Abstract
Because complex mixtures of plant polyphenols exert anticancer activity in animal models, we investigated whether low-molecular-weight natural phenolic compounds (2-OH-coumaric acid, 3-OH-coumaric acid, 4-OH-coumaric acid, 3-OH-flavone, 7-OH-flavone, 4-OH-benzoic acid, 3-OH-benzoic acid, and 2,3-OH-benzoic acid) affect azoxymethane (AOM)-induced aberrant crypt foci (ACF), which have been suggested to represent preneoplastic lesions, in the colon of rats. Male Fischer 344 rats were fed diets supplemented with 0.1% (wt/wt) of the different phenolic compounds, and after 2 wk they were treated twice (1 wk apart) with AOM (15 mg/kg sc); the dietary treatment continued until sacrifice, 7 wk after the first injection with AOM. The results showed that none of these phenolic compounds exerted chemopreventive activity on the ACF assay. On the contrary, 3-OH-flavone slightly, although significantly, increased (P ? 0.05), the number of ACF per colon [157 ± 7 and 198 ±14 (SE) in control and 3-OH-flavone groups, respectively, n = 10]. We also found that the number of "large" ACF was significantly increased in the group treated with 4-OH-benzoic acid. In conclusion, none of the phenolic compounds tested demonstrated a suppressive action on ACF induction by AOM.
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