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Query: UMLS:C0699790 (
colon cancer
)
28,837
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Differentiation inducers act through polyamine-dependent and independent pathways.
Sodium butyrate
(NaB) inhibits proliferation and induces terminal differentiation in human and murine cancer cell lines. An effect of this agent on polyamine biosynthesis has not been demonstrated previously. In the present study, we examined the effects of NaB on polyamine biosynthesis in mouse
colon cancer
(MC-26) cells. All studies were performed on exponentially growing cells, and ODC and polyamine transport measurements were performed as described previously. NaB inhibited the growth of MC-26 cells in a dose-dependent manner. Cell shape was significantly altered by treatment with NaB (development of dendritic-like processes and flattening and spreading out of cells on culture dishes). NaB stimulated ODC activity in a dose-dependent manner. The activity was elevated by 8 h after treatment, and at 48 h there was a ten-fold increase in activity (compared with control activity). The increase in ODC activity led to an increase in polyamine biosynthesis; putrescine, spermidine, and spermine levels in MC-26 cells were significantly elevated by 24 h after treatment with NaB. Polyamine uptake was similar in control cells and cells treated with NaB alone. Our finding of significant stimulation of polyamine uptake by NaB after inhibition of endogenous synthesis (by an ODC-dependent pathway) in DFMO-treated cells suggests that cellular requirements are increased for polyamines in NaB-treated cells. We conclude that polyamine-dependent processes are important in the mechanism of action of NaB in
colon cancer
cells.
...
PMID:Sodium butyrate stimulates polyamine biosynthesis in colon cancer cells. 134 Dec 66
Butyrate has induced differentiation in neoplastic cells grown in vitro, among them being
colon cancer
cell lines. In vivo, only one major study used sodium butyrate in the drinking water and showed an elevation in 1,2-dimethylhydrazine induced
colon cancer
in rats. Seeking to show that it was the sodium and not the butyrate which was responsible for the enhancement, we fed tributyrin at a 5% level to mice for 48 weeks. Mice experienced normal growth and development at this dose. Analysis of short chain fatty acids in the feces after 6 months in tributyrin feeding showed a 10-fold increase in
butyric acid
. However no difference in AOM induced focal areas of dysplasia or colonic tumor incidence was observed between tributyrin fed and control mice. At least two conclusions have been reached by this study, (1) that the dietary use of a sodium salt can contribute to the enhancement of chemically induced colon neoplasia and (2) butyrate may be discounted as providing any major therapeutic benefit against colonic tumorigenesis.
...
PMID:Dietary butyrate (tributyrin) does not enhance AOM-induced colon tumorigenesis. 235 22
Sodium butyrate
induces morphological and biochemical changes consistent with a more differentiated phenotype in some
colon cancer
cell lines. These changes include increased expression of carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) and other oncodevelopmental markers. We utilized domain-specific probes and polyclonal antibodies against CEA-related antigens to study sodium butyrate-induced expression of the CEA gene family in a villous adenoma-derived cell line, which is nontumorigenic in nude mice (VACO 235), and two colonic carcinoma cell lines known to respond to sodium butyrate exposure by phenotypic differentiation (HT-29 and LS 174T). The induction begins as quickly as 24 h after exposure and occurs primarily at a transcriptional level, although some translational control is also evident. No evidence was found for gene amplification, rearrangement, or methylation to account for the mechanism of this transcriptional control. [35S]Cysteine pulse-labeled cell lysate immunoblots and polyadenylated RNA blot hybridization suggest that increases in mRNA transcript and CEA-related glycoprotein levels are primarily due to increased synthesis rather than decreased degradation. A considerable amount of heterogeneity is seen in the biosynthesis of the CEA-related glycoproteins, with each cell line showing a distinct pattern of CEA-related antigen expression from a limited number of mRNA transcripts.
...
PMID:Heterogeneity in the induction and expression of carcinoembryonic antigen-related antigens in human colon cancer cell lines. 272 Jun 85
The effect of sodium butyrate and retinoic acid added singly or in combination on substrate-dependent growth, colonization efficiency in soft agar, and carcino-embryonic antigen (CEA) production in three human colorectal carcinoma cell lines differing in their degree of differentiation was studied. All three
colon cancer
cell lines regardless of their state of differentiation had their growth markedly slowed by sodium butyrate, and to a lesser extent by retinoic acid. When both agents were added together, a small synergistic inhibition of growth was noted in all the cell lines. Butyrate eliminated colony formation in soft agar in all three cell lines, however, retinoic acid only reduced colony formation in the well differentiated cell line DLD-2.
Sodium butyrate
was able to induce CEA production in the undifferentiated cell (MIP-101) and the moderately differentiated cells (clone D) which were previously negative for this marker. It also enhanced the baseline production of CEA in the well differentiated cells (DLD-2). Retinoic acid did not induce CEA production in clone D or MIP-101 cells, but did enhance the production of CEA in DLD-2 cells. When both retinoic acid and sodium butyrate were added together, CEA production was either additive (DLD-2) or was inhibited (clone D and MIP-101). One explanation of these results is that only well differentiated cells have functional cellular retinoic acid-binding protein (cRABP), and that certain actions of retinoic acid (inhibition of anchorage-dependent growth) are independent of the presence of cRABP.
...
PMID:The effect of sodium butyrate and retinoic acid on growth and CEA production in a series of human colorectal tumor cell lines representing different states of differentiation. 336 71
The incidence, distribution, size, and histopathology of small and large bowel tumors induced by parenteral administration of 1,2-dimethylhydrazine were examined in rats given 1% or 2% sodium butyrate dissolved in drinking water. Although previous in vitro reports on
colon cancer
cell lines have suggested that sodium butyrate might have a role to play as a chemotherapeutic "differentiating agent," the results of this in vivo study indicate that sodium butyrate treatment enhanced the development of colonic neoplasia and was associated with increased fecal
butyric acid
concentrations. In contrast, no changes were seen in the incidence of small bowel tumors, luminal
butyric acid
concentrations, mucosal morphology, or brush-border enzyme activities (i.e., sucrase, alkaline phosphatase). This study suggests that dietary butyrate has an important, possibly indirect, regulatory role in carcinogenesis associated with an experimental animal model of colonic neoplasia.
...
PMID:Effects of differing concentrations of sodium butyrate on 1,2-dimethylhydrazine-induced rat intestinal neoplasia. 373 64
Calcium supplementation decreases the incidence of
colon cancer
in animal models and may prevent
colon cancer
in man. Potential mechanisms include binding of mitogens and direct effects of calcium on colonic epithelial cells. In this study, the effects of extracellular calcium on epithelial cell growth and differentiation were studied in three colon carcinoma and two colonic adenoma cell lines. The characteristics studied included morphology, cell cycle kinetics, [Ca2+]IC (intracellular calcium concentration), proliferation, and expression of differentiation markers such as carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) and alkaline phosphatase (AP).
Sodium butyrate
(NaB) and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 were used as controls in the latter three assays as these two agents are known differentiating agents. Alteration of [Ca+2]EC (extracellular calcium concentration) did not affect carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) or alkaline phosphatase (AP) expression. NaB enhanced the expression of AP three-fold and CEA five-fold. This effect was augmented by increasing [Ca2+]EC. The exposure of cells to 1,25-(OH)2-Vitamin D3 increased CEA but not AP. [Ca2+]IC increased in response to 1,25-(OH)2-vitamin D3 and NaB but not with variation in [Ca2+]EC. Increased [Ca2+]EC inhibited proliferation of well-differentiated cells, but had no effect on poorly-differentiated cells. Morphological studies showed that extracellular calcium was necessary for normal cell-cell interactions. These studies have demonstrated direct effects of calcium on colonic epithelial cells which may contribute to the protective effects of dietary calcium against
colon cancer
. Loss of responsiveness to the antiproliferative effects of [Ca2+]EC with de-differentiation suggests that calcium supplementation may be most beneficial prior to the development of neoplastic changes in colonic epithelium.
...
PMID:The effect of extracellular calcium on colonocytes: evidence for differential responsiveness based upon degree of cell differentiation. 777 41
A high-fat/high-protein diet has been reported to promote
colon cancer
by increasing luminal bile acid and ammonia concentrations, whereas butyrate, calcium, and low colonic pH may have protective effects. In this study, bromodeoxyuridine labeling of colonic epithelium was investigated after incubating biopsies from the ascending colon of 70 patients with HCl (20 mM, pH 6.0),
butyric acid
(H-BUT, 20 mM, pH 6.0), sodium butyrate (Na-BUT, 10 mM, pH 8.0), CaCl2 (10 mM), calcium butyrate (Ca-BUT, 10 mM), ammonium butyrate (NH4-BUT, 10 mM), deoxycholic acid (DCA, 5 microM), and a combination of DCA and Na-BUT (DCA/Na-BUT, 5 microM/10 mM). Compared to NaCl, H-BUT and Na-BUT increased the whole crypt-labeling index significantly, whereas HCl and CaCl2 had no effect. Reduced labeling, however, occurred with Ca-BUT in comparison to equimolar Na-BUT. No differences in the labeling indexes were found for NH4-BUT compared to Na-BUT, but increased labeling with expansion of the proliferative zone to the upper 40% of the crypt was seen with DCA compared to NaCl. DCA-induced hyperproliferation was abolished by coincubation with DCA/Na-BUT. These data suggest that butyrate, calcium, and DCA have complex influences on mucosal proliferation. Since luminal concentrations of these compounds are influenced by dietary interventions, the findings of this study may be of particular interest with regard to
colon cancer
development and prevention.
...
PMID:Proliferation of human colonic mucosa as an intermediate biomarker of carcinogenesis: effects of butyrate, deoxycholate, calcium, ammonia, and pH. 832 39
The purpose of this study was to determine whether cultured colonic adenoma and carcinoma cells undergo apoptosis (programmed cell death) in vitro and whether specific growth and dietary factors, thought to be involved in the control of growth and differentiation of human colonic cells, could induce cell death through apoptosis. In cell lines originating from 6 colorectal adenomas and 7 carcinomas, spontaneous apoptosis was observed.
Sodium butyrate
, a naturally occurring fatty acid, is present in the human large bowel in millimolar amounts as a result of bacterial fermentation of dietary fibre.
Sodium butyrate
, at physiological concentrations, induced apoptosis in 2 adenoma cell lines, RG/C2 and AA/Cl, and in the carcinoma cell line PC/JW/FI. In contrast, transforming growth factor beta 1, which is thought to have an important role in the control of growth in colonic epithelium, did not induce apoptosis. Neither RG/C2 nor PC/JW/FI contain wild-type p53, therefore this tumour-suppressor gene is not required to mediate signals for the induction of apoptosis in colonic tumour cells. Our studies report the induction of apoptosis in colonic tumour cells by the naturally occurring fatty acid sodium butyrate. Since sodium butyrate is produced by bacterial fermentation of dietary fibre, the observation that this fatty acid can induce apoptosis could, in part, explain why a high-fibre diet appears to be protective against
colon cancer
. Escape from the induction of programmed cell death may be an important event in colorectal carcinogenesis.
...
PMID:Sodium butyrate induces apoptosis in human colonic tumour cell lines in a p53-independent pathway: implications for the possible role of dietary fibre in the prevention of large-bowel cancer. 839 67
Sodium butyrate
(NaBu) but not dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) induced the synthesis of villin, a protein of the brush border microvilli cytoskeleton, in a rat
colon cancer
cell line. Neither NaBu nor DMSO altered mdr 1-mRNA expression or multidrug resistance (MDR)--associated cellular transport of doxorubicin. These results show that mdr 1 gene expression and activity are independent of other brush border proteins induced by differentiating agents at the apical pole of the epithelial cell.
...
PMID:mdr 1 gene-expression and villin synthesis in a colon cancer cell line differentiated by sodium butyrate. 851 66
The optimum approach to conquering cancer is prevention. Although the human diet contains components which promote cancer, it also contains components with the potential to prevent it. Recent research shows that milk fat contains a number of potential anticarcinogenic components including conjugated linoleic acid, sphingomyelin,
butyric acid
and ether lipids. Conjugated linoleic acid inhibited proliferation of human malignant melanoma, colorectal, breast and lung cancer cell lines. In animals, it reduced the incidence of chemically induced mouse epidermal tumors, mouse forestomach neoplasia and aberrant crypt foci in the rat colon. In a number of studies, conjugated linoleic acid, at near-physiological concentrations, inhibited mammary tumorigenesis independently of the amount and type of fat in the diet. In vitro studies showed that the milk phospholipid, sphingomyelin, through its biologically active metabolites ceramide and sphingosine, participates in three major antiproliferative pathways influencing oncogenesis, namely, inhibition of cell growth, and induction of differentiation and apoptosis. Mice fed sphingomyelin had fewer colon tumors and aberrant crypt foci than control animals. About one third of all milk triacylglycerols contain one molecule of
butyric acid
, a potent inhibitor of proliferation and inducer of differentiation and apoptosis in a wide range of neoplastic cell lines. Although butyrate produced by colonic fermentation is considered important for
colon cancer
protection, an animal study suggests dietary butyrate may inhibit mammary tumorigenesis. The dairy cow also has the ability to extract other potential anticarcinogenic agents such as beta-carotene, beta-ionone and gossypol from its feed and transfer them to milk. Animal studies comparing the tumorigenic potential of milk fat or butter with linoleic acid-rich vegetable oils or margarines are reviewed. They clearly show less tumor development with dairy products.
...
PMID:Cows' milk fat components as potential anticarcinogenic agents. 918 17
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