Vitamin A and D3 combinations reduce breast cancer tumor load in a postmenopausal MCF-7 xenograft mouse model in a dose- and time- dependent manner
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.31989/ffhd.v14i12.1523Abstract
Introduction: Earlier, we documented that a combination of vitamins A and D3 synergistically inhibited the growth of MCF-7, T48:A18 and SKBR3 breast cancer cells with the best activity seen in the ER+ cell line MCF-7. Transcriptomic analysis of treated MCF-7 cells also showed that the combination significantly upregulated the apoptosis and unfolded protein response canonical pathways, and reduced estrogen signaling.
Objective: This study aimed to explore the impact of increasing vitamin A and D3 dose combinations over time in a postmenopausal model of breast cancer using ovariectomized athymic female mice bearing MCF-7 xenografts and further analyze mechanisms of action in MCF-7 cells using RNA-seq analysis.
Methods: MCF-7 breast cancer cells were grown in culture for the xenograft experiments. Athymic female mice were injected with MCF-7 cells (1 x 10^6 in 100 µl of 50% Matrigel mixed with sterile PBS) via subcutaneous injection. Once the tumors reached an average volume of 100 mm³, the mice were randomly divided into four groups and treated with different vitamin A and D3 combinations. Tumor sizes and mouse body weights were monitored on a biweekly basis. After the treatment period, the mice were euthanized, and the tumors were surgically removed and measured. RNA-seq data from the treated MCF-7 cells were then further evaluated using IPA.
Results: As compared with controls, treatment with vitamin A (25,000 IU) and vitamin D (10,000 IU) led to a significant reduction in tumor volume >70%, (p < 0.05-0.01) in OVX athymic mice with MCF-7 xenografts as determined by a two-tailed Student T test. Over the treatment period, the tumor volume in mice treated with vitamin A (10,000 IU) and vitamin D (5,000 IU) or vitamin A (25,000 IU) and vitamin D (5,000 IU) also trended downward and was statistically significant using one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) followed by Dunnett’s multiple comparison test (p<0.05 and p<0.0001, respectively) but was not significant using a two-tailed Student T test. In cultured MCF-7 cells, Ingenuity Pathway Analysis of mRNA-seq data showed that the vitamin A and D combination significantly altered the expression of 101 genes out of 864 in the molecular mechanisms in cancer canonical pathway, downregulating gene expression in the integrin/P13K/Akt/mTOR pathway.
Conclusions: The findings showed that the combination of vitamins A and D3 effectively reduced tumor burden in a postmenopausal MCF-7 xenograft mouse model, with effects that were both dose-dependent and time-dependent. The combination also significantly altered the expression of genes in the molecular mechanisms of cancer canonical pathway in cultured MCF-7 cells. These preclinical data support the use of vitamins A and D3 in the management of estrogen-dependent breast cancers, with the caveat that higher doses and longer treatment periods may be needed to observe anti-tumor effects.
Keywords: Apoptosis, autophagy, breast cancer, cell cycle, integrin, postmenopausal, P13K, tumor load, xenograft
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2024 Functional Foods in Health and Disease
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Any manuscripts or substantial parts of it, submitted to the journal must not be under consideration by or previously published in any other journal or citable form. Authors are required to ensure that no material submitted as part of a manuscript infringes existing copyrights or the rights of a third party. In submitting one's article in any form, the author has assigned the FFC publishing rights and has agreed to an automatic transfer of the copyright to the publisher. This is so that the FFC may create print option journals, for example, at the FFC’s discretion. If the author wishes to distribute their works by means outside of the FFC, for example within their community, they will have to place a request.
Correspondence concerning articles published in Functional Foods in Health and Disease is encouraged. While derivative works (adaptations, extensions on the current work, etc.) are allowed, distribution of the modified material is not allowed without permission from the FFC.