| Literature DB >> 31934267 |
Elzbieta Pawlowska1, Joanna Szczepanska2, Janusz Blasiak3.
Abstract
Vitamin C is an antioxidant that may scavenge reactive oxygen species preventing DNA damage and other effects important in cancer transformation. Dietary vitamin C from natural sources is taken with other compounds affecting its bioavailability and biological effects. High pharmacological doses of vitamin C may induce prooxidant effects, detrimental for cancer cells. An oxidized form of vitamin C, dehydroascorbate, is transported through glucose transporters, and cancer cells switch from oxidative phosphorylation to glycolysis in energy production so an excess of vitamin C may limit glucose transport and ATP production resulting in energetic crisis and cell death. Vitamin C may change the metabolomic and epigenetic profiles of cancer cells, and activation of ten-eleven translocation (TET) proteins and downregulation of pluripotency factors by the vitamin may eradicate cancer stem cells. Metastasis, the main reason of cancer-related deaths, requires breakage of anatomical barriers containing collagen, whose synthesis is promoted by vitamin C. Vitamin C induces degradation of hypoxia-inducible factor, HIF-1, essential for the survival of tumor cells in hypoxic conditions. Dietary vitamin C may stimulate the immune system through activation of NK and T cells and monocytes. Pharmacological doses of vitamin C may inhibit cancer transformation in several pathways, but further studies are needed to address both mechanistic and clinical aspects of this effect.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31934267 PMCID: PMC6942884 DOI: 10.1155/2019/7286737
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1Molecular structure of vitamin C and its derivatives displaying anticancer properties that are discussed in this work.
Figure 2Absorption and bioavailability of natural and synthetic vitamin C. Vitamin C that is partly oxidized to dehydroascorbate (DHA) in an oxygen environment is transported by two sodium-dependent transporters SVCT1 and SVCT2, while DHA is taken up by the glucose transporter GLUTn, where n is 1-3 or 8. Vitamin C/DHA can be taken as either natural or synthetic ascorbic acid, and the latter can be given orally (with or without food) or intravenously. The final concentration of vitamin C in circulation depends not only on the route of ingestion but also on its excretion (not presented here) and the action of other dietary compounds, including glucose and flavonoids. Flavonoids can block the absorption of vitamin C, but they can also reduce some oxidants leading to an increase in the vitamin C/DHA ratio.
Figure 3Vitamin C may differently produce reactive oxygen species (ROS) in blood and the extracellular space. After oral or intravenous administration, vitamin C reaches the same concentration in blood and extracellular fluid and loses one electron (e−) to form ascorbate radical Asc·− and reduces a protein-centered metal ion, such as Fe(III). Reduced metal donates an electron to oxygen forming ROS, including superoxide (O2·−) that can be dismutated to hydrogen peroxide. These reactions in blood are inhibited by plasma and red cell membrane proteins, and hydrogen peroxide in blood is neutralized by antioxidant enzymes hardly present in extracellular fluid. Unless H2O2 is decomposed, it may produce hydroxyl radicals in the Fe(II)- or Cu(I)-catalyzed Fenton-like reaction yielding hydroxyl peroxide (HO·).
Figure 4Vitamin C is oxidized in the extracellular space to dehydroascorbate (DHA) that is taken up by cancer cells via glucose transporters such as GLUT1. Inside the cell, DHA is reduced back to vitamin C by reduced glutathione (GSH) that is oxidized to glutathione disulfide (GSSG) and converted back to GSH by reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH). Depletion of GSH and NADPH results in ROS overproduction that may damage biomolecules and kill cancer cells. ROS-damaged DNA activates poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) that requires NAD+. ROS can also inhibit glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) resulting in decreased production of pyruvate and ATP by mitochondria and finally energetic crisis and cell death [82–84].
Figure 5Vitamin C induces the ten-eleven translocation 2 (TET2) proteins to kill leukemic blasts. TETs are involved in active DNA demethylation that is achieved through TET2-mediated oxidation of 5-methylcytosine (5mC) to 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC), 5-formylcytosine (5fC), and 5-carboxylcytosine (5caC). Oxidized 5mC is progressively lost in subsequent cellular divisions or converted to nonmethylated C by thymine DNA glycosylase (TDG). 5mC can undergo spontaneous or activation-induced deaminase- (AID-) mediated deamination converting it into thymine (T) that can be replaced by C by TDG or in mismatch repair (MMR). AID can convert 5hmC to 5-hydroxymethyluracil (5hmU) or T. If TET2 is deficient in leukemic stem cells, their self-renewal is disturbed leading to increased blast production and progression of the disease. Vitamin C exerts similar effects as restoration of TET2 that leads to increased differentiation and less aggressive disease. Vitamin C-induced oxidation of 5mC results in an increased sensitivity of the cells to inhibitors of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARPi) that can induce cell death and inhibit disease progression.
Anticancer effects induced by dietary (D) or pharmacological (P) concentrations of vitamin C or its derivatives. Abbreviations are explained in the main text. Question marks indicate values that are interpolated from experimental data.
| Cancer | Effect | Mechanism | Concentration | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Many human cancer cell lines | Cell death | Cu(I)- or Fe(II)-dependent H2O2 formation, oxidative stress | P | 6-10 |
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| CRC with KRAS or BRAF mutations, human cell lines, and mouse xenografts | Cell death | Inactivation of GAPDH, depletion of glutathione, ROS increase, decreased ATP, energetic crisis | P | 75 |
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| AML human cell line | Apoptosis, inhibition of proliferation | ERK phosphorylation, Raf1/MAPK inhibition | P/D(?) | 57 |
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| Breast or colon human cell line | Cell death | Changes in metabolomic profile, NAD deficiency | P | 79 |
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| Gastric cancer patients, cell lines | Inhibition of proliferation | Selective upregulation of TMEFE2 | D | 81 |
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| Many cancer cell lines | Killing cancer cells by synergistic or additive action with anticancer drugs, including bleomycin, sorafenib, and auranofin | DNA double-strand break induction; modification of redox balance | P/D | 85-87 |
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| All cancers | Killing cancer cells by stimulation of the immune system | Fas-induced apoptosis, reduction of the activity of caspase-3, caspase-8, and caspase-10, reduced ROS levels, and increased permeability of the mitochondrial membrane as well as HIF-1/2 activation in monocytes; NK stimulation by IFN- | P/D | 3, 93-96 |
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| Colorectal cancer | Killing cancer cells by targeting their epigenetic profile | Synergistic or additive effects with DNA-demethylating drugs, TET2 activation | P/D | 103 |
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| All cancers | Tumor inhibition by eradication of cancer stem-like cells | Synthetic lethality with targeting glycolysis; TET2 activation; TET1 inhibition; oxidative DNA damage; activation of the MLH1/c-Abl/p73 signaling; inhibition of pluripotency factors, incl. OCT4A, SOX2, and NANOG | P/D(?) | 114-121 |
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| All cancers | Metastasis inhibition | Inhibition of MMP secretion; inhibition of hyaluronidase and hyaluronan lyase; increasing efficacy of BET1; upregulation of HDAC1; inhibition epithelial-mesenchymal transition | P/D | 127-137 |