Microgreens: Functional Food with Antiproliferative Cancer Properties Influenced by Light.
Francesca TruzziAnne WhittakerChiara RoncuzziAnnalisa SaltariMitchell Paul LevesqueGiovanni DinelliPublished in: Foods (Basel, Switzerland) (2021)
The anti-proliferative/pro-oxidant efficacy of green pea, soybean, radish, Red Rambo radish, and rocket microgreens, cultivated under either fluorescent lighting (predominant spectral peaks in green and orange) or combination light-emitting diode (LED, predominant spectral peak in blue) was investigated using Ewing sarcoma lines, RD-ES and A673, respectively. All aqueous microgreen extracts significantly reduced cell proliferation (cancer prevention effect) to varying extents in two-dimensional sarcoma cell cultures. The effect of the polyphenol fraction in the aqueous food matrix was unrelated to total polyphenol content, which differed between species and light treatment. Only Pisum sativum (LED-grown) extracts exercised anti-proliferative and pro-apoptotic effects in both three-dimensional RD-ES and A673 spheroids (early tumor progression prevention), without cytotoxic effects on healthy L929 fibroblasts. A similar anti-tumor effect of Red Rambo radish (LED and fluorescent-grown) was evident only in the RD-ES spheroids. Aside from the promising anti-tumor potential of the polyphenol fraction of green pea microgreens, the latter also displayed favorable growth quality parameters, along with radish, under both light treatments over the 10 day cultivation period.
Keyphrases
- light emitting
- papillary thyroid
- anti inflammatory
- cell proliferation
- optical coherence tomography
- quantum dots
- squamous cell
- human health
- cell death
- ionic liquid
- poor prognosis
- stem cells
- squamous cell carcinoma
- lymph node metastasis
- computed tomography
- dual energy
- quality improvement
- magnetic resonance imaging
- atomic force microscopy
- high speed
- replacement therapy
- high resolution