4.7 Article

Apple Polyphenol Phloretin Inhibits Colorectal Cancer Cell Growth via Inhibition of the Type 2 Glucose Transporter and Activation of p53-Mediated Signaling

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 64, Issue 36, Pages 6826-6837

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.6b02861

Keywords

glucose transporter 2; colon cancer; phloretin; p53; apple polyphenol

Funding

  1. Health and Welfare Surcharge on tobacco products [MOHW105-TDU-B-212-134001]
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology [MOST 104-2320-B-038-066-MY2]
  3. Aim for the Top University Project Cancer Translational Center of Taipei Medical University

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Glucose transporters (GLUTs) are required for glucose uptake in malignant cells, and they can be used as molecular targets for cancer therapy. An RT-PCR analysis was performed to investigate the mRNA levels of 14 subtypes of GLUTs in human colorectal cancer (COLO 205 and HT-29) and normal (FHC) Cells. RT-PCR (n = 27) was used to assess the differences in paired tissue samples (tumor vs normal) isolated from colorectal cancer patients. GLUT2 was detected in all tested cells. The average GLUT2 mRNA level in 12 of 27 (44.4%) cases was 2.4-fold higher in tumor compared to normal tissues (*, p = 0.027). Higher GLUT2 mRNA expression was preferentially detected in advanced-stage tumors (stage 0 vs 3 = 16.38-fold, 95% CI = 922-26.54-fold; *, p = 0.029). The apple polyphenol phloretin (Ph) and siRNA methods were used to inhibit GLUT2 protein expression. Ph (0-100 mu M, for 24 h) induced COLO 205 cell growth Cycle arrest in a p53-dependent manner, which was confirmed by pretreatment of the cells with a p53-specific dominant negative expression vector: Hepatocyte nuclear factor 6 (HNF6), which was previously reported to be a transcription factor that activates GLUT2 and p53, was also induced by Ph (0-100 mu M, for 24 h). The antitumor effect of Ph (25 mg/kg or DMSO twice a week for 6 weeks) was demonstrated in vivo using; BALB/c nude Mice bearing COLO 205 tumor xenografts. In conclusion, targeting GLUT2 could potentially suppress celorectat tumor cell invasiveness.

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