| Literature DB >> 35056792 |
Raquel Moral1, Eduard Escrich1.
Abstract
Breast cancer is the most frequent malignant neoplasia and a leading cause of mortality in women worldwide. The Mediterranean diet has been proposed as a healthy dietary pattern with protective effects in several chronic diseases, including breast cancer. This diet is characterized by the consumption of abundant plant foods and olive oil as the principal source of fat, which is considered one of the main components with potential antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and anticancer effects. Extra-virgin olive oil (EVOO) has several bioactive compounds, mainly including monounsaturated fatty acids, triterpenes and polyphenols, such as phenolic alcohols (e.g., hydroxytyrosol), secoiridoids (e.g., oleuropein and oleocanthal), lignans (e.g., pinoresinol) or flavonoids (e.g., luteolin). While epidemiological evidence is still limited, experimental in vivo and in vitro data have shown a protective effect of this oil and its compounds on mammary carcinogenesis. Such effects account through complex and multiple mechanisms, including changes in epigenetics, transcriptome and protein expression that modulate several signaling pathways. Molecular targets of EVOO compounds have a role in the acquisition of cancer hallmarks. Although further research is needed to elucidate their beneficial effects on human prevention and progression of the disease, evidence points to EVOO in the context of the Mediterranean diet as a heathy choice, while EVOO components may be promising adjuvants in anticancer strategies.Entities:
Keywords: EVOO; apoptosis; breast cancer; migration; minor compounds; olive oil; proliferation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35056792 PMCID: PMC8780060 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27020477
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Olive oil components.
| Composition of Olive Oil |
|---|
| Saponifiable Fraction (>98%) |
| Triacylglycerols and derivatives |
| 16:0 |
| 16:1n-7 Palmitoleic acid |
| 18:0 Stearic acid |
| 18:1n-9 Oleic acid |
| 18:2n-6 Linoleic acid |
| 18:3n-3 Linolenic acid |
| Unsaponifiable Fraction (<2%) |
| Non-glyceride esters and waxes |
| Aliphatic alcohols |
| Volatile compounds: aldehydes, ketones, alcohols, acids, esters, etc. |
| Triterpenes: erythrodiol, uvaol, oleanolic acid and maslinic acid |
| Sterols: β-sitosterol, campesterol, stigmasterol and avenasterol |
| Hydrocarbons |
| Squalene |
| n-alkanes and n-alkenes |
| Carotenoids: β-carotene and lycopene |
| Pigments: chlorophylls and pheophytins |
| Lipophilic phenolics: tocopherols and tocotrienols |
| Hydrophilic phenolics |
| Phenolic acids: gallic, vanillic, cinnamic, caffeic, coumanic and elenolic acids |
| Phenolic alcohols: hydroxytyrosol, tyrosol and their glucosides |
| Secoiridoids: oleuropein and ligstroside derivates (oleocanthal and oleacein) |
| Lignans: pinoresinol and acetoxypinoresinol |
| Flavonoids: luteolin and apigenin |
Figure 1Effects and main mechanisms of action of high-EVOO diets, in comparison to high-seed-oil diets, on experimental mammary carcinogenesis. Animals fed the high-EVOO diet displayed tumors of lower clinical and morphological degree of malignancy. These effects can be related to systemic mechanisms influencing susceptibility and tumor initiation (growth and sexual maturation, liver capacity of carcinogen detoxification, hormone levels, antioxidant capacity and immune function), as well as molecular changes in tumors (in membrane composition, epigenetics, gene expression, DNA damage, oxidative stress, or metabolism, conducting cells to decreased proliferation and increased apoptosis).
Effects and mechanisms of action of olive oil on experimental mammary carcinogenesis.
| Animal Model | Dietary Intervention | Carcinogenesis | Molecular/Cellular Mechanisms | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NMU (50 mg/kg body weight at day 50) | Safflower oil (23%, 5%), corn | Promoting effect of high-safflower-oil and high-corn-oil diets | Lipid profile | [ |
| NMU (40 mg/kg body weight at day 50) | Diets at 20% different varieties | Lower degree of morphological | [ | |
| NMU (3 × 50 mg/kg body weight at 50, | Diets of 4% EVOO, 4% sunflower oil, 4% oleic acid-enriched sunflower oil; post-weaning. | Protective effect of olive oil (longer latency period, lowest mortality). | [ | |
| Diet of 4% oleic acid-enriched | Renin–angiotensin system | [ | ||
| Tumor implantation | Corn oil (23%, 5%), olive oil | Increased metastases in 23% corn oil vs. all others. | [ | |
| DMBA (65 mg/kg body weight at | Diets of 20% high-linoleic | Preventive effect of olive oil (longer tumor-free time, fewer tumors per rat and lower tumor incidence). | Lipid profile | [ |
| DMBA (2 × 2 mg/rat | Corn oil (7%, 15%), EVOO | Smaller tumors with 7% olive oil diet. Promoting effect of high-fat | Hormones (estradiol), apoptosis (Bcl2, Bak, Casp3) | [ |
| DMBA (2 × 10 | Corn oil (7%, 15%), olive oil (7%, 15%); prenatal and | Preventive effect of olive oil. | Immune function, apoptotic index | [ |
| DMBA (2 × of 10 mg/rat) | Low-fat, 15% olive oil. | Spleen cellular components, tumor leukocyte infiltrates, apoptosis | [ | |
| DMBA (5 mg/rat | Diets of 3% low-fat, 20% corn | EVOO vs. corn oil preventive effect. Low histologic grade, few necrotic and invasive areas. | [ | |
| EVOO vs. corn oil preventive effect. | [ | |||
| Gene expression—proliferation genes (EGFR, neu) | [ | |||
| Gene expression—differentiation genes (igf2, H19, VDUP1) | [ | |||
| Gene expression—differentiation genes (transferrin, β-actin); ZBP1 protein | [ | |||
| Proliferation and apoptosis pathways (PCNA, ErbB4, Ras, ERK1/2, AKT, Casp3), DNA damage | [ | |||
| DMBA (5 mg/rat | Diets of 3% low-fat, 20% corn oil, 20% EVOO; post-weaning/post-induction. | EVOO vs. corn oil preventive effect. | Growth and sexual maturation (hypothalamic Kiss1) | [ |
| Body mass (plasma OEA, hypothalamic oxytocin) | [ | |||
| Transcriptomics in mammary gland (immune system, apoptosis, metabolism genes) | [ | |||
| EVOO vs. corn oil preventive effect. | Transcriptomics in tumor (proliferation, immune system, apoptosis, metabolism genes) | [ | ||
| Expression of Scd, Pfkl, Sema3A, Jak2, Smad1, Casp3, Arg1, Tgfβ1; | [ | |||
| Epigenetics: DNA methylation (DNMT, Rassf1A, Timp3), histone modifications | [ | |||
| Metabolism (Glut1, PFKL, GAPDH, CS, IDH, UCP2) | [ | |||
| Carcinogen detoxification (liver and mammary gland Cyp1A1, Cyp1A2, Cyp1B1, Nqo1, AhR, Nfr2, Gstp1) | [ | |||
| Oxidative stress (GSSG/GSH, lipid oxidation, DNA damage) | [ | |||
| DMBA (10 mg/rat | Diets of 3% low-fat, 20% corn oil, 20% EVOO; post-weaning. | EVOO vs. corn oil preventive effect. Promoting effect of high-fat diets. | Carcinogen detoxification (Cyp1A1, Cyp1A2, Cyp1B1, Nqo1, AhR, Nfr2, Gstp1), DMBA metabolites and DNA adducts | [ |
| DMBA (20 mg/kg body weight at | Diets of 23,4% olive oil, 23,4% butterfat, 23,4% safflower oil; prenatal. | High safflower oil increased | Gene transcription Cadm4, Bbn1a1 | [ |
| MMTV-neu(ndl)-YD5 mouse | Diets of 10% safflower oil (SA), 3% menhaden oil + 7% SA, 3% flaxseed oil + 7% SA, 10% olive oil, 10% lard. | Menhaden oil better prevented | Lipid profile | [ |
| N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea (180 mg/kg) | Diets of 4% fish oil, 4% olive | Protective effect of fish oil. | Lipid profile | [ |
Overview of the effects of extra-virgin olive oil minor compounds on breast carcinogenesis and associated molecular and cellular mechanisms. Mechanisms induced in combination with chemotherapeutics are not shown.
| Component | Model | Carcinogenesis | Molecular/Cellular Mechanisms | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Triterpenes | ||||
| Uvaol | MCF-7 | Anti-proliferative | ↓ ROS, ↓ H2O2-induced DNA damage | [ |
| MCF-10A, | Decrease in proliferation and survival | ↓ ROS, ↓ basal DNA damage (at low doses), | [ | |
| Erythrodiol | MCF-7 | Anti-proliferative, pro-apoptotic | ↑ ROS | [ |
| MCF-10A, | Decrease in proliferation and survival | ↓ ROS, ↑ DNA damage; cycle arrest and apoptosis in MCF-10A | [ | |
| Maslinic | MCF-7 | ↓ ROS, ↓ H2O2-induced DNA damage | [ | |
| MCF-10A, MCF-7, MDA-MB-23 | Decrease in proliferation and survival | ↓ basal ROS in MCF-10A; ↑ basal ROS in MCF-7 | [ | |
| Oleanolic acid | MCF-7 | Anti-proliferative, pro-apoptotic | ↓ ROS, ↓ H2O2-induced DNA damage | [ |
| MCF-10A, MCF-7, MDA-MB-23 | Decrease in proliferation and survival | ↑ ROS and H2O2-induced DNA damage in MDA-MB-231 | [ | |
| MCF-7, T47D, SKBR3 | Growth inhibition, pro-apoptotic | ERα/Sp1-mediated activation of the p53 gene | [ | |
| MCF-7, | ↓ mTOR-Complex 1 and -Complex2 activity (↓mTOR/FRAP1, RICTOR, RAPTOR, AKT, 4E-BP, p70S6k) | [ | ||
| MCF-7 | Anti-proliferative, pro-apoptotic | Transcriptomic changes; modulation of p53-, TNF- and mTOR-signaling pathways genes | [ | |
| Phenolic acids | ||||
| Caffeic acid | MCF-7 | Decreased viability | ↓ p53, ↑ Mcl-1, ↓ p21 (short treatment), ↑ p21 (long treatment) | [ |
| MCF-7, | Anti-proliferative, cycle | ↓ IGFIR, ↓ AKT activation; ↓ ER, ↓ Cyclin D1 in MCF-7 cells | [ | |
| MCF-7, | ↓ RAR-β methylation | [ | ||
| Elenolic acid | SKBR3, | Anti-proliferative | ↓ HER2 | [ |
| Gallic acid | MCF-7 | Decreased viability | ↑ p53, ↑ Mcl-1, ↓ p21 (short treatment), ↑ p21 (long treatment) | [ |
| Phenolic alcohols | ||||
| Tyrosol | SKBR3, | Anti-proliferative | ↓ HER2 | [ |
| Hydroxyty-rosol | In vivo (DMBA) | Growth inhibition, anti- | Transcriptomic changes in tumors; modulation of apoptosis, cell cycle, proliferation, differentiation, survival and transformation pathways genes; | [ |
| Plasma: ↑ antioxidant capacity, ↓ DNA and protein damage | [ | |||
| MCF-7 | Decreased cell viability, anti-proliferative, blocked G(1)-to-S transition, pro-apoptotic | ↓ Pin1, ↓ Cyclin D1 | [ | |
| MCF-7 | Anti-proliferative | ↓ ERK1/2 | [ | |
| SKBR3, MCF-7/HER2 | Anti-proliferative, pro-apoptotic | ↓ FAS, ↓ HER2 | [ | |
| cocultures MCF-7- | Inhibition of fibroblast-stimulated MCF-7 proliferation | ↓ CCL5 expression in aging fibroblasts | [ | |
| SKBR3 | Pro-apoptotic | ↑ GPER, ↑ ERK1/2, ↑ Bax, ↓ Bcl-2, ↑ Casp-9, | [ | |
| MDA and MCF-7 | Anti-proliferative, | Extracellular production of hydrogen peroxide | [ | |
| MCF-10A, MDA-MB-231, MCF-7 | Prevents oxidative DNA damage | [ | ||
| MCF-10A, | Pro-oxidant under specific growth conditions | [ | ||
| MCF-7 | Antioxidant; ↑ Nrf2, ↑ GSTA2, ↑ HO-1 | [ | ||
| MCF-7 under hypoxic conditions | ↓ PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway, ↓ HIF-1α, ↓ PARP-1 At high doses ↑ VEGF, ↑ AM, ↑ Glut1 | [ | ||
| MDA-MB-231, BT549, Hs578T | Inhibition of EMT, migration and metastatic potential | ↓ SMAD2/3-dependent TGFβ signaling, | [ | |
| MCF-7 and T47D | Inhibition of migration | Induction of autophagy | [ | |
| MDA-MB-231 | Inhibition of migration | Induction of autophagy; ↑ LC3-II/LC3-I, ↑ Beclin-1, | [ | |
| Secoiridoids | ||||
| Ligstroside | SKBR3, | Anti-proliferative, pro-apoptotic | ↓ FAS, ↓ HER2 | [ |
| Oleuropein | In vivo (cancer- | Treatment with decarboxymethyl oleuropein reduced carcinogenesis | ↓ DNMT, ↓ mTOR | [ |
| MCF-7 | Decreased cell viability, inhibited cell proliferation, blocked G(1)-to-S transition, pro-apoptotic | [ | ||
| MDA-MB-468, MDA-MB-231 | Growth inhibition, S-phase cell-cycle arrest-mediated apoptosis | Transcriptomic changes in apoptosis-involved genes (Casp1, Casp14, FADD, TNFRSF21, GADD45A, CYCS and BNIP2) | [ | |
| MCF-7, | Pro-apoptotic | Increased the expression of pro-apoptotic genes and tumor-suppressor miRNAs; decreased the expression of anti-apoptotic genes and oncomiR | [ | |
| MCF-7 | Anti-proliferative, pro-apoptotic, inhibition of | ↓ mir-21, ↓ mir-155 | [ | |
| MCF-7 | Reduced viability and invasiveness, pro-apoptotic | ↓ HDAC2, ↓ HDAC3, ↓ HDAC4 | [ | |
| MCF-7 | Anti-proliferative | ↓ ERK1/2 | [ | |
| MCF-7 | Reduced viability, cell- | ↓ PTP1B | [ | |
| MCF-7 | Pro-apoptotic | ↑ p53, ↑ Bax, ↓ Bcl-2 | [ | |
| MDA-MB-231 | Anti-proliferative, pro-apoptotic, cell-cycle arrest | ↑ Bax, ↑ Casp3, ↓ Bcl2, ↓ Survivin; ↓ NF-kB, | [ | |
| MDA-MB-231 | Pro-apoptotic | ↑ ROS, ↓ NF-kB | [ | |
| MDA-MB-231 | Cell growth inhibition | ↓ PAI-1, ↑ Casp8 | [ | |
| SKBR3, | ↓ FAS | [ | ||
| SKBR3, | Anti-proliferative, | ↓ HER2 | [ | |
| SKBR3 | Pro-apoptotic | ↑ GPER, ↑ Bax, ↓ Bcl-2; ↑ Casp-9, ↑ Casp-3, | [ | |
| MCF-10A, | Pro-oxidant under specific growth conditions | [ | ||
| MDA-MB-231 | Anti-proliferative, pro-apoptotic | Pro-oxidant activity, ↓ SOD2 ↓ catalase, ↑ intracellular and mitochondrial ROS | [ | |
| MCF-7 and T47D | Inhibition of migration | Induction of autophagy | [ | |
| MDA-MB-231 | Inhibition of migration | Induction of autophagy; ↑ LC3-II/LC3-I, ↑ Beclin-1, | [ | |
| MCF-7 | Inhibition of migration | ↓ Sirt1, ↑ ECad, ↓ ZEB1, ↓ MMP-2, ↓ MMP-9, ↑ p53 | [ | |
| MDA-MB-231 | Decreased viability and | ↓ miR-194-5p, ↓ PD-L1, ↑ XIST | [ | |
| MDA-MB-231 | ↓ glycolysis rate | [ | ||
| Oleocanthal | In vivo (MMTV-PyVT; patient-derived xenograft) | Suppressed initiation and incidence | Transcriptomic changes, ↓ Myc | [ |
| In vivo (MDA- | Inhibition of tumor proliferation and growth | ↓ c-Met, ↓ Ki-67, ↓ CD31 | [ | |
| In vivo (BT-474 | Prevention of locoregional recurrence, tumor growth inhibition | ↓ c-Met, ↓ HER2; ↑ ECad, ↓ Vimentin; ↓ CA 15-3 in serum | [ | |
| In vivo (BT-474 | Tumor growth inhibition | ↓ ERα | [ | |
| MCF-7, BT-474, MDA-MB-231 | Inhibition of proliferation and survival | ↓ Met, ↓ AKT, ↓ ERK; ↓ CycD1, ↓ Cdk6, ↑ p21, ↑ p27; ↓ Brk/Paxillin/Rac1; ↑ ECad, ↑ ZO-1, ↓ Vimentin, | [ | |
| MCF-7, | Anti-proliferative, inhibition of migration and invasion | ↓ c-Met activation. ↓ microvessel density marker (CD31) | [ | |
| MCF-7, T47D, | Anti-proliferative | ↓ mTOR and inducing apoptosis in MDA-MB-231 cells | [ | |
| MCF-7, BT-474, | Inhibition of estrogen- | ↓ ERα in BT-474 | [ | |
| MCF-7, | Anti-proliferative, inhibition of migration | Modulation of Ca2+ entry through TRPC6 | [ | |
| Lignans | ||||
| Pinoresinol | SKBR3, | ↓ FAS | [ | |
| SKBR3, | Anti-proliferative, pro-apoptotic | ↓ HER2 | [ | |
| MCF-7 and TD47D | Cytotoxicity | [ | ||
| MDA-MB-231 | Anti-proliferation | ↑ p21 | [ | |
| MDA-MB-231, | Cytotoxic, anti-proliferative and pro-oxidant | ↓ ROS, ↓ DNA damage in MCF-10A cells; ↑ ROS in cancer cells after H2O2 treatment | [ | |
| Acetoxypinoresinol | SKBR3, | ↓ FAS | [ | |
| SKBR3, | Anti-proliferative, pro-apoptotic | ↓ HER2 | [ | |
| Flavonoids | ||||
| Apigenin | In vivo (BT-474 | Tumor growth inhibition, anti-proliferative, pro- | ↓ Ki-67, ↓ HER2, ↓ VEGF, ↑ RANKL | [ |
| In vivo (MDA- | Tumor growth inhibition, pro-apoptotic | ↑ ubiquitinated proteins, ↑ Bax, ↑ IκBα | [ | |
| Hs578T, MDA- | Anti-proliferative, cell- | ↓ PI3K, ↓ PKB, ↑ FOXO3a, ↑ p21, ↑ p27; ↑ p53; | [ | |
| SKBR3, | ↓ FAS | [ | ||
| MDA-MB-231 | Anti-proliferative, | ↑ Casp-3, ↑ proteosome activity, | [ | |
| MCF-7, | Growth inhibition, cycle | ↓ cyclin B1, ↓ cyclin D1, ↓ cyclin A, ↓ CDK1, | [ | |
| T47D, | Anti-proliferative, | ↑ Casp3, ↓ PARP-1, ↑ Bax ↓ Bcl-2; ↑ LC3-II | [ | |
| MDA-MB-231 spheroids—lymph endothelial cells | ↓ MMP-1, ↓ CYP1A1 in MDA-MB-231 cells | [ | ||
| MDA-MB-468, SKBR3, mouse 4T1 cells | ↓ PD-L1, ↓ STAT1 activation, ↑ T-cell proliferation | [ | ||
| MDA-MB-231 | Decreased viability | ↓ CCL2, ↓ GMCSF, ↓ IL-1α, ↓ IL-6, ↓ IKBK-e | [ | |
| human breast tumor phage display cDNA librar; MDA-MB-231 | 160 direct targets, hnRNPA2 top candidate | [ | ||
| MCF-7, | Decreased viability, | ↑ lipid peroxidation, ↑ DNA damage | [ | |
| Luteolin | In vivo (MDA-MB-231 xenograft) | Reduced tumor burden | ↓ Ki-67 | [ |
| In vivo (mouse mammary tumor cells) | Tumor growth inhibition, pro-apoptotic, angiogene- | ↑ p53, ↑ Bax, ↓ Bcl-2 | [ | |
| In vivo (DMBA- | Tumor growth inhibition | Antioxidant, ↑ SOD, ↑ CAT, ↑ GPx | [ | |
| In vivo (DMBA- | Tumor growth inhibition, anti-angiogenic | ↓ VEGF, ↓ CD31 | [ | |
| In vivo (T47D | Tumor growth inhibition, anti-angiogenic | ↓ VEGF, ↓ CD31 | [ | |
| In vivo (MDA-MB-435, MDA-MB-231(4175)LM2 | Inhibition of lung | [ | ||
| In vivo (MDA-MB-231 xenograft) | Inhibition of lung | ↓ Slug, ↓ Vimentin | [ | |
| In vivo (4T1 | Tumor growth inhibition | ↓ YAP, ↓ TAZ | [ | |
| In vivo (MCF-7, | ↑ SOD, CAT in serum | [ | ||
| MDA-MB-231 | Cell growth inhibition, cell-cycle arrest, pro-apoptotic | ↑ p21, ↓ PLK1, ↓CycB1, ↓ CycA, ↓ CDK1, ↓ CDK2; | [ | |
| MCF-7 | Anti-proliferative, cell- | ↓ EGFR, ↓ AKT, ↓ ERK1/2, ↓ Stat3 | [ | |
| ↓ IGFR1, ↓ AKT, ↓ ERα | [ | |||
| MCF-7 | Anti-proliferative | Regulation of gene expression (estrogen receptor pathway and cell cycle genes) | [ | |
| Hs578T, MDA- | Anti-proliferative, cell- | ↓ PI3K, ↓ PKB, ↑ FOXO3a, ↑ p21, ↑ p27; ↑ p53; | [ | |
| MDA-MB-231 | Anti-proliferative, pro-apoptotic | ↓ FAS | [ | |
| SKBR3, | ↓ FAS | [ | ||
| MDA-MB-231 | Anti-proliferative, cell- | ↓ NF-kB, ↓ Myc, ↓TERT | [ | |
| MCF-7 | Anti-proliferative, cell- | ↑ DR5, ↑ Casp8, ↑ Bax, ↓ Bcl-2, ↑ Casp9, ↑ Casp3 | [ | |
| MCF-7, MDA- | Decreased viability, pro-apoptotic | ↑ ERK/p38 activation, AIF translocation | [ | |
| MDA-MB-435, MDA-MB-231(4175)LM2 | Anti-proliferative, pro-apoptotic, reduced migration | ↓ VEGF secretion | [ | |
| MDA-MB-231, | Inhibition of migration | ↓ β-catenin, ↓ N-cadherin, ↓Vimentin, ↑ E-cadherin, | [ | |
| ↑ Claudin | ||||
| SUM-149 | Reduced enrichment in stem cells and growth, | ↓ RSK, ↓ YB-1, ↓ Notch4 | [ | |
| MCF-7, | Anti-proliferative, cycle | ↓ Notch1, ↓ Hes1, ↓ Hey1, ↓ Hey2, ↓ VEGF, | [ | |
| BT-20 | Anti-proliferative, reduced migration and invasion | ↓ AKT, ↓ mTOR, ↓ MMP-9, ↓ H3K27ac, ↓ H3K56ac | [ | |
| MDA-MB-231 | Reduced viability, cycle | ↓ CXCR4, ↓ MMP-2, ↓ MMP-9 | [ | |
| MDA-MB-231, 4T1 | Reduced viability, inhibition of colony formation | ↓ YAP, ↓ TAZ, ↓ N-Cad, ↓ Vimentin, ↓ FN1, ↑ E-Cad | [ | |
| MDA-MB-231 spheroids—lymph endothelial cells | ↓ MMP-1, ↓ CYP1A1 in MDA-MB-231 cells | [ | ||
| T47D, BT-474 | Reduced viability, pro-apoptotic | ↓ VEGF | [ | |
| Reduced mammosphere formation in T47D cells | ||||
| MDA-MB-468 | ↓ PD-L1 | [ | ||
| MCF-7, 4T1 | ↓ glycolytic flux (under hypoxia) | [ |
↓: decrease, downmodulation or inactivation; ↑: increase, upmodulation or activation.
Figure 2Molecular effects of EVOO minor compounds on mammary carcinogenesis. Compounds are grouped by chemical family and their effects in different molecular targets with a role in the acquisition of tumor hallmarks are indicated. General transcriptomic and epigenetic mechanisms are not associated with a specific hallmark. Many of the molecular targets shown have a role in different tumor hallmarks; in this figure, molecules are classified according to the main effects described in the specific bibliography. ↓, decrease, downmodulation or inactivation; ↑, increase, upmodulation or activation.