| Literature DB >> 31683865 |
Abstract
Modified citrus pectin (MCP) has a low-molecular-weight degree of esterification to allow absorption from the small intestinal epithelium into the circulation. MCP produces pleiotropic effects, including but not limited to its antagonism of galectin-3, which have shown benefit in preclinical and clinical models. Regarding cancer, MCP modulates several rate-limiting steps of the metastatic cascade. MCP can also affect cancer cell resistance to chemotherapy. Regarding fibrotic diseases, MCP modulates many of the steps involved in the pathogenesis of aortic stenosis. MCP also reduces fibrosis to the kidney, liver, and adipose tissue. Other benefits of MCP include detoxification and improved immune function. This review summarizes the pleiotropic effects of MCP.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; cardiovascular; fibrosis; galectin; inflammation; pectasol
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31683865 PMCID: PMC6893732 DOI: 10.3390/nu11112619
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Schematic representation of pectin structure. AG, arabinogalactan; HG, homogalacturonan; RG, rhamnogalacturonan; XG, xylogalacturonan. It is reproduced with permission under a Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ from Leclere, L.; Cutsem, PV.; Michiels, C.; Anti-cancer activities of pH- or heat-modified pectin. Front Pharmacol. 2013 Oct 8; 4:128 [1].
Pleiotropic effects of modified citrus pectin.
| Main Indication | Study Type | Disease Model | Species Studied | Reference | Summary of Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cancer | Clinical trial | Circulating tumor cells | Human | [ | Nutrients with anti-carcinogenic properties could reduce circulating tumor cell count, and included curcumin, garlic, green tea, grape seed, MCP, and medicinal mushroom extract |
| Cancer | Clinical trial | Advanced solid tumors | Human | [ | Clinical benefits and life quality with far advanced solid tumors |
| Cancer | Clinical trial | Prostate cancer | Human | [ | PSADT extended in 70% of patients |
| Cancer | Preclinical | Ovarian cancer | In vitro | [ | MCP enhanced the PTX effect on ovarian cancer cells MCTS through the inhibition of STAT3 activity |
| Cancer | Preclinical | Cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity | Mouse | [ | MCP-treated mice demonstrated decreased renal fibrosis and apoptosis |
| Cancer | Preclinical | Colon cancer | In vitro, in vivo, and ex vivo | [ | MCP inhibition of extracellular Gal-3 decreases colon cancer cell migration |
| Cancer | Preclinical | Prostate cancer and radiation therapy | In vitro | [ | MCP reduced prostate cancer cell viability and synergistically enhanced cell sensitivity to ionizing radiation |
| Cancer | Preclinical | Bladder cancer | In vitro and mouse | [ | Remarkable inhibitory effects of MCP on urinary bladder cancer cell proliferation and survival in vitro and in vivo mainly through Gal-3 |
| Cancer | Preclinical | Gastrointestinal cancer | Mouse | [ | MCP effectively inhibits the growth and metastasis of gastrointestinal cancer cells, partly by down-regulating Bcl-xL and Cyclin B to promote apoptosis and suppress EMT |
| Cancer | Preclinical | Colonic carcinogenesis | Mouse | [ | Modified |
| Cancer | Preclinical | Breast and prostate cancer | In vitro | [ | Inhibits breast/prostate cancer cell migration and synergy with MCP |
| Cancer | Preclinical | Ovarian cancer | In vitro | [ | MCP synergy with paclitaxel |
| Cancer | Preclinical | Prostate cancer | In vitro | [ | MCP synergy with doxorubicin |
| Cancer | Preclinical | Prostate cancer | In vitro | [ | MCP induced cell death and inhibition of the proliferation of prostate cancer |
| Cancer | Preclinical | Liver and colon cancer | Mouse | [ | MCP inhibits liver metastasis of colon cancer |
| Cardiovascular | Preclinical | Myocardial infarction | Rat | [ | MCP blockade of Gal-3 can prevent cardiac fibrosis, inflammation, and functional alterations |
| Cardiovascular | Preclinical | Ischemic heart failure | Rabbit | [ | Perindopril and MCP comparably improve ischemic heart failure in rabbits by downregulating Gal-3 and reducing myocardial fibrosis |
| Cardiovascular | Preclinical | Myocardial fibrosis | Rat, mouse, and human | [ | MCP -mediated Gal-3 inhibition in mice prevented the profibrotic and proinflammatory effects of cardiotrophin-1 |
| Cardiovascular | Preclinical | Blood-brain barrier disruption | Mouse | [ | MCP prevents post-Subarachnoid Hemorrhage blood-brain barrier disruption possibly by inhibiting Gal-3, of which the mechanisms may include binding to TLR4 and activating ERK1/2, STAT3, and MMP-9 |
| Cardiovascular | Preclinical | Cardiovascular fibrosis | In vitro, in vivo, and ex vivo | [ | The pharmacological inhibition of Gal-3 with MCP restored cardiac Prx-4 as well as prohibitin-2 levels and improved oxidative status in spontaneously hypertensive rats |
| Cardiovascular | Preclinical | Cardiac lipotoxicity | Rat | [ | Gal-3 inhibition with MCP attenuates consequences of cardiac lipotoxicity induced by a high-fat diet, reducing total triglyceride and lysophosphatidylcholine levels |
| Cardiovascular | Preclinical | Abdominal aortic aneurysm | Mouse | [ | Mice treated with MCP showed decreased aortic dilation, as well as elastin degradation, vascular smooth muscle cell loss, and macrophage content at day 14 post-elastase perfusion compared with control mice |
| Cardiovascular | Preclinical | Atherosclerotic lesions in apoE-deficiency | Mouse | [ | MCP reduced the size of atherosclerotic lesions by inhibiting the adhesion of leukocytes to endothelial cells |
| Cardiovascular | Preclinical | Aortic stenosis | Rat | [ | In short-term AS, the increase in myocardial Gal-3 expression associated with cardiac fibrosis and inflammation, alterations that were prevented by Gal-3 blockade with MCP |
| Cardiovascular | Preclinical | Cardiovascular fibrosis and aortic valve calcification | Rat | [ | MCP treatment prevented the increase in Gal-3, media thickness, fibrosis, and inflammation in the aorta of pressure overload rats |
| Cardiovascular | Preclinical | Aortic stenosis | Human and ex vivo | [ | Gal-3 expression was blocked in VICs undergoing osteoblastic differentiation using MCP |
| Cardiovascular | Preclinical | Cardiovascular LV fibrosis | Mouse | [ | MCP reversed induced LV dysfunction of HF with cardiac hyperaldosteronism |
| Cardiovascular | Preclinical | Cardiac inflammation and fibrosis in experimental hyperaldosteronism and hypertension | Rat | [ | MCP prevention of inflammation and fibrosis with hypertension |
| Cardiovascular | Preclinical | Heart fibrosis | Rat | [ | MCP prevention of cardiac fibrosis |
| Cardiovascular | Preclinical | Vascular fibrosis | Rat | [ | MCP reverses vascular hypertrophy and fibrosis |
| Kidney | Preclinical | Renal damage in spontaneous hypertension | Rat | [ | The inflammatory mediators (monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, osteopontin, cd68, cd80, cd44, and cd45) were elevated in spontaneously hypertensive rats and attenuated by MCP |
| Kidney | Preclinical | Kidney fibrosis | Rat | [ | In experimental models of mild kidney damage, the increase in renal Gal-3 expression paralleled with renal fibrosis and inflammation, while these alterations prevented with MCP |
| Kidney | Preclinical | Kidney fibrosis | Rat | [ | MCP prevention of kidney fibrosis |
| Kidney | Preclinical | Acute kidney disease | In vitro | [ | MCP inhibits renal fibrosis |
| Obesity | Preclinical | Adipose tissue remodeling | Rat | [ | Despite no effect on body weight, adipose tissue weights or adiposity, MCP prevented adipose tissue fibrosis, inflammation and the increase in adipocyte differentiation markers in a model of diet-induced obesity |
| Obesity | Preclinical | Adipose tissue remodeling/fibrosis | Rat | [ | MCP prevented an increase in pericellular collagen, adipose tissue inflammation and differentiation degree of the adipocytes |
| Liver | Preclinical | Liver fibrosis | Rat | [ | MCP attenuates liver fibrosis through an antioxidant effect, the inhibition of Gal-3, and the induction of apoptosis |
| Detoxification | Clinical trial | Chronic low-level uranium exposure | Human | [ | MCP, after a post-treatment period of 6 weeks, decreased in fecal excretion of uranium found in 5 of 6 participants |
| Detoxification | Clinical trial | Child lead toxicity | Human | [ | Detoxification from lead toxicity in hospitalized children |
| Detoxification | Clinical trial | Lead and mercury toxicity | Human | [ | MCP lowered body burden of lead and or mercury and chronic ailment improvements |
| Detoxification | Clinical trial | Toxic metals | Human | [ | MCP detoxification of lead, cadmium, arsenic, and mercury |
| Immune | Preclinical | Immuno-modulation | Mouse | [ | CP and mainly MCP have an immunomodulatory effect on the levels of cytokine secretion in the spleen of mice with a pro-inflammatory potential |
| Immune | Preclinical | Probiotic | Mouse | [ | The number of fecal lactobacilli in the MCP alginate probiotic-treated mice significantly increased |
| Immune | Preclinical | Shiga toxin producing | In vitro | [ | MCP inhibits adhesion of shiga toxin, reduces shiga toxin cytotoxicity |
| Immune | Preclinical | Inflammation | In vitro | [ | MCP: Honokiol (9:1) combination induced a synergistic effect on antioxidant activity suggesting that the mixture is significantly more efficient than individual compounds |
| Immune | Preclinical |
| In vitro | [ | MCP demonstrates in vitro antimicrobial activity alone and combination with cefotaxime against staphylococcus aureus. |
| Immune | Preclinical | Immune activation | Human blood and ex vivo | [ | MCP significantly activated T-cells and natural killer cells |
Abbreviations. apoE: Apolipoprotein E, AS: Aortic stenosis, CP: Citrus pectin, EMT: Epithelial-mesenchymal transition, ERK1/2: Extracellular signal-related kinase 1/2, Gal-3: Galectin-3, HF: Heart failure, HNK: Honokiol, LV: Left ventricular, MCP: PectaSol-C Modified citrus pectin, MCTS: multicellular tumor spheroid, MMP-9: Matrix metalloproteinase-9, Prx-4: Peroxiredoxin-4, PSADT: Prostate-specific antigen doubling time, PTX: Paclitaxel, STAT3: Signal transducer and activator of transcription 3, TLR4: Toll-like receptor 4, and VIC: Valvular interstitial cell.
Figure 2Structure of Gal-3. (A) Gal-3 protein structure consists of an N terminal Domain (NTD), which has an N terminal region of 12 amino acids (aa) and contains a serine 6 (S) phosphorylation site. The carbohydrate recognition domain (CRD) of 130 aa comprises the C-terminal and contains the anti-death motif or Asp-Trp-Gly-Arg (NWGR); (B) Pentameric structure of Gal-3. Reproduced with permission under a Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. Clementy, N.; Piver, E.; Bisson, A.; André, Clémentine, A.; Bernard, A.; Pierre, B.; Fauchier, L.; Babuty, D. (2018). Galectin-3 in Atrial Fibrillation: Mechanisms and Therapeutic Implications. Int J Mol Sci. 2018 Apr; 19(4): 976 [49].