Evidence of pomegranate methanolic extract in antagonizing the endogenous SERM, 27-hydroxycholesterol.
Ravindran ViniAzeez M JuberiyaSreeharshan SreejaPublished in: IUBMB life (2016)
The direct relationship between obesity and breast cancer has been elucidated recently with the identification of a cholesterol derivative 27-hydroxycholesterol (27HC), an endogenous SERM that can act through estrogen receptor (ER)-mediated mechanisms. Our recent research shed light on the possible SERM-like property of methanol extract of pericarp of pomegranate (PME) by using human breast (MCF-7, MDA-MB-231), endometrial (HEC-1A), cervical (SiHa, HeLa), ovarian (SKOV3) cancer cell lines, normal breast fibroblasts (MCF-10A) and also by in vivo models (ovariectomized Swiss albino mice). Our findings demonstrated that PME binds to ER and downregulates the Estrogen response elements (ERE)-mediated transcription in breast cancer cells without being agonistic in the uterine endometrium and has cardioprotective effects comparable to that of 17-β-estradiol. This preliminary work indicates the ability of PME to antagonize the activity of 27HC. We hypothesize that PME can compete with 27HC for ERα and reduce 27HC-induced proliferation of MCF-7 cells. Relevant estrogen-regulated genes such as pS2, PR and ERα were checked to evaluate the ability of PME to abrogate 27HC-induced genes. This study is significant, being the first report describing that bioactive components of the methanolic extract of pericarp of PME, a proven SERM could plausibly compete for 27HC.
Keyphrases
- breast cancer cells
- estrogen receptor
- oxidative stress
- diabetic rats
- high glucose
- endothelial cells
- cell cycle arrest
- induced apoptosis
- bioinformatics analysis
- high fat diet induced
- genome wide
- type diabetes
- transcription factor
- insulin resistance
- weight loss
- anti inflammatory
- signaling pathway
- genome wide identification
- carbon dioxide
- weight gain
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- body mass index
- dna methylation
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- childhood cancer