| Literature DB >> 29977456 |
Xuling Su1, Xin Jiang2, Lingbin Meng3, Xiaoming Dong1, Yanjun Shen4, Ying Xin1.
Abstract
Sulforaphane (SFN), a compound derived from cruciferous vegetables that has been shown to be safe and nontoxic, with minimal/no side effects, has been extensively studied due to its numerous bioactivities, such as anticancer and antioxidant activities. SFN exerts its anticancer effects by modulating key signaling pathways and genes involved in the induction of apoptosis, cell cycle arrest, and inhibition of angiogenesis. SFN also upregulates a series of cytoprotective genes by activating nuclear factor erythroid-2- (NF-E2-) related factor 2 (Nrf2), a critical transcription factor activated in response to oxidative stress; Nrf2 activation is also involved in the cancer-preventive effects of SFN. Accumulating evidence supports that epigenetic modification is an important factor in carcinogenesis and cancer progression, as epigenetic alterations often contribute to the inhibition of tumor-suppressor genes and the activation of oncogenes, which enables cells to acquire cancer-promoting properties. Studies on the mechanisms underlying the anticancer effects of SFN have shown that SFN can reverse such epigenetic alterations in cancers by targeting DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs), histone deacetyltransferases (HDACs), and noncoding RNAs. Therefore, in this review, we will discuss the anticancer activities of SFN and its mechanisms, with a particular emphasis on epigenetic modifications, including epigenetic reactivation of Nrf2.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29977456 PMCID: PMC6011061 DOI: 10.1155/2018/5438179
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
The epigenetic regulation of sulforaphane (SFN) in cancer.
| Epigenetic mechanisms | Cancer types | Epigenetic functions | Target genes/proteins | Anticancer effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Histone acetylation | Prostate cancer cells (LnCaP and PC-3) and PC-3 cell xenografts | Inhibition of class I and II HDACs | Reactivation of p21 and Bax | Cell cycle arrest and apoptosis↑ | [ |
| Colon cancer cells (HCT116) | Inhibition of HDAC3 | CtIP: a critical DNA repair protein | DNA damage and apoptosis↑ | [ | |
| Acetylation of CtIP and its degradation | |||||
| Lung cancer cells (A549 and H1299) and A549 cell xenografts | Inhibition of HDAC activity | Reactivation of p21 and Bax | Cell growth↓ | [ | |
| Apoptosis↑ | |||||
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| Histone phosphorylation | Bladder cancer cells (RT4, J82, and UMUC3) and UMUC3 cell xenografts | Inhibition of histone H1 phosphorylation | Increased PP1 | Carcinogenesis and progression↓ | [ |
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| DNA methylation | Prostate cancer cells (LNCap) | Decreased expression of DNMT1 and 3b | Restoration of cyclin D2 | Cancer cell death↑ | [ |
| Human breast cancer cells (MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231) | Inhibition of DNMT1 expression | Restoration of P21, PTEN, and RARbeta2 | Cell growth arrest and apoptosis↑ | [ | |
| Human breast cancer cells (MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231) | Decrease in DNMT1 and 3a expression and activity | Downregulation of hTERT expression | Apoptosis↑ | [ | |
| Cervical cancer cells (HeLa) | Inhibition of DNMT3b activity | Upregulation of RAR | Cell cycle arrest and apoptosis↑ | [ | |
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| Noncoding RNA regulation | Oral squamous carcinoma cells (SAS and GNM); cancer stem cell xenografts (SAS and GNM) | Induction of miR-200c | Suppression of Bmi1 | Cell migration, invasiveness, and growth↓ | [ |
| 95D and H1299 cells and in vivo xenografts | Downregulation of miR-616-5p | Inactivation of the GSK3 | EMT and metastasis↓ | [ | |
| Human glioma cell lines (H4, SNB19, LN229, and U251) and colorectal cancer cells | Downregulation of miR 21 | Inhibition of the Wnt/ | Apoptosis↑ | [ | |
| Cell viability↓ | |||||
| Prostate cancer cells (LNCaP and PC-3) | Decreased expression of the lncRNA LINC01116 | Cell proliferation↓ | [ | ||
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| CPG demethylation and histone acetylation at the | Mouse skin epidermal JB6 (JB6 P+) cells and prostate cancer (TRAMP C1) cells | Inhibition of DNMT1, 3a, and 3b and HDAC1–5 and HDAC7 | The reactivation of Nrf2 | Cell transformation and development↓ | [ |
Figure 1The Keap1/Nrf2 pathway and its epigenetic modification by SFN. Under basal conditions, Keap1 binds to Nrf2 in the cytoplasm, which promotes its proteasomal degradation via ubiquitination. Under oxidative stress, Nrf2 dissociates from Keap1 and then translocates into the nucleus and binds with the small protein Maf at ARE sequences in the promoter regions of target genes. This drives the expression of several cytoprotective genes, such as HO-1, NQO1, and SOD. In TRAMP C1 prostate cancer cells, SFN can inhibit the expression and activity of enzymes involved in epigenetic regulation, including DNMT1 and 3a, as well as HDAC1, 4, 5, and 7. Significant inhibition of DNMT1, DNMT3a/b, and HDAC1, 2, 3, and 4 has also been observed in TPA-induced mouse skin JB6 P+ cells treated by SFN, which reduces the CpG methylation and elevates histone acetylation of the Nrf2 promoter. Ultimately, epigenetic regulation by SFN promotes the transcription of Nrf2 and its subsequent nuclear translocation and activation.