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Anti-cancer effects of polyphenol-rich sugarcane extract

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 17:59 authored by Monica Prakash, Lily Stojanovska, Jack Feehan, Kulmira Nurgali, Elizabeth Donald, Magdalena PlebanskiMagdalena Plebanski, Matthew Flavel, Barry Kitchen, Vasso Apostolopoulos
Plant polyphenols have an array of health benefits primarily thought to be related to their high content of anti-oxidants. These are commonly undervalued and knowledge of their biological properties have grown exponentially in the last decade. Polyphenol-rich sugarcane extract (PRSE), a natural extract from sugar cane, is marketed as high in anti-oxidants and polyphenols, but its anti-cancer activity has not been reported previously. We show that, PRSE exerts anti-cancer properties on a range of cancer cells including human (LIM2045) and mouse (MC38, CT26) colon cancer cells lines; human lung cancer (A549), human ovarian cancer (SKOV-3), pro-monocytic human leukemia (U937) and to mouse melanoma (B16) cell lines; whereas no effects were noted on human breast (ZR-75-1) and human colon (HT29) cancer cell lines, as well as to human normal colon epithelial cell line (T4056). Anti-proliferative effects were shown to be mediated via alteration in cytokines, VEGF-1 and NF-κB expression.

History

Journal

PLoS One

Volume

16

Number

e0247492

Issue

3

Start page

1

End page

14

Total pages

14

Publisher

Public Library of Science

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© Copyright: © 2021 Prakash et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) License

Former Identifier

2006109946

Esploro creation date

2021-10-10

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