Fucoxanthin (Fx), a dietary marine xanthophyll, exerts potent anticancer effects in various colorectal cancer (CRC) animal models. However, therapeutic effects of Fx in human cancer tissues remain unclear. A patient-derived xenograft (PDX) mouse model transplanted with cancer tissues from patients is widely accepted as the best preclinical model for evaluating the anticancer potential of drug candidates. Herein, we investigated the anticancer effects of Fx in PDX mice transplanted with cancer tissues derived from a patient with CRC (CRC-PDX) using LC-MS/MS- and western blot-based proteome analysis. The tumor in the patient with CRC was a primary adenocarcinoma (T3N0M0, stage II) showing mutations of certain genes that were tumor protein p53 (TP53), AT-rich interaction domain 1A (ARID1A), neuroblastoma RAS viral oncogene homolog (NRAS), and PMS1 homolog 2 (PMS2). Administration of Fx significantly suppressed the tumor growth (0.6-fold) and tended to induce differentiation in CRC-PDX mice. Fx up-regulated glycanated-decorin (Gc-DCN) expression, and down-regulated Kinetochore-associated protein DSN1 homolog (DSN1), phospho(p) focal adhesion kinase (pFAK)(Tyr397), pPaxillin(Tyr31), and c-MYC involved in growth, adhesion, and/or cell cycle, in the tumors of CRC-PDX mice than in control mice. Alterations in the five proteins were consistent with those in human CRC HT-29 and HCT116 cells treated with fucoxanthinol (FxOH, a major metabolite of Fx). Fx suppresses development of human-like CRC tissues, especially through growth, adhesion, and cell cycle signals.
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