4.7 Article

Antiproliferative and Cytotoxic Activity of Xanthohumol and Its Non-Estrogenic Derivatives in Colon and Hepatocellular Carcinoma Cell Lines

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms20051203

Keywords

xanthohumol; polyphenol; flavonoid; apoptosis; colon cancer; dihydroxanthohumol; tetrahydroxanthohumol; cell cycle; phytochemical; chemoprevention; dietary agent

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [NIH/NCCIH 5R01AT009168]
  2. Hopsteiner, Inc., New York
  3. Oregon State University Foundation Buhler-Wang Research Fund
  4. 2017-18 Christopher and Catherine Mathews Graduate Fellowship in the Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics
  5. Franz Stenzel M.D. and Kathryn Stenzel II Scholarship by the Oregon Office of Student Access and Completion
  6. 2019 Audrey and George Varsevelt Linus Pauling Institute Graduate Fellowship

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Xanthohumol (XN), a prenylated flavonoid found in hops, inhibits growth in a variety of cancer cell lines; however, its use raises concerns as gut microbiota and the host's hepatic cytochrome P450 enzymes metabolize it into the most potent phytoestrogen known, 8-prenylnaringenin (8-PN). The XN derivatives dihydroxanthohumol (DXN) and tetrahydroxanthohumol (TXN) are not metabolized into 8-PN and they show higher tissue concentrations in vivo compared with XN when orally administered to mice at the same dose. Here we show that DXN and TXN possess improved anti-proliferative activity compared with XN in two colon (HCT116, HT29) and two hepatocellular (HepG2, Huh7) carcinoma cell lines, as indicated by their respective IC50 values. Furthermore, XN, DXN, and TXN induce extensive apoptosis in all these carcinoma cell lines. Finally, TXN induces G(0)/G(1) cell cycle arrest in the colon carcinoma cell line HT29. Our findings suggest that DXN and TXN could show promise as therapeutic agents against colorectal and liver cancer in preclinical studies without the drawback of metabolism into a phytoestrogen.

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