Title: Dietary Chemoprevention of Cancer
1Dietary Chemoprevention of Cancer
- June 27, 2007
- BYU Cancer Research Center Summer Fellows
- 2007 Workshop
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3- The incidence of cancer among strict Mormons in
Utah is only about half that among Americans in
general.
4Factors contributing to death in the U.S.
5United States, MalesRates age-adjusted to the
U.S. 2000 population
From Jemal, A. et al. CA Cancer J Clin
20075743-66
6United States, FemalesRates age-adjusted to the
U.S. 2000 population
From Jemal, A. et al. CA Cancer J Clin
20075743-66
7United States 2007
- From Jemal, A. et al. CA Cancer J Clin
20075743-66.
8The Nature of Cancer
- Underlying causes environmental
- DNA damage fundamental
- Occurs only in replicating cells - pattern
different in children, adults
9Nutrients and cancer roles
- Possibly Protective
- Vitamins A, D, E, C, folate selenium,
carotenoids, fiber, calcium, omega-3 fatty acids - Possibly carcinogenic
- fats, alcohol, nitrites, nitrates, aflatoxin,
benzopyrene
10Multistage process
11Diet and cancer
- Eliminate foods that cause cancer
- Increase consumption of foods that slow
development of cancer (initiation, promotion,
progression) - Increase period of life thats cancer-free
12Human Carcinogenesis
- Exposure to agent
- Metabolism of agent
- Interaction between agent and cell constituent at
risk (e.g. DNA) initiation - DNA damage repair, cell death, or replication
- Growth to definable locus of cells promotion
- Growth and spread of tumor progression
13Exposure to Agents
- Tobacco, workplace, diet, alcohol, wider
environment, viruses, bacteria - procarcinogens - DNA damage by oxyradicals produced by normal
metabolism
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15Human Carcinogenesis
- Exposure to agent
- Metabolism of agent
- Interaction between agent and cell constituent at
risk (e.g. DNA) initiation - DNA damage repair, cell death, or replication
- Growth to definable locus of cells promotion
- Growth and spread of tumor progression
16Enzymes
17Phase I (P450s, mixed function oxidases)
- Phase I Reactions Addition or unmasking of a
functional polar group. This typically results in
a relatively small increase in hydrophilicity and
may cause metabolic activation. - Incorporate one atom of molecular oxygen into the
substrate and one atom into water. - NADPH H O2 RH gt NADP H2O R-OH
18Phase I polymorphisms and risk of lung cancer
19Phase II e.g. GST
- Conjugation with a small hydrophilic endogenous
substance (e.g. GSH) - often, but not always, to
a functional group provided by a Phase I reaction
- thereby significantly increasing hydrophilicity
and facilitating excretion.
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21Role of food and nutrition
- block activation (Phase I)
- increase detoxification (Phase II)
- provide alternate targets
22- Induces Phase II
- Inhibits Phase 1
- Induce cell cycle arrest, apoptosis
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25Human Carcinogenesis
- Exposure to agent
- Metabolism of agent
- Interaction between agent and cell constituent at
risk (e.g. DNA) initiation - DNA damage repair, cell death, or replication
- Growth to definable locus of cells promotion
- Growth and spread of tumor progression
26Initiation
- Mutations, deletions
- Genetic alteration
- somatic mutation
- DNA repair
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28DNA Repair
- Heredity may determine efficiency
- Mutation -gt no mechanic
- Death of damaged cell - apoptosis
- Dietary effectors of apoptosis
29Apoptosis
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31X-ray repair cross complementing group 1 (XRCC1)
protein is involved in the base-excision repair
pathway and plays a critical role in repairing
DNA base damage and DNA singlestrand breaks.
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34Human Carcinogenesis
- Exposure to agent
- Metabolism of agent
- Interaction between agent and cell constituent at
risk (e.g. DNA) initiation - DNA damage repair, cell death, or replication
- Growth to definable locus of cells promotion
- Growth and spread of tumor progression
35Promotion (growth to definable locus of cells)
- Affect cell replication, growth
- Physical activity, energy intake, obesity,
dietary factors - hormones, growth factors - Carotenoids, retinol - redifferentiation
- Colon, fiber, volatile fatty acids - apoptosis
- Epigenetic mechanisms - affect behavior but not
structure of DNA - Hyper- or hypomethylation of gene - loss or gain
of function
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37Human Carcinogenesis
- Exposure to agent
- Metabolism of agent
- Interaction between agent and cell constituent at
risk (e.g. DNA) initiation - DNA damage repair, cell death, or replication
- Growth to definable locus of cells promotion
- Growth and spread of tumor progression
38Progression (growth and spread of tumor)
- Growth and expansion from focal lesion to
invasive tumor mass - Metastasis
- Fat, reactive oxygen species (ROS)
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41Preventive mechanisms
42The Reductionist Approach
- Identify, isolate compound
- Test in cells
- Test in animals
- Proceed to clinical trials (Phase I, II, III)
43Grape seed extract a case study
- Grape seed extract (GSE) a complex mixture of
polyphenols - Which compound in GSE accounts for its
anti-cancer efffects?
44Chemical constituents of GSE
45Fractionation
46Fractionation
47Fractionation
4814 Compounds isolated
49Effects on growth, death, apoptosis
50Effects in normal cells
51Mechanism pathway(s), intermediate(s)
52Mechanisms (cont.)
- Cultured cells (appropriateness?)
- Knockdown (siRNA) decreases effect
- Transfection increases effect
53Animal models - xenografts
- Human prostate cancer cells injected
subcutaneously into nude mice - Advantages
- Easy to measure tumor development
- Human, rather than mouse tumors
- Disadvantages
- Cant study immunostimulatory effects
- Cant study prevention
54Xenografts in nude mice
55Animal models Transgenic/K.O.
- Cancer-causing gene added, or tumor suppressor
gene knocked out of mouse genome - Advantages
- Allows study of chemoprevention
- Allows study of immunomodulation
- Disadvantage
- Tumor formation driven by one or limited nubmer
of genetic events
56TRAMP Transgenic Adenocarcimoma of Mouse
Prostate
Probasin promoter
57The Reductionist Approach
- The more garlic people consume, the lower is
their risk of colon cancer. - Q What is it in garlic thats protective?
- Dissect garlic to identify individual chemical
compounds. - Test supplements of each compound individually
for potency in chemoprevention
58Phytochemicals
- Isoflavones, phytoestrogens soy
- Catechins tea
- Sulfur compounds garlic
- Resveratrol red wine
- Flavonoids fruits and vegetables
59B-carotene, vitamin E and lung cancer
- Observation People with higher blood levels of
B-carotene and vitamin E had lower rates of lung
cancer - Experiment Give smokers (people at high risk of
lung cancer) B-carotene and vitamin E supplements
to reduce their risk
60Results (NEJM 19943301029)
61Results (NEJM 19943301029)
62Food synergy (EB2002)
- Results with isolated compounds disappointing
- Chronic disease much more complex than deficiency
disease - Apples vitamin C 5.7 mg total antioxidant
activity of apples 1500 mg vitamin C (Nature
2000405903) - Orange, apple, grape, blueberry combination has
greater effect than sum of individual effects - Soy concentrate genistein increased colon cancer
63aTwo arrows indicate more consistent evidence.
bCancers of the gastric cardia. cGIglycemic
index GLglycemic load. dEvidence for a
potential benefit from some components of fruits
and vegetables (not necessarily blanket effect).
eIncreased risk limited to smokers
64Breast Cancer
- Energy - rapid growth, obesity
- Alcohol
- Fat jury still out
- Fiber phytoestrogens, hormones
- Physical activity
- Vitamins/minerals
65Breast Cancer (cont.)
- Decrease risk
- Lower BMI
- High fiber
- Physical activity
- Low sex hormone levels
- High F/V intakes
- Increase risk
- Alcohol
- Obesity
- High sex hormone levels
- Dietary fat? jury still out
66Breast Cancer
- No association with fat intake in Nurses Health
Study (Boston) - Hunter et al. 1996 - lowest fat intake (lt 15
kcal) increased RR for BRCA - Post-menopausal BRCA related to adiposity (?
circulating estrogen)
67Colon Cancer
- Fuchs 1999. Giovanucci 1994, Platz 1997 - no hint
of fiber effect - Two recent intervention trials (high fiber, low
fat diet) - no effect on polyps - Michels 2000 - no hint of Fr-Veg effect in
health-conscious populations - Terry 2001 Fr-Veg protective in populations
with low intakes (especially fruits) - Adiposity - 43 waist circumference ? RR 2.0
(Giovanucci 1995) - Calcium, folate may decrease risk
68Modifiable Risk Factors
- BMI lt 25
- Physical activity ? 30/d
- Alcohol lt 15 g/d
- Folate supplement ?100 ?g/d
- Smoking ? 3 pack-years
- Red meat ? 2 servings/wk
- Would eliminate 70 of colon cancer (Platz et al.
2000)
69Colon Cancer - Tentative Summary
- Previous case-control studies subject to
selection bias, recall bias - Cancer clearly related to adiposity - energy
balance most important - Folate the most promising nutrient (at present)
for further investigation - mutation in THFR gene ? CaCo risk
- hi folate ? BRCA risk due to EtOH
70Prostate Cancer
- Nutritional Science Research Group, Division of
Cancer Prevention, NCI - Dietary fat
- Lycopene (tomatoes)
- Vitamin D and Calcium
- Selenium
- Vitamin E
- Soy products (isoflavones)
71Prostate cancer