Cancer chemoprevention: Evidence of a nonlinear dose response for the protective effects of resveratrol in humans and mice

Hong Cai(University of Leicester), Edwina N. Scott(University of Leicester), Abeer Othman A. Kholghi(University of Leicester), Catherine Andreadi(University of Leicester), Alessandro Rufini(University of Leicester), Ankur Karmokar(University of Leicester), Robert G. Britton(University of Leicester), Emma Horner‐Glister(University of Leicester), Peter Greaves(University of Leicester), Dhafer Jawad(University of Leicester), Mark I. James(University of Leicester), Lynne Howells(University of Leicester), Ted Ognibene(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), Michael Malfatti(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), Christopher E. Goldring(University of Liverpool), Neil R. Kitteringham(University of Liverpool), Joanne Walsh(University of Liverpool), Maria Viskaduraki(University of Leicester), Kevin West(University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust), A. S. Miller(University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust), David Hemingway(University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust), William P. Steward(University of Leicester), Andreas J. Gescher(University of Leicester), Karen Brown(University of Leicester)
Science Translational Medicine
July 29, 2015
Cited by 177Open Access
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Abstract

Resveratrol is widely promoted as a potential cancer chemopreventive agent, but a lack of information on the optimal dose prohibits rationally designed trials to assess efficacy. To challenge the assumption that "more is better," we compared the pharmacokinetics and activity of a dietary dose with an intake 200 times higher. The dose-response relationship for concentrations generated and the metabolite profile of [(14)C]-resveratrol in colorectal tissue of cancer patients helped us to define clinically achievable levels. In Apc(Min) mice (a model of colorectal carcinogenesis) that received a high-fat diet, the low resveratrol dose suppressed intestinal adenoma development more potently than did the higher dose. Efficacy correlated with activation of adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK) and increased expression of the senescence marker p21. Nonlinear dose responses were observed for AMPK and mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) signaling in mouse adenoma cells, culminating in autophagy and senescence. In human colorectal tissues exposed to low dietary concentrations of resveratrol ex vivo, we measured enhanced AMPK phosphorylation and autophagy. The expression of the cytoprotective NAD(P)H dehydrogenase, quinone 1 (NQO1) enzyme was also increased in tissues from cancer patients participating in our [(14)C]-resveratrol trial. These findings warrant a revision of developmental strategies for diet-derived agents designed to achieve cancer chemoprevention.


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