| Literature DB >> 34257824 |
J P Jose Merlin1, H P Vasantha Rupasinghe1,2, Graham Dellaire2, Kieran Murphy3.
Abstract
Cancer arises through a complex interplay between genetic, behavioral, metabolic, and environmental factors that combined trigger cellular changes that over time promote malignancy. In terms of cancer prevention, behavioral interventions such as diet can promote genetic programs that may facilitate tumor suppression; and one of the key tumor suppressors responsible for initiating such programs is p53. The p53 protein is activated by various cellular events such as DNA damage, hypoxia, heat shock, and overexpression of oncogenes. Due to its role in cell fate decisions after DNA damage, regulatory pathways controlled by p53 help to maintain genome stability and thus "guard the genome" against mutations that cause cancer. Dietary intake of flavonoids, a C15 group of polyphenols, is known to inhibit cancer progression and assist DNA repair through p53-mediated mechanisms in human cells via their antioxidant activities. For example, quercetin arrests human cervical cancer cell growth by blocking the G2/M phase cell cycle and inducing mitochondrial apoptosis through a p53-dependent mechanism. Other polyphenols such as resveratrol upregulate p53 expression in several cancer cell lines by promoting p53 stability, which in colon cancer cells results in the activation of p53-mediated apoptosis. Finally, among vitamins, folic acid seems to play an important role in the chemoprevention of gastric carcinogenesis by enhancing gastric epithelial apoptosis in patients with premalignant lesions by significantly increased expression of p53. In this review, we discuss the role of these and other dietary antioxidants in p53-mediated cell signaling in relation to cancer chemoprevention and tumor suppression in normal and cancer cells.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34257824 PMCID: PMC8257365 DOI: 10.1155/2021/9924328
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1A schematic of the p53-mediated apoptotic pathways in a mammalian cell. The apoptotic pathways involve intrinsic and extrinsic pathways. p53 activates the extrinsic pathway through the induction of the tumor necrosis factor receptor (TNF-R) superfamily that contains apoptotic death domains such as Fas, DR5, and PERP. Overexpression of p53 enhances levels of Fas at the cell surface by promoting the trafficking of the Fas receptor from the Golgi. Fas is activated by its ligand FasL, and DR5 is initiated by the ligand TRAIL. TNF-R is induced by p53 in response to DNA damage, which also promotes cell death through the caspase-9-mediated intrinsic pathway. The intrinsic pathway is dominated by the Bcl-2 family, including Noxa, Puma, and Bax. Bax is activated by BID to increase the mitochondrial outer membrane permeability, allowing efflux of cytochrome c to cytosol. BID is activated by cellular ROS and also cleaved by caspase-8. BID is a crossregulator between the extrinsic and intrinsic pathways. The released cytochrome c and Apaf-1 form a complex with pro-caspase-9 named apoptosome in which caspase-9 is activated. Caspase-8 is activated by death domains of the extrinsic pathway and cleaves proenzyme to form caspase-3, caspase-6, and caspase-7, which affect cell viability and overall apoptosis induced by p53. Abbreviations: Apaf-1: apoptotic protease-activating factor 1; Bax: Bcl-2-associated X protein; Bcl-2: B-cell lymphoma 2; BID: BH3 domain-only death agonist protein; DR5: death receptor 5; Fas: Fas cell surface death receptor; FasL: Fas ligand; Noxa: damage protein, a proapoptotic BH3-containing protein; p53: tumor suppressor; PERP: p53 apoptosis effector related to PMP22; Puma: p53 upregulated modulator of apoptosis; TNF-R: tumor necrosis factor receptor; TRAIL: tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand.
Figure 2DNA damage and oncogenic signaling active the p53 tumor suppressor to maintain genomic stability and prevent transformation. Both the double-stranded DNA break and the single-stranded DNA break trigger the activation of p53 through ATM and ATR, respectively. Chk1 and Chk2 are selectively phosphorylated and activated by ATR and ATM, respectively. Oncogenic signaling produces the ARF tumor suppressor to inhibit the expression of MDM2 and MDMX. MDM2 and MDMX are the two negative regulators that function as an E3 ubiquitin ligase, which recognizes the N-terminal transcriptional activation domain (TAD) of p53, and as an inhibitor of p53 transcriptional activation. Therefore, under no stress or no DNA damage, p53 is kept inactive by the negative regulation by MDM2 and MDMX. Once activated, p53 induces antioxidant genes such as TIGAR, sestrin 1/2, GPx1, ALDH4, GLS2, and Parkin to repair the DNA. Growth arrest and DNA damage-inducible proteins such as GADD45, p21, Ypel3, and Pml are induced by p53 to cell cycle arrest and apoptotic genes, including DR5, Fas, PERP, Bcl-2, Bax, Noxa, and Puma for p53-mediated apoptosis. If the p53 gene is damaged, tumor suppression is severely reduced. Mutant p53 transactivates several genes, including MDR1, c-myc, PCNA, IL-6, IGF-1, FGF, EGFR, ASNS, and TERT. Mutant p53 promotes oncogenic genes, which lead to the progression of aggressive cancers. Abbreviations: ALDH4: aldehyde dehydrogenases; ARF: alternate reading frame; ASNS: asparagine synthetase; ATM: ataxia telangiectasia-mutated protein kinase; ATR: ATM-Rad3-related protein kinase; Bax: Bcl-2-associated X protein; Bcl-2: B-cell lymphoma 2; Chk1: checkpoint kinase 1; Chk2: checkpoint kinase 2; DR5: death receptor 5; EGFR: epidermal growth factor receptor; Fas: Fas cell surface death receptor; FGF: fibroblast growth factor; GADD45: growth arrest and DNA damage-inducible protein; GLS2: glutaminase 2; GPx1: glutathione peroxidase-1; IGF-1: insulin-like growth factor 1; MDM2: mouse double minute 2 homolog; MDMX: double minute X human homolog; MDR1: multiple drug resistance gene 1; Noxa: damage protein, a proapoptotic BH3-containing protein; p21: cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor; p53: tumor suppressor; PCNA: proliferating cell nuclear antigen; PERP: p53 apoptosis effector related to PMP22; Pml: promyelocytic leukemia protein; Puma: p53 upregulated modulator of apoptosis; TERT: telomerase reverse transcriptase; TIGAR: TP53-inducible glycolysis and apoptosis regulator; Ypel3: Yippee-like 3.
Dietary antioxidants show the expression of p53 in experimental models.
| Antioxidants | Experimental model | Mechanism | Expression of p53 | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (i) Cancer cells | ||||
| Vitamin C | T-lymphocyte cell lines (HuT-102, C91-PL, CEM, and Jurkat) | p53 ↑, p21 ↑, Bax ↑, Bcl-2 ↓ | Protein | [ |
| Human lung carcinoma cell lines (H460 and A549) | p53 ↑, caspase-3 ↑, caspase-7 ↑ | Protein, mRNA | [ | |
| Vitamin B6 | HT29, Caco2, LoVo, HEK293T, and HepG2 cell lines and ICR mice | p53 ↑, p21 ↑ | Protein, mRNA | [ |
| Vitamin D | Mice (1 | p53 ↑, p21 ↓, p16 ↑ | Protein, mRNA | [ |
| Folic acid | Human | p53 ↑, Bcl-2 ↓ | Protein | [ |
| N-Acetylcysteine | Non-small-cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) cell line | p53 ↑, p65 ↓ | Protein, mRNA | [ |
| Vitamin E | Human breast cancer cell line (MCF-7) | p53 ↓ | Protein, mRNA | [ |
| | RAT-1 murine fibroblast cell line | p53 ↑, p21 ↑, Bax ↑, Bcl-2 ↓ | Protein | [ |
| Quercetin | Human cervical cancer cell line (HeLa) | p53 ↑, caspase-3 ↑, caspase-9 ↑, Bax ↑, Bcl-2 ↓ | Protein, mRNA | [ |
| Apigenin | Human colon cancer cell lines (HCT116 and HT29) | p53 ↑, p21 ↑, NAG-1 ↑ | Protein, mRNA | [ |
| Acacetin | Human liver cancer cell line (HepG2) | p53 ↑, Bax ↑ | Protein, mRNA | [ |
| Fisetin | Human colon cancer cell line (HCT116) | p53 ↑, caspase-3 ↑ | Protein, mRNA | [ |
| Luteolin | Human lung cancer cell lines (A549 and H460) | p53 ↑, p21 ↑, MDM4 ↓ | Protein, mRNA | [ |
| Theaflavin | Human prostate cancer cell line (LNCaP) | p53 ↑, Bcl-2 ↓, Bax ↑ | Protein | [ |
| Epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG) | Human prostate cancer cell line (LNCaP) | p53 ↑, p21 ↑, Bcl-2 ↓, Bax ↑, caspase-3 ↑, caspase-8 ↑, caspase-9 ↑ | Protein | [ |
| Caffeic acid | Human cervical cancer cell line (HeLa) | p53 ↑, Bcl-2 ↓ | Protein | [ |
| Caffeic acid phenethyl ester | C6 glioma cell line | p53 ↑, Bcl-2 ↓, Bax ↓ | Protein | [ |
| Ellagic acid | Human cervical cancer cell line (CaSki) | p53 ↑, p21 ↑, GAPDH ↑ | Protein, mRNA | [ |
| Curcumin | Human cervical cancer cell lines (HeLa, SiHa, and CaSki) | p53 ↑ | Protein | [ |
| Multiple myeloma cell line (U266B1) | p53 ↑, p21 ↑ | Protein | [ | |
| Resveratrol | Human breast cancer cell line (MCF-7) | p53 ↑, p21 ↑, p16 ↑ | Protein | [ |
| Human colon cancer cell lines (HCT116, CO-115, and SW48) | p53 ↑, PARP ↓, caspase-3 ↓ | Protein | [ | |
| Red wine | Human lung cancer cell line (A549) | p53 ↑, p53 (Ser15) ↑ | Protein | [ |
| Caffeine | Human T-lymphocyte leukemia MOLT-4 cell line | p53 ↑, p21 ↑, Mcl-1 ↓ | Protein | [ |
| Harmine | Human breast cancer cell line (MCF-7) | p53 ↑ | mRNA | [ |
| Colchicine | Human cervical cancer cell lines (CaSki and HeLa) | p53 ↑, Bcl-2 ↓, Bax ↑ | Protein, mRNA | [ |
| (ii) Normal cells | ||||
| | Rat | p53 ↓, MDM2 ↓ | Protein | [ |
| Kaempferol | Human umbilical vein endothelial cell line (HUVEC) | p53 ↑, ATM ↑, Fas ↑, DR5 ↑, caspase-3 ↑, caspase-8 ↑, caspase-9 ↑ | Protein | [ |
| Fisetin | Wistar rat | p53 ↓, p21 ↓, Bax ↓, Bcl-2 ↑ | Protein | [ |
| Apple flavonoids | Normal human bronchial epithelial cell line (BEAS-2B) | p53 ↓, Chk1 ↓, ATR ↓ | Protein | [ |
| Cyanidin-3- | Kunming mice (KM) | p53 ↓, Bax ↓, caspase-3 ↓, caspase-9 ↓, Bcl-2 ↑ | Protein | [ |
| Curcumin | Wistar rat | p53 ↓, p21 ↓ | Protein | [ |
| Caffeine | Normal human fibroblast cell line (NHF1) | p53 ↓, p21 ↓ | Protein | [ |