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Modulatory Effects of Polyphenols on Apoptosis Induction: Relevance for Cancer Prevention

Polyphenols, occurring in fruit and vegetables, wine, tea, extra virgin olive oil, chocolate and other cocoa products, have been demonstrated to have clear antioxidant properties in vitro, and many of their biological actions have been attributed to their intrinsic reducing capabilities. However, it...

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Autores principales: D'Archivio, Massimo, Santangelo, Carmela, Scazzocchio, Beatrice, Varì, Rosaria, Filesi, Carmela, Masella, Roberta, Giovannini, Claudio
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI) 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2635670/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19325744
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author D'Archivio, Massimo
Santangelo, Carmela
Scazzocchio, Beatrice
Varì, Rosaria
Filesi, Carmela
Masella, Roberta
Giovannini, Claudio
author_facet D'Archivio, Massimo
Santangelo, Carmela
Scazzocchio, Beatrice
Varì, Rosaria
Filesi, Carmela
Masella, Roberta
Giovannini, Claudio
author_sort D'Archivio, Massimo
collection PubMed
description Polyphenols, occurring in fruit and vegetables, wine, tea, extra virgin olive oil, chocolate and other cocoa products, have been demonstrated to have clear antioxidant properties in vitro, and many of their biological actions have been attributed to their intrinsic reducing capabilities. However, it has become clear that, in complex biological systems, polyphenols exhibit several additional properties which are yet poorly understood. Apoptosis is a genetically controlled and evolutionarily conserved form of cell death of critical importance for the normal embryonic development and for the maintenance of tissue homeostasis in the adult organism. The malfunction of the death machinery may play a primary role in various pathological processes, since too little or too much apoptosis can lead to proliferative or degenerative diseases, respectively. Cancer cells are characterized by a deregulated proliferation, and/or an inability to undergo programmed cell death. A large body of evidence indicates that polyphenols can exert chemopreventive effects towards different organ specific cancers, affecting the overall process of carcinogenesis by several mechanisms: inhibition of DNA synthesis, modulation of ROS production, regulation of cell cycle arrest, modulation of survival/proliferation pathways. In addition, polyphenols can directly influence different points of the apoptotic process, and/or the expression of regulatory proteins. Although the bulk of data has been obtained in in vitro systems, a number of clinical studies suggesting a preventive and therapeutic effectiveness of polyphenols in vivo is available. However, a deeper knowledge of the underlying mechanisms responsible for the modulation of apoptosis by polyphenols, and their real effectiveness, is necessary in order to propose them as potential chemopreventive and chemotherapeutic candidates for cancer treatment.
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spelling pubmed-26356702009-03-25 Modulatory Effects of Polyphenols on Apoptosis Induction: Relevance for Cancer Prevention D'Archivio, Massimo Santangelo, Carmela Scazzocchio, Beatrice Varì, Rosaria Filesi, Carmela Masella, Roberta Giovannini, Claudio Int J Mol Sci Review Polyphenols, occurring in fruit and vegetables, wine, tea, extra virgin olive oil, chocolate and other cocoa products, have been demonstrated to have clear antioxidant properties in vitro, and many of their biological actions have been attributed to their intrinsic reducing capabilities. However, it has become clear that, in complex biological systems, polyphenols exhibit several additional properties which are yet poorly understood. Apoptosis is a genetically controlled and evolutionarily conserved form of cell death of critical importance for the normal embryonic development and for the maintenance of tissue homeostasis in the adult organism. The malfunction of the death machinery may play a primary role in various pathological processes, since too little or too much apoptosis can lead to proliferative or degenerative diseases, respectively. Cancer cells are characterized by a deregulated proliferation, and/or an inability to undergo programmed cell death. A large body of evidence indicates that polyphenols can exert chemopreventive effects towards different organ specific cancers, affecting the overall process of carcinogenesis by several mechanisms: inhibition of DNA synthesis, modulation of ROS production, regulation of cell cycle arrest, modulation of survival/proliferation pathways. In addition, polyphenols can directly influence different points of the apoptotic process, and/or the expression of regulatory proteins. Although the bulk of data has been obtained in in vitro systems, a number of clinical studies suggesting a preventive and therapeutic effectiveness of polyphenols in vivo is available. However, a deeper knowledge of the underlying mechanisms responsible for the modulation of apoptosis by polyphenols, and their real effectiveness, is necessary in order to propose them as potential chemopreventive and chemotherapeutic candidates for cancer treatment. Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI) 2008-02-28 /pmc/articles/PMC2635670/ /pubmed/19325744 Text en © 2008 by MDPI
spellingShingle Review
D'Archivio, Massimo
Santangelo, Carmela
Scazzocchio, Beatrice
Varì, Rosaria
Filesi, Carmela
Masella, Roberta
Giovannini, Claudio
Modulatory Effects of Polyphenols on Apoptosis Induction: Relevance for Cancer Prevention
title Modulatory Effects of Polyphenols on Apoptosis Induction: Relevance for Cancer Prevention
title_full Modulatory Effects of Polyphenols on Apoptosis Induction: Relevance for Cancer Prevention
title_fullStr Modulatory Effects of Polyphenols on Apoptosis Induction: Relevance for Cancer Prevention
title_full_unstemmed Modulatory Effects of Polyphenols on Apoptosis Induction: Relevance for Cancer Prevention
title_short Modulatory Effects of Polyphenols on Apoptosis Induction: Relevance for Cancer Prevention
title_sort modulatory effects of polyphenols on apoptosis induction: relevance for cancer prevention
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2635670/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19325744
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