Hepatic vitamin A preloading reduces colorectal cancer metastatic multiplicity in a mouse xenograft model

Riferimento: 
Nutr Cancer. 2012;64(5):732-40.
Autori: 
Park EY, Pinali D, Lindley K, Lane MA.
Fonte: 
Nutr Cancer. 2012;64(5):732-40.
Anno: 
2012
Azione: 
Supplementare dieta di vitamina A può ridurre il numero complessivo di metastasi epatiche derivanti da cancro al colon.
Target: 
Vit.A/cancro al colon.

ABSTRACT
Previous research in our laboratory showed that retinol inhibited all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA)-resistant human colon cancer cell invasion via a retinoic acid receptor-independent mechanism in vitro. The objective of the current study was to determine if dietary vitamin A supplementation inhibited metastasis of ATRA-resistant colon cancer cells in a nude mouse xenograft model. Female nude mice (BALB/cAnNCr-nu/nu, n = 14 per group) consumed a control diet (2,400 IU retinyl palmitate/kg diet) or a vitamin A supplemented diet (200,000 IU retinyl palmitate/kg diet) for 1 mo prior to tumor cell injection to preload the liver with vitamin A. HCT-116, ATRA-resistant, human colon cancer cells were intrasplenically injected. Mice continued to consume their respective diets for 5 wk following surgery. Consumption of supplemental vitamin A decreased hepatic metastatic multiplicity to 17% of control. Hepatic and splenic retinol and retinyl ester concentrations were significantly higher in the mice supplemented with vitamin A when compared to mice consuming the control diet. Supplemental vitamin A did not decrease body weight, feed intake, or cause toxicity. Thus, supplemental dietary vitamin A may decrease the overall number of hepatic metastasis resulting from colon cancer.
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