PLoS One, 2013 Sep 4;8(9):e73151
Diet is one of the major lifestyle factors affecting
incidence of colorectal cancer (CC), and despite accumulating evidence that
numerous diet-derived compounds modulate CC incidence, definitive dietary
recommendations are not available.
We propose a strategy that could facilitate the design of
dietary supplements with CC-preventive properties. Thus, nutrient combinations
that are a source of apoptosis-inducers and inhibitors of compensatory cell
proliferation pathways (e.g., AKT signaling) may produce high levels of
programmed death in CC cells.
Here we report the combined effect of butyrate, an apoptosis
inducer that is produced through fermentation of fiber in the colon, and
propolis, a honeybee product, on CC cells. We established that propolis
increases the apoptosis of CC cells exposed to butyrate through suppression of
cell survival pathways such as the AKT signaling. The programmed death of CC
cells by combined exposure to butyrate and propolis is further augmented by
inhibition of the JNK signaling pathway. Analyses on the contribution of the
downstream targets of JNK signaling, c-JUN and JAK/STAT, to the apoptosis of
butyrate/propolis-treated CC cells ascertained that JAK/STAT signaling has an
anti-apoptotic role; whereas, the role of cJUN might be dependent upon
regulatory cell factors.
Thus, our studies ascertained that propolis augments
apoptosis of butyrate-sensitive CC cells and re-sensitizes butyrate-resistant
CC cells to apoptosis by suppressing AKT signaling and downregulating the
JAK/STAT pathway.
Future in vivo studies should evaluate the CC-preventive
potential of a dietary supplement that produces high levels of colonic
butyrate, propolis, and diet-derived JAK/STAT inhibitors.
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