The Biphasic Effect of Flavonoids on Oxidative Stress and Cell Proliferation in Breast Cancer Cells.
Xiaomin XiJiting WangYue QinYilin YouWeidong HuangJi-Cheng ZhanPublished in: Antioxidants (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Flavonoids have been reported to play an essential role in modulating processes of cellular redox homeostasis such as scavenging ROS. Meanwhile, they also induce oxidative stress that exerts potent antitumor bioactivity. However, the contradiction between these two aspects still remains unclear. In this study, four typical flavonoids were selected and studied. The results showed that low-dose flavonoids slightly promoted the proliferation of breast cancer cells under normal growth via gradually reducing accumulated oxidative products and demonstrated a synergistic effect with reductants NAC or VC. Besides, low-dose flavonoids significantly reduced the content of ROS and MDA induced by LPS or Rosup but restored the activity of SOD. However, high-dose flavonoids markedly triggered the cell death via oxidative stress as evidenced by upregulated ROS, MDA and downregulated SOD activity that could be partly rescued by NAC pretreatment, which was also confirmed by antioxidative gene expression levels. The underlying mechanism of such induced cell death was pinpointed as apoptosis, cell cycle arrest, accumulated mitochondrial superoxide, impaired mitochondrial function and decreased ATP synthesis. Transcriptomic analysis of apigenin and quercetin uncovered that high-dose flavonoids activated TNF-α signaling, as verified through detecting inflammatory gene levels in breast cancer cells and RAW 264.7 macrophages. Moreover, we identified that BRCA1 overexpression effectively attenuated such oxidative stress, inflammation and inhibited ATP synthesis induced by LPS or high dose of flavonoids possibly through repairing DNA damage, revealing an indispensable biological function of BRCA1 in resisting oxidative damage and inflammatory stimulation caused by exogenous factors.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- cell death
- cell cycle arrest
- high dose
- dna damage
- breast cancer cells
- low dose
- diabetic rats
- induced apoptosis
- cell proliferation
- gene expression
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- stem cell transplantation
- pi k akt
- dna repair
- dna methylation
- anti inflammatory
- transcription factor
- rheumatoid arthritis
- inflammatory response
- signaling pathway
- copy number
- rna seq
- endothelial cells
- drug induced
- high glucose
- cell cycle
- genome wide