Abstract

The oncoprotective role of food-derived polyphenol antioxidants has been described but the implicated mechanisms are not yet clear. In addition to polyphenols, phenolic acids, found at high concentrations in a number of plants, possess antioxidant action. The main phenolic acids found in foods are derivatives of 4-hydroxybenzoic acid and 4-hydroxycinnamic acid. This work concentrates on the antiproliferative action of caffeic acid, syringic acid, sinapic acid, protocatechuic acid, ferulic acid and 3,4-dihydroxy-phenylacetic acid (PAA) on T47D human breast cancer cells, testing their antioxidant activity and a number of possible mechanisms involved (interaction with membrane and intracellular receptors, nitric oxide production). The tested compounds showed a time-dependent and dose-dependent inhibitory effect on cell growth with the following potency: caffeic acid > ferulic acid = protocatechuic acid = PAA > sinapic acid = syringic acid. Caffeic acid and PAA were chosen for further analysis. The antioxidative activity of these phenolic acids in T47D cells does not coincide with their inhibitory effect on tumoral proliferation. No interaction was found with steroid and adrenergic receptors. PAA induced an inhibition of nitric oxide synthase, while caffeic acid competes for binding and results in an inhibition of aryl hydrocarbon receptor-induced CYP1A1 enzyme. Both agents induce apoptosis via the Fas/FasL system. Phenolic acids exert a direct antiproliferative action, evident at low concentrations, comparable with those found in biological fluids after ingestion of foods rich in phenolic acids. Furthermore, the direct interaction with the aryl hydrocarbon receptor, the nitric oxide synthase inhibition and their pro-apoptotic effect provide some insights into their biological mode of action.

Highlights

  • The oncoprotective role of food-derived polyphenol antioxidants has been described but the implicated mechanisms are not yet clear

  • Phenolic acids affect the proliferation of T47D cells All tested phenolic acids showed a time-dependent (Fig. 2a) and a dose-dependent inhibition of cell growth (Fig. 2b)

  • A second group of the phenolic acids is composed of ferulic acid, protocatechuic acid and phenylacetic acid (PAA)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The oncoprotective role of food-derived polyphenol antioxidants has been described but the implicated mechanisms are not yet clear. A rich, heterogeneous class of substances, antioxidant (poly)phenols, characterized by the presence of one or multiple phenolic rings in their molecular structure, is present in plant sources. This phenolic ring can be present either in the oxidized form (quinone) or in the reduced form (phenol). Exogenous antioxidants belong to distinct classes; for example, simple phenolic acids (e.g. caffeic acid), phytoalexins (stilbenoids, e.g. resveratrol) or flavonoids (catechins, quercetin) [16,17,18]. They further polymerize and form high molecular weight substances like tannins

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call