| Literature DB >> 30037082 |
Michele Dei Cas1, Riccardo Ghidoni2.
Abstract
Polyphenols, chemically characterized by a polyhydroxylated phenolic structure, are well known for their widespread pharmacological properties: anti-inflammatory, antibiotic, antiseptic, antitumor, antiallergic, cardioprotective and others. Their distribution in food products is also extensive especially in plant foods such as vegetables, cereals, legumes, fruits, nuts and certain beverages. The latest scientific literature outlines a resilient interconnection between cancer modulation and dietary polyphenols by sphingolipid-mediated mechanisms, usually correlated with a modification of their metabolism. We aim to extensively survey this relationship to show how it could be advantageous in cancer treatment or prevention by nutrients. From this analysis it emerges that a combination of classical chemotherapy with nutrients and especially with polyphenols dietary sources may improve efficacy and decreases negative side effects of the antineoplastic drug. In this multifaceted scenario, sphingolipids play a pivotal role as bioactive molecules, emerging as the mediators of cell proliferation in cancer and modulator of chemotherapeutics.Entities:
Keywords: ceramide; chemotherapeutics; curcumin; flavonoids; genistein; nutraceuticals; nutrients; resveratrol; sphingolipids
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30037082 PMCID: PMC6073226 DOI: 10.3390/nu10070940
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Polyphenols classes and examples of more relevant compounds.
|
| |
| Flavones | apigenin, chrysin, diosmin, luteolin, baicalein |
| Isoflavones | daidzein, daidzin, genistein |
| Flavanones | hesperetin, narigenin |
| Flavonols | kaempferol, quercetin, rutine, myricetin, morin |
| Anthocyanidins | cyanidin, dephinidin, malvidin, pelargonidin, peonidin |
| Chalcones | butein, curcumin, xanthohumol |
| Flavanols | catechins, tannins |
|
| |
| Benzoic acids | vanillic acid, gallic acid, syringic acid |
| Cinnamic acids | caffeic acid, chlorogenic acid, CAPE, tannic acid |
| Stilbenes | resveratrol, piceatannol, isorhapontigenin, oxyresveratrol |
Figure 1Chemical structures of polyphenols that are connected with a sphingolipid-based mechanism for cancer prevention and treatment.
Figure 2Sphingolipids metabolism and their chemical structures. Lc3: GlcNAcβ1-3Galβ1-4Glcβ-Cer for others see the abbreviation list.
Roles of sphingolipids in cancer.
| Sphingolipids | Biological Target | Effect in Cancer | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cer | PKC, I2PP2A, cathepsin D, caspases, telomerase | Apoptosis, growth arrest, senescence | [ |
| Cer-1P | cPLA2 | Release of arachidonic acid and activation of inflammatory cascade | [ |
| DAG (from SM) | PKC | Cellular proliferation | [ |
| Sph-1P | NFKB, COX-2, ERK | Malignant transformation, anti-apoptosis, angiogenesis, survival, metastatization | [ |
Figure 3Mechanism of modulation on sphingolipids by apigenin (A), caffeic acid (B), CAPE (C), catechin (D) and chlorogenic acid (E). It is depicted with an asterisk (*) enzymatic pathway, with plus (+) red-regulated pathway and with minus (−) down-regulation ones. PTK: protein tyrosine kinase.
Figure 4Mechanism of modulation on sphingolipids by chrysin (A), curcumin (B) and genistein (C). It is depicted with an asterisk (*) enzymatic pathway, with plus (+) red-regulated pathway and with minus (−) down-regulation ones.
Figure 5Mechanism of modulation on sphingolipids by luteolin (A), morin (B) and quercetin (C). It is depicted with an asterisk (*) enzymatic pathway, with plus (+) red-regulated pathway and with minus (−) down-regulation ones.
Figure 6Mechanism of modulation on sphingolipids by silibinin (A), xanthohumol (B) and Res (C). It is depicted with an asterisk (*) enzymatic pathway, with plus (+) red-regulated pathway and with minus (−) down-regulation ones.