| Literature DB >> 27548236 |
Katherine M Weh1, Jennifer Clarke2,3,4, Laura A Kresty5.
Abstract
Cranberries are rich in bioactive constituents reported to influence a variety of health benefits, ranging from improved immune function and decreased infections to reduced cardiovascular disease and more recently cancer inhibition. A review of cranberry research targeting cancer revealed positive effects of cranberries or cranberry derived constituents against 17 different cancers utilizing a variety of in vitro techniques, whereas in vivo studies supported the inhibitory action of cranberries toward cancers of the esophagus, stomach, colon, bladder, prostate, glioblastoma and lymphoma. Mechanisms of cranberry-linked cancer inhibition include cellular death induction via apoptosis, necrosis and autophagy; reduction of cellular proliferation; alterations in reactive oxygen species; and modification of cytokine and signal transduction pathways. Given the emerging positive preclinical effects of cranberries, future clinical directions targeting cancer or premalignancy in high risk cohorts should be considered.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; cranberry; proanthocyanidin; quercetin; ursolic acid
Year: 2016 PMID: 27548236 PMCID: PMC5039576 DOI: 10.3390/antiox5030027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antioxidants (Basel) ISSN: 2076-3921
Figure 1Cranberry and cranberry derived constituents target numerous mechanisms of cancer inhibition based on 34 preclinical studies.
Summary of preclinical in vitro evaluations of cranberries or cranberry derived constituents as cancer inhibitors.
| Target | Cell Line(s) | Cranberry Constituent | In Vitro Results [Reference(s)] |
|---|---|---|---|
| Breast | MCF-7 | CE | ↑ apoptosis [ |
| ↓ cell viability [ | |||
| CJE | ↓ cell viability [ | ||
| C-PAC | ↓ cell density [ | ||
| FG | ↓ cell viability [ | ||
| Fr6 | ↓ cell viability [ | ||
| Q | ↓ cell viability [ | ||
| UA | ↓ cell density [ | ||
| MDA-MB-435* | CJE | ↓ cell viability [ | |
| Fr6 | ↑ apoptosis [ | ||
| ↓ cell viability [ | |||
| UA | ↓ cell density [ | ||
| Cervix | ME180 | C-PAC | ↓ cell density [ |
| UA | ↓ cell density [ | ||
| Colon | Caco-2 | CJE | ↓ cell viability [ |
| TP | ↓ lipid peroxidation [ | ||
| ↓ pro-inflammatory markers TNFα and IL-6 [ | |||
| HT-29 | ANTHO | ↓ cell viability [ | |
| CE | ↓ cell viability [ | ||
| ↓ pro-inflammatory marker COX-2 [ | |||
| C-PAC | ↑ apoptosis [ | ||
| ↓ cell viability [ | |||
| CJE | ↓ cell viability [ | ||
| Fr6 | ↓ cell viability [ | ||
| TP | ↓ cell viability [ | ||
| UA | ↑ apoptosis [ | ||
| ↓ cell viability [ | |||
| HCT116 | CE | ↓ cell viability [ | |
| C-PAC | ↑ apoptosis [ | ||
| UA | ↑ apoptosis [ | ||
| ↓ cell viability [ | |||
| LS-513 | ANTHO | ↓ cell viability [ | |
| CJE | ↓ cell viability [ | ||
| TP | ↓ cell viability [ | ||
| SW460 | TP | ↓ cell viability [ | |
| SW620 | TP | ↓ cell viability [ | |
| C-PAC | ↓ cell proliferation [ | ||
| Esophagus | CP-C | C-PAC | ↓ total reactive oxygen species [ |
| JHEsoAD1 | C-PAC | ↑ autophagy in acid-sensitive cells, pro-death [ | |
| ↑ necrosis in acid-resistant cells [ | |||
| ↑ G2-M cell cycle arrest [ | |||
| ↑ total reactive oxygen species [ | |||
| ↑ hydrogen peroxide levels [ | |||
| ↓ cell viability [ | |||
| ↓ PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling [ | |||
| OE33 | C-PAC | ↑ autophagy in acid-sensitive cells [ | |
| ↑ low levels of apoptosis [ | |||
| ↓ cell proliferation [ | |||
| ↑ total reactive oxygen species [ | |||
| ↓ PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling [ | |||
| OE19 | C-PAC | ↑ necrosis in acid-resistant cells [ | |
| ↑ G2-M cell cycle arrest with significant S-phase delay [ | |||
| ↑ total reactive oxygen species [ | |||
| ↑ hydrogen peroxide levels [ | |||
| ↓ PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling [ | |||
| ↓ cell viability [ | |||
| Glioblastoma | SF295 | UA | ↓ cell density [ |
| U87 | C-PAC | ↑ apoptosis [ | |
| ↓ cell viability [ | |||
| Fr6 | ↑ apoptosis [ | ||
| ↓ cell viability [ | |||
| Leukemia | K562 | C-PAC | ↓ cell density [ |
| RPMI8226 | UA | ↓ cell density [ | |
| Liver | HepG2 | CE | ↑ reduced glutathione levels [ |
| ↓ glutathione peroxidase activity [ | |||
| ↓ lipid peroxidation [ | |||
| ↓ reactive oxygen species [ | |||
| CJE | ↑ reduced glutathione levels [ | ||
| ↓ glutathione peroxidase activity [ | |||
| ↓ lipid peroxidation [ | |||
| ↓ reactive oxygen species [ | |||
| FG | ↓ cell viability [ | ||
| Q | ↓ cell viability [ | ||
| UA | ↓ cell viability [ | ||
| Lung | DMS114 | Fr6 | ↓ cell viability [ |
| NCI-H322M | UA | ↓ cell density [ | |
| NCI-H460 | C-PAC | ↑ apoptosis [ | |
| ↓ cell density [ | |||
| ↓ cell proliferation [ | |||
| UA | ↓ cell density [ | ||
| Lymphoma | Rev-2-T-6 | NDM | ↓ cell viability [ |
| ↓ extracellular matrix invasion [ | |||
| Melanoma | M14 | C-PAC | ↓ cell density [ |
| UA | ↓ cell density [ | ||
| SK-MEL5 | Fr6 | ↓ cell viability [ | |
| Neuroblastoma | IMR-32 | C-PAC | ↓ cell viability [ |
| SH-Sy5Y | C-PAC | ↓ cell viability [ | |
| SK-N-SH | C-PAC | ↓ cell viability [ | |
| SMS-KCNR | C-PAC | ↑ apoptosis [ | |
| ↑ reactive oxygen species [ | |||
| ↓ PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling [ | |||
| ↓ cell viability [ | |||
| Oral Cavity | CAL27 | CE | ↑ apoptosis [ |
| ↓ cell density [ | |||
| TP | ↓ cell viability [ | ||
| HSC2 | CJE | ↑ reduced glutathione levels [ | |
| ↓ cell viability [ | |||
| KB | CE | ↓ cell viability [ | |
| TP | ↓ cell viability [ | ||
| SCC25 | CE | ↑ apoptosis [ | |
| ↓ cell density [ | |||
| Ovary | OVCAR-8 | C-PAC | ↑ G2-M cell cycle arrest [ |
| SKOV-3 | C-PAC | ↑ apoptosis [ | |
| ↑ reactive oxygen species [ | |||
| ↓ AKT signaling [ | |||
| ↓ cell proliferation [ | |||
| ↓ cell viability [ | |||
| Prostate | 22Rv1 | CE | ↓ cell viability [ |
| TP | ↓ cell viability [ | ||
| DU-145 | CE | ↑ G1 cell cycle arrest [ | |
| ↓ cell viability [ | |||
| C-PAC | ↑ apoptosis [ | ||
| ↑ MAPK signaling [ | |||
| ↓ cell viability [ | |||
| ↓ matrix metalloprotease activity [ | |||
| ↓ PI3K/AKT signaling [ | |||
| Fr6 | ↓ cell viability [ | ||
| LNCaP | CE | ↓ cell viability [ | |
| PC3 | CJE | ↑ G1 cell cycle arrest [ | |
| ↓ cell viability [ | |||
| C-PAC | ↓ cell density [ | ||
| UA | ↓ cell density [ | ||
| RWPE-1 | CE | ↓ cell viability [ | |
| C-PAC | ↓ cell viability [ | ||
| TP | ↓ cell viability [ | ||
| RWPE-2 | CE | ↓ cell viability [ | |
| C-PAC | ↓ cell viability [ | ||
| TP | ↓ cell viability [ | ||
| Renal | RXF393 | UA | ↓ cell density [ |
| SN12C | UA | ↓ cell density [ | |
| TK-10 | UA | ↓ cell density [ | |
| Stomach | AGS | CJE | ↓ cell viability [ |
| SGC-7901 | CE | ↑ apoptosis [ | |
| ↓ cell proliferation [ | |||
| ↓ cell viability [ |
Cranberry derived constituents are abbreviated as follows: anthocyanins (ANTHO), organic-soluble cranberry extract (CE), cranberry juice extract (CJE), cranberry proanthocyanidin-rich fraction (C-PAC), flavonoid-rich fraction 6 (Fr6), flavonoid glycosides (FG), non-dialyzable material from cranberry juice concentrate (NDM), total polyphenolic fraction (TP), quercetin (Q) or ursolic acid fraction (UA). Additional abbreviations: Phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K), Protein Kinase B (AKT), mechanistic Target of Rapamycin (mTOR), mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK). Note: MDA-MB-435* was misidentified as a breast cancer cell line, but is now confirmed to be of melanoma origin.
Summary of preclinical in vivo evaluations of cranberry products as cancer inhibitors.
| Target Organ | In Vivo Models/Cranberry Product and Mode of Delivery/Results |
|---|---|
| [Reference] | |
| Bladder | |
| [ | Nitrosamine-induced tumors in female F344 rats for eight weeks; following a one-week break, treatment with 0.5 mL/rat or 1.0 mL/rat with cranberry juice concentrate by gavage daily for six months; 31% reduction in bladder tumor weight and 38% reduction in cancerous lesion formation. |
| Colon | |
| [ | AOM-induced ACF in male F344 rats three weeks after initiation of cranberry juice treament; ad libitum access to 20% cranberry juice in water for 15 weeks; 77% reduction in AOM-induced ACF with reductions in the proximal and distal colon versus untreated controls; significantly increased levels of liver glutathione- |
| [ | HT29 (5.0 × 106 cells) xenografts in female NCR NU/NU mice; treatment with cranberry proanthocyanidins (100.0 mg/kg body weight) intraperitoneally three times weekly for 24 days; significant inhibition of explant growth versus controls. |
| [ | DSS induced experimental colitis in male Balb/c mice at weeks three and six; Treatment with cranberry extract powder (0.1% or 1.0%) or 1.5% freeze dried whole cranberry powder in diet ad libitum from start until ≥ six weeks; cranberry extract powder (1.0%) and 1.5% dried whole cranberry powder treatment normalized stool consistency, decreased blood in fecal samples versus controls and reduced late onset colitis; all treatments decreased serum TNFα levels. |
| Esophagus | |
| [ | OE19 (1.25 × 106 cells) xenografts in male athymic NU/NU mice; treatment with cranberry proanthocyanidins (250.0 µg/mouse) by oral gavage six days/week for 19 days; 67% decrease in mean tumor volume versus controls and treatment modulated multiple cancer signaling pathways including inactivation of the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway. |
| Glioblastoma | |
| [ | U87 (1.0 × 106 cells) xenografts in female NCR NU/NU mice; treatment with cranberry proanthocyanidins (100.0 mg/kg body weight) or a flavonoid rich cranberry fraction (250.0 mg/kg body weight) intraperitoneally three times a week; significant inhibition of explant growth by both fractions versus controls |
| Lymphoma | |
| [ | Rev-2-T-6 (5.0 × 106 cells) xenografts in female Balb/C mice; treatment with non-dialyzable material from cranberry juice concentrate (160.0 mg/kg body weight) intraperitoneally three times a week; significant inhibition of explant growth. |
| Prostate | |
| [ | DU-145 (4.0 × 106 cells) xenografts in female NCR NU/NU mice; treatment with cranberry proanthocyanidins (100.0 mg/kg body weight) intraperitoneally three times a week; significant inhibition of explant growth by cranberry proanthocyanidin fraction. |
| Stomach | |
| [ | SGC-7901 (5.0 x 106 cells) xenografts in Balb/c NU/NU mice; SGC-7901 cells were pre-treated with cranberry extract prior to xenograft implantation; increased tumor latency and reduced tumor size in a dose-dependent manner. |
Abbreviations: azoxymethane (AOM), athymic nude mice (NCR NU/NU), dextran sodium sulfate (DSS).