4.7 Article

Resveratrol Oligomers Isolated from Carex Species Inhibit Growth of Human Colon Tumorigenic Cells Mediated by Cell Cycle Arrest

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 59, Issue 16, Pages 8632-8638

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jf201561e

Keywords

Carex follicullata; Carex gynandra; stilbenes; resveratrol; alpha-viniferin; antiproliferative; cell cycle; colon cancer

Funding

  1. Susquehanna University
  2. National Center for Research Resources, National Institutes of Health at the University of Rhode Island [P20RR016457]

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Research has shown that members of the Cares genus produce biologically active stilbenoids including resveratrol oligomers. This is of great interest to the nutraceutical industry given that resveratrol, a constituent of grape and red wine, has attracted immense research attention due to its potential human health benefits. In the current study, five resveratrol oligomers (isolated from Carex folliculata and Carex gynandra), along with resveratrol, were evaluated for antiproliferative effects against human colon cancer (HCT-116, HT-29, Caco-2) and normal human colon (CCD-18Co) cells. The resveratrol oligomers included one dimer, two trimers, and two tetramers: pallidol (1); alpha-viniferin (2) and trans-miyabenol C (3); and kobophenols A (4) and B (5), respectively. Although not cytotoxic, the resveratrol oligomers (1-5), as well as resveratrol, inhibited growth of the human colon cancer cells. Among the six stilbenoids, alpha-viniferin (2) was most active against the colon cancer cells with IC50 values of 6-32 mu M (>2-fold compared to normal colon cells). Moreover, alpha-viniferin (at 20 mu M) did not induce apoptosis but arrested cell cycle (in the S-phase) for the colon cancer but not the normal colon cells. This study adds to the growing body of knowledge supporting the anticancer effects of resveratrol and its oligomers. Furthermore, Cares species should be investigated for their nutraceutical potential given that they produce biologically active stilbenoids such as alpha-viniferin.

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