TY - JOUR
T1 - Quercetin mediates preferential degradation of oncogenic Ras and causes autophagy in Ha-RAS-transformed human colon cells
AU - Psahoulia, Faiy H.
AU - Moumtzi, Sophy
AU - Roberts, Michael L.
AU - Sasazuki, Takehiko
AU - Shirasawa, Senji
AU - Pintzas, Alexander
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by Greek General Secretariat for Research and Technology Research Program PENED 01ED227 and EU Research Program HPMD-CT-2001-00116 to A.P. We thank Dr Simos G. and Dr Georgatsou E., University of Thessaly, for their helpful discussion. We also thank Maria Evaggelidou, Hellenic Pasteur Institute, for her assistance in FACS analysis.
PY - 2007/5
Y1 - 2007/5
N2 - Several food polyphenols act as chemopreventers by reducing the incidence of many types of cancer, especially in colon epithelia. In this study, we have investigated whether the flavonoid quercetin can modulate cell proliferation and survival by targeting key molecules and/ or biological processes responsible for tumor cell properties. The effect of quercetin on the expression of Ras oncoproteins was specifically studied using systems of either constitutive or conditional expression of oncogenic RAS in human epithelial cells. Our findings suggest that quercetin inhibits cell viability as well as cancer cell properties like anchorageindependent growth. These findings were further supported at the molecular level, since quercetin treatment resulted in a preferential reduction of Ras protein levels in cell lines expressing oncogenic Ras proteins. Notably, in cells that only express wildtype Ras or in those where the oncogenic Ras allele was knocked out, quercetin had no evident effects upon Ras levels. We have shown that quercetin drastically reduces half-life of oncogenic Ras but has no effect when the cells are treated with a proteasome inhibitor. Moreover, in Ha-RAS-transformed cells, quercetin induces autophagic processes. Since quercetin downregulates the levels of oncogenic Ras in cancer cells, we propose that this flavonoid could act as a chemopreventive agent for cancers with frequent mutations of RAS genes.
AB - Several food polyphenols act as chemopreventers by reducing the incidence of many types of cancer, especially in colon epithelia. In this study, we have investigated whether the flavonoid quercetin can modulate cell proliferation and survival by targeting key molecules and/ or biological processes responsible for tumor cell properties. The effect of quercetin on the expression of Ras oncoproteins was specifically studied using systems of either constitutive or conditional expression of oncogenic RAS in human epithelial cells. Our findings suggest that quercetin inhibits cell viability as well as cancer cell properties like anchorageindependent growth. These findings were further supported at the molecular level, since quercetin treatment resulted in a preferential reduction of Ras protein levels in cell lines expressing oncogenic Ras proteins. Notably, in cells that only express wildtype Ras or in those where the oncogenic Ras allele was knocked out, quercetin had no evident effects upon Ras levels. We have shown that quercetin drastically reduces half-life of oncogenic Ras but has no effect when the cells are treated with a proteasome inhibitor. Moreover, in Ha-RAS-transformed cells, quercetin induces autophagic processes. Since quercetin downregulates the levels of oncogenic Ras in cancer cells, we propose that this flavonoid could act as a chemopreventive agent for cancers with frequent mutations of RAS genes.
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U2 - 10.1093/carcin/bgl232
DO - 10.1093/carcin/bgl232
M3 - Article
C2 - 17148506
AN - SCOPUS:34447092454
SN - 0143-3334
VL - 28
SP - 1021
EP - 1031
JO - Carcinogenesis
JF - Carcinogenesis
IS - 5
ER -