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Dietary energy balance modulates ovarian cancer progression and metastasis

A high energy balance, or caloric excess, accounts as a tumor promoting factor, while a negative energy balance via caloric restriction, has been shown to delay cancer progression. The effect of energy balance on ovarian cancer progression was investigated in an isogeneic immunocompetent mouse model...

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Autores principales: Al-Wahab, Zaid, Tebbe, Calvin, Chhina, Jasdeep, Dar, Sajad A., Morris, Robert T., Ali-Fehmi, Rouba, Giri, Shailendra, Munkarah, Adnan R., Rattan, Ramandeep
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4171613/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25026276
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author Al-Wahab, Zaid
Tebbe, Calvin
Chhina, Jasdeep
Dar, Sajad A.
Morris, Robert T.
Ali-Fehmi, Rouba
Giri, Shailendra
Munkarah, Adnan R.
Rattan, Ramandeep
author_facet Al-Wahab, Zaid
Tebbe, Calvin
Chhina, Jasdeep
Dar, Sajad A.
Morris, Robert T.
Ali-Fehmi, Rouba
Giri, Shailendra
Munkarah, Adnan R.
Rattan, Ramandeep
author_sort Al-Wahab, Zaid
collection PubMed
description A high energy balance, or caloric excess, accounts as a tumor promoting factor, while a negative energy balance via caloric restriction, has been shown to delay cancer progression. The effect of energy balance on ovarian cancer progression was investigated in an isogeneic immunocompetent mouse model of epithelial ovarian cancer kept on a regimen of regular diet, high energy diet (HED) and calorie restricted diet (CRD), prior to inoculating the animals intraperitoneally with the mouse ovarian surface epithelial ID8 cancer cells. Tumor evaluation revealed that mice group on HED displayed the most extensive tumor formation with the highest tumor score at all organ sites (diaphragm, peritoneum, bowel, liver, kidney, spleen), accompanied with increased levels of insulin, leptin, insulin growth factor-1 (IGF-1), monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1), VEGF and interleukin 6 (IL-6). On the other hand, the mice group on CRD exhibited the least tumor burden associated with a significant reduction in levels of insulin, IGF-1, leptin, MCP-1, VEGF and IL-6. Immunohistochemistry analysis of tumors from HED mice showed higher activation of Akt and mTOR with decreased adenosine monophosphate activated kinase (AMPK) and SIRT1 activation, while tumors from the CRD group exhibited the reverse profile. In conclusion, ovarian cancer growth and metastasis occurred more aggressively under HED conditions and was significantly curtailed under CRD. The suggested mechanism involves modulated secretion of growth factors, cytokines and altered regulation of AMPK and SIRT1 that converges on mTOR inhibition. While the role of a high energy state in ovarian cancer has not been confirnmed in the literature, the current findings support investigating the potential impact of diet modulation as adjunct to other anticancer therapies and as possible individualized treatment strategy of epithelial ovarian cancer.
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spelling pubmed-41716132014-09-23 Dietary energy balance modulates ovarian cancer progression and metastasis Al-Wahab, Zaid Tebbe, Calvin Chhina, Jasdeep Dar, Sajad A. Morris, Robert T. Ali-Fehmi, Rouba Giri, Shailendra Munkarah, Adnan R. Rattan, Ramandeep Oncotarget Research Paper A high energy balance, or caloric excess, accounts as a tumor promoting factor, while a negative energy balance via caloric restriction, has been shown to delay cancer progression. The effect of energy balance on ovarian cancer progression was investigated in an isogeneic immunocompetent mouse model of epithelial ovarian cancer kept on a regimen of regular diet, high energy diet (HED) and calorie restricted diet (CRD), prior to inoculating the animals intraperitoneally with the mouse ovarian surface epithelial ID8 cancer cells. Tumor evaluation revealed that mice group on HED displayed the most extensive tumor formation with the highest tumor score at all organ sites (diaphragm, peritoneum, bowel, liver, kidney, spleen), accompanied with increased levels of insulin, leptin, insulin growth factor-1 (IGF-1), monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1), VEGF and interleukin 6 (IL-6). On the other hand, the mice group on CRD exhibited the least tumor burden associated with a significant reduction in levels of insulin, IGF-1, leptin, MCP-1, VEGF and IL-6. Immunohistochemistry analysis of tumors from HED mice showed higher activation of Akt and mTOR with decreased adenosine monophosphate activated kinase (AMPK) and SIRT1 activation, while tumors from the CRD group exhibited the reverse profile. In conclusion, ovarian cancer growth and metastasis occurred more aggressively under HED conditions and was significantly curtailed under CRD. The suggested mechanism involves modulated secretion of growth factors, cytokines and altered regulation of AMPK and SIRT1 that converges on mTOR inhibition. While the role of a high energy state in ovarian cancer has not been confirnmed in the literature, the current findings support investigating the potential impact of diet modulation as adjunct to other anticancer therapies and as possible individualized treatment strategy of epithelial ovarian cancer. Impact Journals LLC 2014-07-05 /pmc/articles/PMC4171613/ /pubmed/25026276 Text en Copyright: © 2014 Al-Wahab et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Al-Wahab, Zaid
Tebbe, Calvin
Chhina, Jasdeep
Dar, Sajad A.
Morris, Robert T.
Ali-Fehmi, Rouba
Giri, Shailendra
Munkarah, Adnan R.
Rattan, Ramandeep
Dietary energy balance modulates ovarian cancer progression and metastasis
title Dietary energy balance modulates ovarian cancer progression and metastasis
title_full Dietary energy balance modulates ovarian cancer progression and metastasis
title_fullStr Dietary energy balance modulates ovarian cancer progression and metastasis
title_full_unstemmed Dietary energy balance modulates ovarian cancer progression and metastasis
title_short Dietary energy balance modulates ovarian cancer progression and metastasis
title_sort dietary energy balance modulates ovarian cancer progression and metastasis
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4171613/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25026276
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