4.8 Article

Synergistic effect of fasting-mimicking diet and vitamin C against KRAS mutated cancers

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NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
卷 11, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-16243-3

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资金

  1. Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro (AIRC) [17605, IG 21820, 17736, 22098]
  2. Fondazione Umberto Veronesi
  3. Breast Cancer Research Program (US Department of Defense) [BC161452, BC161452P1]
  4. US National Institute on Aging-National Institutes of Health (NIA-NIH) [AG034906, AG20642]

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Fasting-mimicking diets delay tumor progression and sensitize a wide range of tumors to chemotherapy, but their therapeutic potential in combination with non-cytotoxic compounds is poorly understood. Here we show that vitamin C anticancer activity is limited by the up-regulation of the stress-inducible protein heme-oxygenase-1. The fasting-mimicking diet selectivity reverses vitamin C-induced up-regulation of heme-oxygenase-1 and ferritin in KRAS-mutant cancer cells, consequently increasing reactive iron, oxygen species, and cell death; an effect further potentiated by chemotherapy. In support of a potential role of ferritin in colorectal cancer progression, an analysis of The Cancer Genome Atlas Database indicates that KRAS mutated colorectal cancer patients with low intratumor ferritin mRNA levels display longer 3- and 5-year overall survival. Collectively, our data indicate that the combination of a fasting-mimicking diet and vitamin C represents a promising low toxicity intervention to be tested in randomized clinical trials against colorectal cancer and possibly other KRAS mutated tumors. Fasting diets are emerging as an approach to delay tumor progression and improve cancer therapies. Here, the authors show that the combination of fasting-mimicking diet with vitamin C decreases tumor development and increases chemotherapy efficacy in KRAS-mutant cancer.

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