Two citrus flavonoids, hesperetin and naringenin, found in oranges and grapefruit, respectively, and four noncitrus flavonoids, baicalein, galangin, genistein, and quercetin, were tested singly and in one-to-one combinations for their effects on proliferation and growth of a human breast carcinoma cell line, MDA-MB-435. The concentration at which cell proliferation was inhibited by 50% (IC50), based on incorporation of [3H]thymidine, varied from 5.9 to 140 micrograms/ml for the single flavonoids, with the most potent being baicalein. IC50 values for the one-to-one combinations ranged from 4.7 micrograms/ml (quercetin + hesperetin, quercetin + naringenin) to 22.5 micrograms/ml (naringenin + hesperetin). All the flavonoids showed low cytotoxicity (> 500 micrograms/ml for 50% cell death). Naringenin is present in grapefruit mainly as its glycosylated form, naringin. These compounds, as well as grapefruit and orange juice concentrates, were tested for their ability to inhibit development of mammary tumors induced by 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA) in female Sprague-Dawley rats. Two experiments were conducted in which groups of 21 rats were fed a semipurified diet containing 5% corn oil and were given a 5-mg dose of DMBA intragastrically at approximately 50 days of age while in diestrus. One week later, individual groups were given double-strength grapefruit juice or orange juice or fed naringin or naringenin at levels comparable to that provided by the grapefruit juice; in the second experiment, the rats were fed a semipurified diet containing 20% corn oil at that time. As expected, rats fed the high-fat diet developed more tumors than rats fed the low-fat diet, but in both experiments tumor development was delayed in the groups given orange juice or fed the naringin-supplemented diet compared with the other three groups. Although tumor incidence and tumor burden (grams of tumor/rat) were somewhat variable in the different groups, rats given orange juice had a smaller tumor burden than controls, although they grew better than any of the other groups. These experiments provide evidence of anticancer properties of orange juice and indicate that citrus flavonoids are effective inhibitors of human breast cancer cell proliferation in vitro, especially when paired with quercetin, which is widely distributed in other foods.
The activation of LDL receptors was described recently in a human hepatoma cell line (Hep G2) exposed both to alpha + alpha' subunits from 7S soy globulin and to Croksoy(R)70, a commercial isoflavone-poor soy concentrate. To assess the final identity of the peptide(s) putatively responsible for the biochemical effect, experiments were performed in Hep G2 cells, exposed either to synthetic peptides corresponding to specific sequences of 7S soy globulin or to peptides from the in vitro digestion of Croksoy(R)70. Moreover, the ability of the whole 7S globulin, its subunits and whole Croksoy(R)70 to interfere in the apolipoprotein B (apo B) secretion in the medium as well as in sterol biosynthesis was evaluated in the same model. Increased (125)I-LDL uptake and degradation vs. controls were shown after Hep G2 incubation with a synthetic peptide (10(-)(4) mol/L, MW 2271 Da) corresponding to positions 127-150 of the 7S globulin. Cells exposed to Croksoy(R)70 enzyme digestion products showed a more marked up-regulation of LDL receptors vs. controls, compared with vs. Hep G2 cells incubated with undigested Croksoy(R)70. Among soy-derived products, only the 7S globulin inhibited apo B secretion and (14)C-acetate incorporation when tested in Hep G2 cells at a concentration of 1.0 g/L. These findings support the hypothesis that if one or more peptides can reach the liver after intestinal digestion, they may elicit a cholesterol-lowering effect. Moreover, the protein moiety, devoid of isoflavone components, is likely to be responsible for this major biochemical effect of soy protein.
Our previous studies showed that replacing the drinking water of rabbits fed a casein-containing diet with either orange juice or grapefruit juice reduced serum low density lipoprotein cholesterol and hepatic cholesteryl ester concentrations. To determine whether the changes observed in rabbits were due to flavonoids present in the juices acting directly on the liver, the effects of hesperetin and naringenin on net apolipoprotein B (apoB) secretion by HepG2 cells were investigated. These flavanones dose-dependently reduced net apoB secretion by up to 81% after a 24 h incubation, while doses of 60 micrograms/mL reduced net apoB secretion by 50% after 4 h. Coincubation with the proteasome inhibitor, MG-132, did not alter the ability of the flavonoids to reduce net apoB secretion over 4 h, suggesting that the flavonoid-induced changes in apoB metabolism were not due to a direct increase in proteasomal activity. However, the flavonoids were unable to reduce net apoB secretion after 4 h in the presence of oleate, suggesting that these compounds may interfere with the availability of neutral lipids for lipoprotein assembly. Furthermore, our 14C-acetate-labeling studies showed a 50% reduction in cholesteryl ester synthesis in the presence of either flavonoid, which could account for the reduction in net apoB secretion caused by incubation with these compounds. These in vitro studies suggest that hesperetin and naringenin may, in part, reduce net apoB secretion by HepG2 cells by inhibiting cholesteryl ester synthesis and that these compounds are good candidates for further in vivo studies to determine whether they are responsible for the cholesterol-lowering properties of dietary citrus juices.
The tocotrienol-rich fraction (TRF) of palm oil consists of tocotrienols and some alpha-tocopherol (alpha-T). Tocotrienols are a form of vitamin E having an unsaturated side-chain, rather than the saturated side-chain of the more common tocopherols. Because palm oil has been shown not to promote chemically-induced mammary carcinogenesis, we tested effects of TRF and alpha-T on the proliferation, growth, and plating efficiency (PE) of the MDA-MB-435 estrogen-receptor-negative human breast cancer cells. TRF inhibited the proliferation of these cells with a concentration required to inhibit cell proliferation by 50% of 180 microgram/mL whereas alpha-T had no effect at concentrations up to 1000 microgram/mL as measured by incorporation of [3H]thymidine. The effects of TRF and alpha-T also were tested in longer-term growth experiments, using concentrations of 180 and 500 microgram/mL. We found that TRF inhibited the growth of these cells by 50%, whereas alpha-T did not. Their effect on the ability of these cells to form colonies also was studied, and it was found that TRF inhibited PE, whereas alpha T had no effect. These results suggest that the inhibition is due to the presence of tocotrienols in TRF rather than alpha T.
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