| Literature DB >> 35117361 |
Pritam Bhagwan Bhosale1, Sang Eun Ha1, Preethi Vetrivel1, Hun Hwan Kim1, Seong Min Kim1, Gon Sup Kim1.
Abstract
Cancer is a major health concern as the incidence is growing worldwide and still lacks successful therapies. Plant-derived functional foods are getting considerable attention, primarily due to their safety and therapeutic potential. Polyphenols are a group of mostly natural, water-soluble organic compounds. Here, we review the functions of selected polyphenols and their anticancer properties on numerous cancer cell lines and their mechanisms. The literature search was performed using the electronic database PubMed, Google scholar up to June 2020, with the following keywords-polyphenol, polyphenol anticancer, quercetin anticancer, resveratrol anticancer, curcumin anticancer, and kaempferol anticancer. Chemical structures of the selected polyphenols were obtained using the ChemDraw program. The initial search identified 40,554 polyphenols papers and among that, 2,559 were limited to polyphenol and cancer, 987 quercetin and cancer, 2,174 curcumin and cancer, 1,079 resveratrol and cancer, and 226 were limited to kaempferol and cancer. A total of 84 papers are included in this review paper. Most studies report the multiple anticarcinogenic properties of plant-derived polyphenols, including its inhibitory effects on the proliferation of cancer cells, tumor expansion, angiogenesis, inflammation, and metastasis. Besides, some studies shows potential synergistic effects when polyphenol treatment combined with chemotherapeutic agents. Anticancer effects of polyphenolic compounds like quercetin, curcumin, resveratrol, and kaempferol are investigated on numerous cancer cell lines and have shown prominent results. The present review provides a direction to determine the anticarcinogenic ability of the selected polyphenols in vitro and in vivo. Consequently, the use of polyphenols in cancer treatment should be investigated in-depth in the future. 2020 Translational Cancer Research. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Anticancer effect; curcumin; kaempferol; polyphenols; quercetin; resveratrol
Year: 2020 PMID: 35117361 PMCID: PMC8798728 DOI: 10.21037/tcr-20-2359
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Cancer Res ISSN: 2218-676X Impact factor: 1.241
Classification of polyphenols
| Classification | Representative members |
|---|---|
| Flavonoids | |
| Anthocyanins | Delphinidin, pelargonidin, cyanidin, malvidin, aurantinidin, peonidin, petunidin, rosinidin |
| Flavanols | Epicatechin, epigallocatechin, EGCG, procyanidins, prodelphinidins |
| Flavanones | Hesperidin, naringenin, butin, eriodictyol, homoeriodictyol, isosakuranetin |
| Flavones | Apigenin, chrysin, luteolin, acacetin, genkwanin, echioidinin, baicalein, oroxylon, wogonin, geraldone, tithonine, diosmetin, pilloin, velutin, scutellarein, hispidulin, sorbifolin, pectolinarigenin, zapotin, tricetin, jaceosidin, sinensetin, onopordin, tangeretin |
| Flavonols | Quercetin, kaempferol, myricetin,isorhamnetin, galangin, azaleatin, fisetin, gossypetin, kaempferide, morin, natsudaidain, pachypodol, rhamnazin |
| Isoflavonoids | Genistein, daidzein, formononetin |
| Phenolic acids | |
| Hydroxybenoic acid | Ellagic acid, gallic acid, syringic acid |
| Hydroxycinnamic acid | Ferulic acid, chlorogenic acid, caffeic acid |
| Lignans | Sesamin, secoisolariciresinol diglucoside, pinoresinol, lariciresinol, syringaresinol, hydroxymatairesinol, matairesinol |
| Stilbenes | Resveratrol, pterostilbene, piceatannol, viniferins |
Figure 1Summary of search strategy employed.
In vitro and in vivo anti-cancer effect of selected polyphenols
| Cancer | Cell type | Main effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Quercetin | |||
| Hepatocellular cancer | HepG2, SMMC-7721 | Inducing apoptosis, decrease tumor growth | ( |
| Breast cancer | MCF-7 | Induction of apoptosis | ( |
| Colon cancer | HCT116 | Inducing apoptosis | ( |
| Gastric cancer | BGC-823 | Inducing apoptosis | ( |
| Primary effusion lymphoma cancer | BC3, BCBL1 and BC1 | Induction of apoptosis, autophagy, inhibiting PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway | ( |
| Cervical cancer | HeLa | Inducing apoptosis, autophagy | ( |
| Hepatocellular cancer | LM3 | Inducing apoptosis, G2/M cell cycle arrest, autophagy, inhibits JAK/STAT3 pathway | ( |
| Pancreatic cancer | PATU-8988, PANC-1 | Inhibiting metastasis and STAT3 pathway | ( |
| Prostate cancer | PC-3 | Inhibiting angiogenesis and tumor growth | ( |
| Retinoblastoma | Y79 | Inhibits migration, angiogenesis and inducing apoptosis | ( |
| Rhesus choroids-retina cancer | RF/6A | Inducing apoptosis, inhibits angiogenesis | ( |
| Breast cancer | MCF-7 | Inhibits xenograft growth, angiogenesis by calcineurin/NFAT pathway | ( |
| Colon cancer | HT29, CT26 | Inducing apoptosis, inhibits metastasis, MAPK pathway | ( |
| Curcumin | |||
| Colon cancer | HT29 | Inducing apoptosis | ( |
| Leukemia | CEM, HSB2, Jurkat and Molt-4 | Inducing apoptosis, Inhibiting PI3K/AKT pathway | ( |
| Lung cancer | A549 | Induction of apoptosis, suppression of PI3K/AKT pathway | ( |
| Ovarian cancer | SK-OV-3, A2780 | Inducing apoptosis, autophagy and inhibits AKT/mTOR/p70S6K pathway | ( |
| Colon cancer | HCT116, SW620 | Induce autophagy | ( |
| Pancreatic cancer | PANC1, BxPC3 | G2/M cell cycle arrest, apoptosis and autophagy | ( |
| Gastric cancer | AGS | G2/M phase cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, Ras/ERK pathway | ( |
| Prostate cancer | DU145 | Inhibiting metastasis | ( |
| Lung cancer | 801D | Inhibiting metastasis | ( |
| Mesothelioma | RN5 | Inhibits angiogenesis, tumor growth | ( |
| Lung cancer | NCI-H446, NCI-1688 | Inhibits metastasis, angiogenesis and STAT3 pathway | ( |
| Breast cancer | MCF-7 | Inhibits metastasis and angiogenesis | ( |
| Prostate cancer | LNCaP | Inducing apoptosis, inhibits angiogenesis, metastasis | ( |
| Resveratrol | |||
| Gastric cancer | SGC7901 | Inducing apoptosis | ( |
| Prostate cancer | TRAMP-C1, TRAMP-C2, and TRAMP-C3 | Inducing apoptosis | ( |
| Oral cancer | SCC-VII, SCC-25, and YD-38 | Inducing G2/M cell cycle arrest, apoptosis | ( |
| Melanoma | A375SM | Inducing G2/M cell cycle arrest, apoptosis | ( |
| Hepatocellular cancer | MHCC97-H | Autophagy, Inhibits PI3K/AKT pathway | ( |
| Melanoma | B16-F10, A375 | Inducing apoptosis, autophagy, inhibits PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway | ( |
| Hepatocellular cancer | Huh7 | Inhibits metastasis, JNK pathway | ( |
| Colon cancer | SW480, SW620 | Inhibits metastasis, AKT/GSK-3β/Snail pathway | ( |
| Colorectal cancer | HCT116, Caco2 | Inhibiting angiogenesis | ( |
| Melanoma | B16 | Inhibits angiogenesis | ( |
| Breast cancer | MDA-MB-231 | Induces apoptosis, inhibits angiogenesis | ( |
| Kaempferol | |||
| Ovarian cancer | OVACAR-3 | Inducing apoptosis, inhibition of PI3K/AKT/mTOR and STAT3 pathway | ( |
| Colon cancer | HT-29 | Inducing apoptosis | ( |
| Gastric cancer | AGS, SNU-638 | Induce autophagy, IRE1-JNK-CHOP and AMPKα/ULK1 pathway | ( |
| Hepatocellular cancer | HepG2 | Inducing autophagy, ER stress-CHOP pathway | ( |
| Colon cancer | HT-29 | G2/M cell cycle arrest | ( |
| Breast cancer | MDA-MB-453 | Induction of apoptosis, G2/M cell cycle arrest | ( |
| Lung cancer | A549 | Inducing apoptosis, autophagy, PI3K/AKT pathway | ( |
| Osteosarcoma | U-2 OS | Inhibits metastasis, blocks MAPK pathway | ( |
| Tongue cancer | SCC-4 | Inhibit metastasis, ERK pathway | ( |
| Ovarian cancer | OVCAR-3, A2780/CP70 | Inhibits angiogenesis | ( |
| Cholangiocarcinoma | HCCC9810, QBC939 | Inducing apoptosis, inhibits PI3K/AKT and tumor growth | ( |
Figure 2Chemical structure of quercetin.
Figure 3Chemical structure of curcumin.
Figure 4Chemical structure of resveratrol.
Figure 5Chemical structure of kaempferol.