Reduced growth and integrin expression of prostate cells cultured with lycopene, vitamin E and fish oil in vitro

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Abstract

Integrins are transmembrane proteins that facilitate the interaction of cells with the extracellular environment. They have also been implicated in cancer progression. The effects of nutrients thought to be involved in the prevention of prostate cancer on integrin expression have not been determined. Prostate cancer cell lines representing a range of malignancy from normal (RWPE-1) to highly invasive phenotypes (22Rv1 < LNCaP < PC-3) were cultured with or without lycopene (10 nM), vitamin E (5 μM) or fish oil (100 μM) for 48 h. Growth and integrin (α2β1, αv β3 and αvβ5) expression were assessed using Trypan Blue exclusion and monoclonal antibodies combined with flow cytometry. Vitamin E enhanced (P < 0.001) whereas fish oil reduced the growth of all the cell lines tested (P < 0.001). Lycopene had no effect on growth. All the malignant cell lines exhibited lower expression of α2 β1 with the addition of lycopene to culture media. Supplemental fish oil reduced α2β1 in most invasive cell lines (LNCaP and PC-3). Each nutrient at physiological levels reduced integrins αv β3 and αvβ5 in most invasive cell lines (PC-3). The results suggest that integrins may represent an additional target of bioactive nutrients and that the effects of nutrients may be dependent on the type of cell line used.

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Bureyko, T., Hurdle, H., Metcalfe, J. B., Clandinin, M. T., & Mazurak, V. C. (2009). Reduced growth and integrin expression of prostate cells cultured with lycopene, vitamin E and fish oil in vitro. British Journal of Nutrition, 101(7), 990–997. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007114508051684

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