| Literature DB >> 26978396 |
Yue Zhou1, Ya Li2, Tong Zhou3, Jie Zheng4, Sha Li5, Hua-Bin Li6,7.
Abstract
Liver cancer is the most common malignancy of the digestive system with high death rate. Accumulating evidences suggests that many dietary natural products are potential sources for prevention and treatment of liver cancer, such as grapes, black currant, plum, pomegranate, cruciferous vegetables, French beans, tomatoes, asparagus, garlic, turmeric, ginger, soy, rice bran, and some edible macro-fungi. These dietary natural products and their active components could affect the development and progression of liver cancer in various ways, such as inhibiting tumor cell growth and metastasis, protecting against liver carcinogens, immunomodulating and enhancing effects of chemotherapeutic drugs. This review summarizes the potential prevention and treatment activities of dietary natural products and their major bioactive constituents on liver cancer, and discusses possible mechanisms of action.Entities:
Keywords: anticancer; fruit; liver cancer; spice; vegetable
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26978396 PMCID: PMC4808884 DOI: 10.3390/nu8030156
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1The general structure of glucosinolates and their enzymatic conversion to isothiocyanates by myrosinase.
Figure 2The chemical structures of several organo-sulphur compounds in garlic: (a) alliin; (b) allicin; (c) diallyl disulfide; (d) diallyl sulfide; (e) allyl mercaptan; and (f) S-allylcysteine.
Effects of dietary natural products against liver cancer.
| Natural Products | Bioactive Components | Study Type | Bioactivities and Potential Mechanisms | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fruits | ||||
| Grape | procyanidins | selective cytotoxicity to cancer cells | [ | |
| inhibiting tumor angiogenesis; promoting doxorubicin induced apoptosis | [ | |||
| Flavan-3-ol | inducing apoptosis, DNA damage and Suppressing expression of oncoprotein Her-2 | [ | ||
| Black currant | anthocyanins | protecting against diethylnitrosamine induced hepatocarcinogenesis by inducting apoptosis and suppressing oxidative stress and inflammation | [ | |
| Plum | polyphenols | inducing extrinsic apoptosis and inhibiting migration | [ | |
| protecting against B(α)P liver damage through regulating enzymes involved detoxification | [ | |||
| Pomegranate | polyphenols | protecting against diethylnitrosamine induced hepatocarcinogenesis by suppressing oxidative stress and inflammatory responses | [ | |
| Apple | polyphenols | inducing apoptosis, G2/M cell cycle arrest and inhibiting DNA topoisomerase II in cancer cells | [ | |
| Sweetsop | annonaceous acetogenins | exerting cytotoxicity against HepG2 cells and inhibiting tumor growth in hepatoma bearing mice | [ | |
| Sea buckthorn | isorhamnetin | promoting apoptosis of human hepatoma cells | [ | |
| Gac fruit | a water soluble protein | inducing S phase arrest in cancer cells | [ | |
| Mangosteen | γ-mangostin | inducing apoptosis in cancer cells | [ | |
| Citrus fruit | auraptene | suppressing tumor progression in | [ | |
| Mango | lupeol | ameliorating DMBA insult induced alterations in liver | [ | |
| Vegetables | ||||
| Radish | Glucoraphasa-tin, isothiocyanate | upregulating hepatic phase II detoxification enzymes involved in the metabolism of chemical carcinogens | [ | |
| Broccoli | sulforaphane | upregulating CYP1A1 and quinone reductase | [ | |
| Rutabaga | NA | exerting selective antiproliferative and pro-apoptotic effects in cancer cells | [ | |
| French bean | triterpenoids, flavonoids | exhibiting antiproliferative activities against cancer cells | [ | |
| lectins | exerting selectively cytotoxicity to cancer cells via promoting apoptosis, necrosis, NO production and release of proinflammatory cytokines | [ | ||
| Tomato | lycopene | protecting against chemical induced liver carcinogenesis through inducing apoptosis | [ | |
| tomatine | inducing antigen-specific cellular immunity and direct destructing cancer cell membranes | [ | ||
| Asparagus | polysaccharides | selectively inhibiting cancer cell proliferation and enhancing the tumoricidal activities of mitomycin | [ | |
| serving as a good embolic candidate in transcatheter arterial chemoembolization | [ | |||
| asparanin A | inducing G2/M cell cycle arrest and apoptosis | [ | ||
| Mung bean sprouts | NA | increasing apoptosis, anti-tumor cytokines (TNF-α and IFN-β), IFN-γ production and upregulating cell-mediated immunity | [ | |
| Bitter gourd | lectin | inducing G2/M phase arrest, apoptosis, autophagy and enhancing the anti-tumor effects of Sorafenib | [ | |
| MAP30 | inducing apoptosis and S phase cell cycle arrest | [ | ||
| Purple perilla | Isoegomake-tone | inhibiting cell growth and xenograft tumor formation probably through blocking the PI3K/Akt signaling pathway | [ | |
| Potato | glycoalkaloids | selectively inhibiting cancer cell growth | [ | |
| Celery | pigenin, linamarose, Vitamins A/C | dose dependently suppressing chemically induced hepatocarcinogenesis | [ | |
| Spices | ||||
| Garlic | Organo-sulphur compounds | inhibiting chemical induced DNA damage | [ | |
| sodium 2-propenyl thiosulfate | upregulating quinone reductase | [ | ||
| allicin | inducing apoptosis through overproduction of ROS | [ | ||
| S-allylcysteine | inducing apoptosis and S phase arrest, inhibiting cancer cell migration and invasion | [ | ||
| aged garlic extract | inhibiting diethylnitrosamine induced preneoplastic lesions in liver | [ | ||
| clinical trial | enhancing natural-killer cell activities | [ | ||
| Turmeric | NA | protecting against HBV-related liver cancer | [ | |
| curcumin | demonstrating anti-tumor activity against chemical induced hepatocarcinogenesis | [ | ||
| Sesquiterpe-noids | alleviating concanavalin A induced oxidative stress and inflammation, inhibiting cancer cell growth | [ | ||
| aromatic tumerone | inducing apoptotic cell death via ROS-mediated ERK and JNK kinases activation | [ | ||
| Pepper | NA | selective cytotoxicity against rat hepatoma cells through intracellular accumulation of ROS | [ | |
| glycoprotein | preventing chemical induced liver carcinogenesis by immunomodulation and promotion of apoptosis | [ | ||
| NA | inducing G2/M cell cycle arrest and apoptosis, inhibiting cell metastasis, invasion via down-regulating MMP-2/-9 and up-regulating TIMP-1/-2 | [ | ||
| geranyl acetate, citronella, sabinene | increasing apoptotic cell death through ROS production | [ | ||
| Ginger | NA | inhibiting inflammation and promoting apoptosis | [ | |
| geraniol, pinostrobin, clavatol | inhibiting cancer cell proliferation though ROS-mediated apoptotic death | [ | ||
| 6-shogaol, 6-gingerol | suppressing metastasis via down-regulation of MMP-9, urokinase-type plasminogen and up-regulation of TIMP-1 | [ | ||
| Star anise | NA | ameliorating tumor burden, oxidative stress and upregulating phase II detoxifying enzymes | [ | |
| Saffron | NA | inducing apoptosis and decreasing tumor burden, oxidative damage and inflammatory responses | [ | |
| Galangal | galagin | promoting mitochondrial apoptotic death | [ | |
| Cinnamon | Isoobtusilac-tone A | inducing apoptotic cancer cell death through overproduction of ROS | [ | |
| Basil | NA | inhibiting sulfotransferase induced procarcinogenesis by suppressing DNA adducts formation | [ | |
| Rosemary | carnosic acid | protecting against aflatoxin B1 through reduced oxidative stress | [ | |
| Soy | trypsin inhibitor | inhibiting cancer cell growth | [ | |
| Cereals | ||||
| Rice bran | peptide hydrolysates, phytic acid | inhibiting cancer cell growth | [ | |
| Pigmented rice | anthocyanin | synergistically promoting the cytotoxicity of vinblastine through a mitochondrial apoptosis pathway | [ | |
| Corn silk | polysaccharides | enhancing immune function and extending survival time | [ | |
| Semen coicis | NA | dose-dependently promoting apoptotic death of cancer cells through upregulation of capase-8 | [ | |
| Edible macro-fungi | ||||
| NA | sensitizing doxorubicin induced apoptotic death of cancer cells; decreasing formation of abnormal collagen fiber | [ | ||
| β-glucan | protecting against B(α)P induced DNA damage by binding to the carcinogen, scavenging free radicals and probably modulating cell metabolism | [ | ||
| blazeispirols A and C | displaying potent antiproliferative activities against Hep3B cells and HepG2 cells | [ | ||
| NA | reducing the incidence and size of tumor; inhibiting invasion and drug-resistance of hepatoma cells; enhancing cytotoxicity of cisplatin | [ | ||
| polysaccharide | selectively killing HepG2 cells through the capase-3/-8 mediated extrinsic apoptosis pathway | [ | ||
| lectin | binding to the surface of liver cancer cells, resulting apoptotic cell death | [ | ||
| FVE (glycoprotein) | prolonging survival time and reduced tumor size through inducing cytotoxic immune response | [ | ||
| iso-suillin | selectively inducing G1 cell cycle arrest and apoptotic death in cancer cells | [ | ||
| exhibiting selective potent cytotoxicity against Hep3B cells | [ |
NA stands for not available.
Figure 3Some effects of dietary natural products against liver cancer.