib) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |
| EGCG + NS38 or celecoxib (s) | LNCaP, PC-3, CWR22Rv1 prostate cancer cells (10–40 µM EGCG + 10 µMNS38) | Athymic nude mice implanted with CWR22Rv1 cells (0.1% EGCG in drinking water/day + 5 mg/kg/day celecoxib i.p. 5 days per week) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ |
| EGCG + paclitaxel or docetaxel (a) | PC-3ML prostate cancer cells (30 µM EGCG+ 6.25 nM paclitaxel or 3.12 nM docetaxel) | CB17 SCID mice implanted with PC-3ML cells (228 mg/kg/day EGCG + 20 mg/kg paclitaxel i.p.weekly) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ |
| EGCG + DOX | IBC-10a, PCa-20a, PC-3ML prostate cancer cells (0–60 µM EGCG + 2 nM or 1–6 µM DOX) | NOD-SCID mice implanted with PC-3ML cells (200 µM EGCG + 2 µM DOX) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ |
| ECG + EGCG + DOX | BEL-7404/DOX liver cancer cells (60 mg/mL ECG or 14 mg/mL EGCG + 0.8–2.0 mg/mL DOX) | BALB/c nu/nu mice implanted with BEL-7404/DOX cells (40–160 mg/kg EGCG + 2 mg/kg DOX i.p.) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ |
| EGCG + paclitaxel (s) | 4T1, MCF-7, MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells (20 µM EGCG + 2 µM paclitaxel) | BALB/c mice implanted with 4T1 cells (30 mg/kg/day EGCG i.p. + 10 mg/kg paclitaxel i.p. thrice weekly) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ |
| EGCG + cisplatin | SKOV3, CAOV3, C200 ovarian cancer cells (0–20 µM EGCG + 1–350 µg/mL cisplatin) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |
| EGCG+ gemcitabine or tasocitinib (s) | AsPC-1, PANC-1 pancreatic cancer cells (0–60 µM EGCG + 0.5 µM gemcitabine or tasocitinib) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |
| Quercetin + DOX | MCF-7, MDA-231 breast cancer cells (5–10 µM quercetin + 10–100 nM DOX) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |
| Quercetin + cisplatin | H520 NSCLC cells (40 µM quercetin + 5 µg/mL cisplatin) | ↑ Apoptotic rate
| [ | |
| HeP2 laryngeal cancer cells (40 µM quercetin + 2.5 µg/mL cisplatin) (s) | ↓ Akt phosphorylation
| [ | ||
| Genistein + cisplatin | BxPC-3 pancreatic cancer cells (25 µM genistein + 0.5 µM cisplatin) | SCID mice implanted with BxPC-3 cells (800 µg/kg/day genistein p.o. + 9 mg/kg cisplatin/day i.p.) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ |
| Panc-28, COLO-357, L3.6pl pancreatic cancer cells (30 µM genistein + 1–2 µM cisplatin) | SCID mice implanted with COLO-357 cells (1 mg/day genistein p.o. + 9 mg/kg cisplatin i.p.) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ | |
| Genistein + gemcitabine | COLO-357, L3.6pl pancreatic cancer cells (25 µM genistein + 25 nM gemcitabine) | SCID mice implanted with COLO-357 and L3.6pl cells (1 mg/day genistein p.o. + 80 mg/kg/day gemcitabine i.v.) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ |
| Isoflavones + radiotherapy | PC-3 prostate cancer cells (0–15 µM isoflavones + 3 Gy radiotherapy) | Nude mice implanted with PC-3 cells (1 mg/day isoflavones p.o. + 5 Gy radiotherapy) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ |
| Cur-NPs | CAL-27-cisplatin-resistent HNSCC cells (0–80 µM) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ | |
| GLUT1-PEG-PE micelles co-loaded with CUR and DOX | HCT-116 colon cancer cells (7.5–20 µM CUR + 0.1–0.4 µM DOX) | NU/NU nude mice implanted with HCT-116 cells (4 mg/kg/day CUR + 0.4 mg/kg/day DOX i.v.) | ↓ Cell viability
| [ |
| MPEG-PCL micelles loaded with CUR and DOX (s) | LL/2, MS1 lung cancer cells (0–3 µg/mL CUR and DOX) | C57 mice implanted with LL/2 cells (5mg/kg CUR + 5 mg/kg DOX i.v. every five days) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ |
| Liposomal CUR + cisplatin | CAL-27, UM-SCC1 HNSCC cells (100 µM CUR + 10–20 µM cisplatin) | Athymic nude mice implanted with HNSCC cells (50 mg/kg CUR i.v. thrice weekly for three weeks + 0.75 µg/mL cisplatin i.p. after 4 weeks) | ↓ Tumor growth
| [ |
| PLGA-Nano-CUR particles + cisplatin or radiotherapy | cisplatin-resistant A2780CP ovarian cancer cells (2–20 µM CUR + 2.5–40 µM cisplatin; 2–8 µM CUR + 0–4 Gy radiotherapy) | ↓ Cell proliferation
| [ |
Abbreviations: (s), synergic effect; (a), additive effect; p.o., per os; i.p., intraperitoneally; i.t., intratumorally; i.v., intravenously; s.c., subcutaneously.