Dietary vitamin E, highly expressed in palm oil, exists as either tocopherols or tocotrienols. Evidence indicates that vitamin Es maybe potent cancer preventive agents. In this study, the y- and O- isoforms of vitamin E were found to he the most effective at cancer cell growth inhibition, with the tocotrienols being more effective than the tocopherols in androgen-independent PC-3 prostate cancer cells. To assure that these compounds were selective toward cancer cells, the growth arrest of PrEC normal prostate cells was compared to PC-3 cells. At concentrations of -30 iM dietary, y-vitamin Es showed no signficant growth arrest on PrEC cell growth, hut selectively inhibited growth in the PC-3 cancer cells. Moreover y-Tocotrienol demonstrated a greater potential to inhibit growth in cancer cells at these lower concentrations than did y-Tocopherol. Two independent pathways important in carcinogenesis were tested: PPAR y and NFicB. The PPAR y was up regulated by both dietary y-vitamin Es by the modulation of the endogenous ligand 15-S-HETE, while NFicB was only regulated by y-Tocotrienol. The modulation of NFicB was confirmed by the down regulation of the pro-Apoptotic proteins clAP, xIAP, and BcL-2 which potentiate apoptosis and are down stream effectors of NFicB.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:ETSU/oai:dc.etsu.edu:etsu-works-18925 |
Date | 01 October 2008 |
Creators | Campbell, S., Whaley, S. G., Phillips, R., Aggarwal, B. B., Stimmel, J. B., Leesnitzer, L., Blanchard, S. G., Stone, W. L., Christian, Muenyi, Krishnan, K. |
Publisher | Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University |
Source Sets | East Tennessee State University |
Detected Language | English |
Type | text |
Source | ETSU Faculty Works |
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