Anti-cancer properties of olive oil secoiridoid phenols: a systematic review of in vivo studies
Food & Function Pub Date: 2016-09-05 DOI: 10.1039/C6FO00958A
Abstract
Epidemiological studies suggest that olive oil intake is associated to a reduced risk of cancer. Recently, the chemopreventive activity of olive oil has been attributed to its unique phenolic compounds represented by phenolic alcohols, hydroxytyrosol (3,4-dihydroxyphenylethanol: 3,4-DHPEA) and tyrosol (p-hydroxyphenylethanol: p-HPEA), and their secoiridoid derivatives 3,4-DHPEA-EA (oleuropein aglycon), p-HPEA-EA (ligstroside aglycon), 3,4-DHPEA-EDA, p-HPEA-EDA (oleocanthal), and oleuropein. Several studies have demonstrated that these compounds are able to inhibit proliferation and induce apoptosis in different tumor cell lines. These in vitro effects have been recently summarized in several reviews. The aim of this systematic review was to evaluate the in vivo anti-cancer activities of secoiridoid phenols as evidenced by either animal models of carcinogenesis or human intervention trials. From the literature research through “PubMed” and “Web of Science”, 16 animal studies and 5 human intervention trials were identified and included in the review. Most of the animal studies have confirmed the ability of these compounds to inhibit the carcinogenesis process at both initiation and promotion/progression phases. All human intervention trials have investigated the effects of olive oil phenols on DNA damage. Among the five selected studies, three have shown a significant preventive effect on oxidative DNA damage in terms of reduction of 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2′-deoxyguanosine in urine, in mitochondria DNA of mononuclear cells and in lymphocyte DNA. The other two studies failed to see an effect on the urinary excretion of either etheno–DNA adducts or oxidation products of guanine. Further investigations are necessary to clarify the real chemopreventive potential of olive oil secoiridoid phenols on humans performing intervention studies on populations at high cancer risk.
Recommended Literature
- [1] Exchanged ligands on the surface of a giant cluster: [(MoO3)176(H2O)63(CH3OH)17Hn](32 – n)– Chem. Commun., 1998, 1501-1502 10.1039/A801804I
- [2] Emerging investigator series: bacteriophages as nano engineering tools for quality monitoring and pathogen detection in water and wastewater Fereshteh BayatEnviron. Sci.: Nano, 2021,8, 367-389 10.1039/D0EN00962H
- [3] Fatty acid eutectic mixtures and derivatives from non-edible animal fat as phase change materials? Pau Gallart-Sirvent,Marc Martín,Gemma Villorbina,Mercè Balcells,Aran Solé,Luisa F. Cabeza,Ramon Canela-GarayoaRSC Adv., 2017,7, 24133-24139 10.1039/C7RA03845C
- [4] Evolving better nanoparticles: Genetic algorithms for optimising cluster geometries Dalton Trans., 2003, 4193-4207 10.1039/B305686D
- [5] Examination of deposit in commercial diluted phosphoric acid Analyst, 1880,5, 146-147 10.1039/AN8800500146
- [6] Fast-Track to Research Data Management in Experimental Material Science-Setting the Ground for Research Group Level Materials Digitalization. LarsBanko,AlfredLudwig 10.1021/acscombsci.0c00057
- [7] Emergence of cationic polyamine dendrimersomes: design, stimuli sensitivity and potential biomedical applications Partha Laskar,Christine DufèsNanoscale Adv., 2021,3, 6007-6026 10.1039/D1NA00536G
- [8] Excellent electrochemical performance of LiFe0.4Mn0.6PO4 microspheres produced using a double carbon coating process? Yong Ping Huang,Tao Tao,Zheng Chen,Wei Han,Ying Wu,Chunjiang Kuang,Shaoxiong Zhou,Ying ChenJ. Mater. Chem. A, 2014,2, 18831-18837 10.1039/C4TA03994G
- [9] Enabling high-throughput single-animal gene-expression studies with molecular and micro-scale technologies Jason WanLab Chip, 2020,20, 4528-4538 10.1039/D0LC00881H
- [10] Exchangeability of amino acid residues with similar physicochemical properties in coiled-coil interactions? Guiying Zhang,Maosheng Cheng,Yanni Li,Keliang Liu,Lifeng CaiChem. Commun., 2013,49, 11086-11088 10.1039/C3CC46560H
Journal Name:Food & Function
research_products
-
CAS no.: 89640-58-4