4.6 Article

Excentric cleavage products of β-carotene inhibit estrogen receptor positive and negative breast tumor cell growth in vitro and inhibit activator protein-1-mediated transcriptional activation

Journal

JOURNAL OF NUTRITION
Volume 132, Issue 6, Pages 1368-1375

Publisher

AMER SOC NUTRITION-ASN
DOI: 10.1093/jn/132.6.1368

Keywords

beta-carotene; excentric cleavage; breast tumor cells; activator protein-1; retinoblastoma protein; E2F1

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Both retinoids and carotenoids are potentially useful chemopreventive agents, In this study we tested the effect of synthetic excentric cleavage products of P-carotene on the growth of the MCF-7, Hs578T and MDA-MB-231 human breast cancer cells. The apo-beta-carotenoic acids (beta-apo-CA) beta-apo-14'-, beta-apo-12'-, beta-apo10'- and beta-apo-8'-CA are structurally similar to all-trans-retinoic acid (atRA) but have different side chain lengths. Nine days of treatment with atRA inhibited MCF-7 and Hs578T cell proliferation in a dose-dependent manner. beta-apo-14'-CA and beta-apo-12'-CA significantly inhibited MCF-7 growth, whereas only beta-apo-14'-CA inhibited Hs578T growth. None of these treatments inhibited the growth of MDA-MB-231 cells. Potential mechanisms of growth inhibition, i.e., regulation of the cell cycle control proteins E2F1 and retinoblastoma protein (RB), and effect on activator protein-1 (AP-1)-mediated gene regulation were examined. beta-apo-14'-CA and atRA inhibited the expression of E2F1 protein in MCF-7 and Hs578T cells. beta-apo-14'-CA, beta-apo-12'-CA and atRA down-regulated RB protein expression in MCF-7 but not in Hs578T cells. The effect of phorbol ester-induced transcriptional activation of a collagenase promoter-reporter gene construct was strongly inhibited by 1 mumol/L beta-apo-14'-CA, atRA (MCF-7, Hs578T) or beta-apo-12'-CA (MCF-7). These effects were due neither to cellular conversion of beta-apo-CA to atRA nor to high affinity binding to the retinoid acid receptors. Thus, beta-apo-CAs were effective inhibitors of breast tumor cell proliferation, possibly mediated through down-regulation of cell cycle regulatory proteins and/or inhibition of AP-1 transcriptional activity. The ability of beta-apo-CA to regulate breast tumor cell growth independently of conversion to atRA suggests that these compounds may have fewer side effects than retinoids and, therefore, have a potential chemotherapeutic value that deserves further examination.

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