Subscriber access provided by University of Pennsylvania Libraries
Bioactive Constituents, Metabolites, and Functions
Tea Polysaccharides Inhibits Colitis-associated Colorectal Cancer via Interleukin-6/STAT3 Pathway Li-Qiao Liu, Mingyue Shen, Shao-Ping Nie, Jie-Lun Hu, Qiang Yu, Deming Gong, and Ming-Yong Xie J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.8b00710 • Publication Date (Web): 15 Apr 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on April 15, 2018
Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.
is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
Page 1 of 38
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Figure 1
C Number of cells invade per field
A
Page 2 of 38
**
OD value
** **
Conditioned medium
-
+
+
+
+
TPS (μg/ml)
-
-
40
80
160
Conditioned medium TPS (μg/ml)
** ** **
-
+
+
+
+
-
-
40
80
160
B
Conditioned medium TPS (μg/ml)
- -
+ - ACS Paragon Plus Environment
+ 40
+ 80
+ 160
Page 3 of 38
Figure 2
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
A
Figure 3
C
Percent survival
B
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 4 of 38
Figure 4
Page 5 of 38
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
A B
C
D
E
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Figure 5 CD3
A
Merge
DAPI
C
CD68
Page 6 of 38
Merge
DAPI
Gr-1
E
A/D
A/D
A/D
A/D + TPS-L
A/D + TPS-L
A/D + TPS-L
A/D + TPS-M
A/D + TPS-M
A/D + TPS-M
A/D + TPS-H
A/D + TPS-H
A/D + TPS-H
D
B
Merge
F
**
* IOD
IOD
**
IOD
DAPI
**
**
**
**
** ACS Paragon Plus Environment
A/D
A/D+TPS-L
A/D+TPS-M
A/D+TPS-H
A/D
A/D+TPS-L
A/D+TPS-M
A/D+TPS-H
A/D
A/D+TPS-L
A/D+TPS-M
A/D+TPS-H
B Tumor tissues
Surrounding tissues
Tumor tissues Surrounding tissues
STAT3+ cells per view (%)
A
**
**
Surrounding tissues
pSTAT3+ cells per view (%)
A/D
Tumor tissues
Surrounding tissues
Surrounding tissues
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
A/D+TPS-M
A/D+TPS-H
** ** **
**
** **
A/D+TPS-L A/D+TPS-M
A/D+TPS-H
Tumor tissues Surrounding tissues
** **
** **
A/D
Tumor tissues
A/D+TPS-L
Tumor tissues Surrounding tissues
A/D
Tumor tissues
**
**
IL-6+ cells per view (%)
Figure 6
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Cyclin D 1+ cells per view (%)
Page 7 of 38
** **
A/D+TPS-L A/D+TPS-M
A/D+TPS-H
Tumor tissues Surrounding tissues
** **
** **
** **
A/D
A/D+TPS-L
A/D+TPS-M A/D+TPS-H
Figure 7
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 8 of 38
Page 9 of 38
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
1 2 3
Tea Polysaccharides Inhibit Colitis-associated Colorectal
4
Cancer via Interleukin-6/STAT3 Pathway
5 6
Li Qiao Liu,a, b Shao Ping Nie,* a Ming Yue Shen, a
7
Deming Gong, a, c
Jie Lun Hu, a
Qiang Yu, a
Ming Yong Xie* a
8 9
a
State Key Laboratory of Food Science and Technology, Nanchang University, Nan-
10
chang, Jiangxi 330047, China; b Basic Medical College, Nanchang University, Nan-
11
chang, Jiangxi 330047, China; c New Zealand Institute of Natural Medicine Research,
12
Auckland, 2104, New Zealand
13 14 15 16 17 18
Corresponding authors
19
* Professor Shao Ping Nia. State Key Laboratory of Food Science and Technology,
20
Nanchang University, 235 Nanjing East Road, Nanchang 330047, China. Tel/Fax: +86
21
791-88304452. E-mail address:
[email protected] 22
* Professor Ming Yong Xie. State Key Laboratory of Food Science and Technology,
23
Nanchang University, 235 Nanjing East Road, Nanchang 330047, China. Tel/Fax: +86
24
791-83969009. E-mail address:
[email protected] ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
25
ABSTRACT:
26
The interleukin-6 (IL-6)/signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT)-3
27
signaling pathway regulates proliferation and survival of intestinal epithelial cells, and
28
has profound impact on the tumorigenesis of colitis-associated cancer (CAC). Tea
29
polysaccharides (TPS) are the major nutraceutical component isolated from tea-leaves
30
and is known to possess antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and antitumor bioactivities.
31
Here, we investigated the antitumor activities of TPS on CAC using the
32
azoxymethane/dextran sulfate sodium (AOM/DSS) mouse model and IL-6-induced
33
colorectal cancer cell line (CT26), and determined whether TPS exerted its antitumor
34
effects through the IL-6/STAT3 pathway. Results demonstrated that TPS significantly
35
decreased the tumor incidence, tumor size, and markedly inhibited the infiltration of
36
pro-inflammatory cells and the secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines via balancing
37
cellular microenvironment. Furthermore, we found that TPS suppressed the activation
38
of STAT3 and transcriptionally regulate the expressions of downstream genes includ-
39
ing MMP2, cyclin Dl, survivin and VEGF, both in vivo and in vitro. Thus, it is con-
40
cluded that TPS attenuate the progress of CAC via suppressing IL-6/STAT3 pathway
41
and downstream genes’ expressions, which indicated that TPS may be a hopeful anti-
42
tumor agent for the prevention and treatment of colon cancer.
43
KEYWORDS: Tea polysaccharides (TPS), colitis-associated cancer (CAC), inter-
44
leukin-6 (IL-6), signal transducer and activator of transcription-3 (STAT3)
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 10 of 38
Page 11 of 38
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
45
INTRODUCTION
46
Colorectal carcinoma (CRC) is the third most common malignancy in the devel-
47
oped countries, with the change of people’s eating habits and lifestyle, the morbidity
48
of patients with colon cancer has been rising steadily in the developing countries in
49
recent years.1-3 Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) sufferers are at increased risks for
50
developing ulcerative colitis-associated colorectal cancer (CAC).4-5 One of the im-
51
portant underlying etiologies of carcinogenesis in the colon is chronic inflammation,6
52
which can cause the gradual loss of the host’s antitumor immune effect, and might
53
promote the growth of malignant tumor.7
54
The chronic intestinal inflammation is also considered as one of the main influ-
55
ence factors in the progress of CAC by facilitating pro-inflammatory cytokine pro-
56
duction, cell proliferation, alterations in immune responses and thereby promoting
57
tumorigenesis.8-9 Therefore, the anti-inflammatory therapy may be an effectively way
58
to reduce the incidence of CAC, and many epidemiological studies have found
59
chemoprevention effects of natural or synthetic compounds in preventing, or revers-
60
ing the process of carcinogenesis.10-11
61
One of the cytokines, IL-6, a critical tumor-associated inflammatory promoter
62
during early CAC tumorigenesis, was mostly mediated by the signal activator and
63
regulator of transcription STAT3 protein overexpressed and persistently activated in
64
CAC.12 Transcription factors STAT3 are originally located in the cytoplasm in their
65
inactive state. After “receives” those extracellular signals, including cell growth fac-
66
tors, cytokines, and hormones, the activated Janus kinases (JAKs) subsequently
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
67
phosphorylates STAT3 on Tyr 705. Activated STAT3 protein dimerizes and translo-
68
cates from the cytoplasm into nucleus, where they binding to specific recognition sites
69
and regulate the expression of downstream target genes involved in proliferation, sur-
70
vival, migration and invasion.13-14 The constitutive activation of STAT3 proteins was
71
constantly detected in clinical tumor specimens from an extensive range of human
72
tumor, especially gastrointestinal carcinoma.15 Hence, STAT3 has been considered as
73
a hopeful pharmacological target of cancer chemoprevention and therapy.
74
China is the hometown of tea (Camellia sinensis L.O. Kuntze), and it is the larg-
75
est tea producer in the world.16 In 2015, the cultivated area of tea trees in China
76
reached up to 2.87 million hectares. Tea polysaccharides (TPS) are a kind of bioactive
77
compound with great potential for exploitation. Along with the increase of people’s
78
living standard, the coarse leaves are unsalable for their worse taste so that it causes a
79
huge waste of nature resources. Extracting TPS from coarse tea leaves can not only
80
utilize the tea leaves resources sufficiently but also is significant to promote human
81
health.17 While the low-grade/coarse leaves was discovered to contain more polysac-
82
charides when compared with the high-grade/tender tea leaves.18 The monosaccharide
83
compositions of TPS were confirmed to be rhamnose, arabinose, ribose, xylose,
84
mannose, galactose, glucose and so on.19 It has been reported that TPS had diverse
85
biologically activities such as anti-tumor, hypolipidemic, hypotensive, antioxidant and
86
anti-virus activities, and enhanced body immunity function.20
87
The current clinic treatment of CRC is not satisfactory, and the common treat-
88
ment may lead to the body immunological system damages.21 Fortunately, the
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 12 of 38
Page 13 of 38
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
89
food-borne TPS has a specific feature of low toxicity and immunoregulation function,
90
without above-mentioned drawbacks.22 Recent numerous studies have described the
91
antitumor activity of polysaccharides in tumor-bearing mice and tumor cell lines.23-28
92
These researches mainly focused on the chemical constitution and structure of poly-
93
saccharides, and explored its immunoregulatory and antitumor functions. However,
94
the details of the underlying molecular mechanisms behind these biological functions
95
have remained unclear. In this study, we used the purified TPS whose structure was
96
preliminarily identified by our group,29-30 and investigated the anti-tumor effects of
97
TPS on CAC mice colon carcinogenesis and mouse colon tumor cell line CT26 under
98
inflammatory conditions. We have, for the first time, found that TPS may exhibit an
99
antitumor effect via inhibiting STAT3 activation through IL-6/STAT3 signaling path-
100
way, and offered new perspective into the potential treatment of regulating the in-
101
flammatory cell infiltration and STAT3 activation by TPS.
102
MATERIALS AND METHODS
103
Reagents and chemicals
104
Extraction and purification of TPS from the low-grade tea leaves were collected
105
in Wuyuan County, Jiangxi Province, China. This specie was identified by Prof.
106
Zhi-hong Fu, Jiangxi University of Traditional Chinese Medical University (Nan-
107
chang, China). A voucher specimen (Wu tea No.1) were deposited at the State Key
108
Laboratory of Food Science and Technology, Nanchang University, Jiangxi Province,
109
China.
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
110
The best condition was 80% aqueous alcohol, 1:10 as the ratio for 24 h. The res-
111
idue could be placed in boiling water for 4 h. Extracted twice, use 80% alcohol to
112
precipitate the crude polysaccharides. Use Sevag method to remove protein, and this
113
deproteinization step was repeated 3 times. The crude polysaccharides were extracted
114
in distilled water for 72 h, concentrated by vacuum and then freeze dried.30
115
Azoxymethane (AOM) was from Sigma-Aldrich Corporation (St. Louis, MO,
116
United States). Dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) was from MP Biomedicals Inc. (Irvine,
117
CA, United States). Anti-mouse CD68 PE, anti-mouse CD3 FITC, and Anti-mouse
118
Gr-1 FITC were purchased from eBioscience (San Diego, CA, United States). IL-6
119
recombinant protein was obtained from R&D Systems (Abingdon, Oxon, United
120
Kingdom). Primary antibodies against t-STAT3 and p-STAT3 were obtained from
121
Abcam (Cambridge, UK); Antibodies against cyclin D1, survivin and IL-6 were ob-
122
tained from Cell Signaling Technology Inc. (Danvers, MA, USA); Antibodies against
123
MMP-2 and VEGF were obtained from R & D Systems (Minneapolis, MN, USA);
124
Antibody against β-actin was purchased from ZSGB-BIO (Beijing, China). The sec-
125
ondary antibodies were purchased from ZSGB-BIO (Beijing, China).
126
Cell culture and conditioned culture
127
Mouse colon carcinoma cells (CT26) were obtained from Type Culture Collec-
128
tion of Chinese Academy of Sciences (Shanghai, China). RAW 264.7 cells were pur-
129
chased from ATCC (Rockville, MD, United States). CT26 cells and RAW 264.7 cells
130
were grown in RPMI-1640 medium with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS). Cells were
131
grown in the carbon dioxide incubator at 37 °C. After 25 ng/ml IL-6 were added into
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 14 of 38
Page 15 of 38
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
132
the RAW 264.7 cells culture medium or 12 h, the culture media were removed and
133
and replaced with free-serum media for the next 12 h, then the culture supernatant of
134
RAW 264.7 cells was collected by centrifugation at 3,000 rpm/min for 8 min. In the
135
co-culture system, cells were placed in the culture supernatant in the with or without
136
of TPS for 24 h (RAW 264.7 and CT26 in a ratio of 1:4).
137
Cell proliferation assays
138
CT26 cells’ survival ability were measured by the Cell Counting Kit 8 (CCK8;
139
Dojindo Lab, Kumamoto, Japan). CT26 cells were seeded in 96-well plates exposed
140
to the conditional culture in the absence or presence of TPS for 24 h. After 24 h, 10 µl
141
of CCK8 reagent was dripped into and the CT26 cells were cultivated at the carbon
142
dioxide incubator for 1 h. The optical density (OD) was measured with a microplate
143
reader (Thermo, Shanghai, China) at 450 nm immediately.
144
Cell matrigel invasion assay
145
CT26 cells’ migration rate was investigated by using transwell chambers assays.
146
Briefly, the experiment was operated after CT26 cells were treated with IL-6-activated
147
RAW264.7 conditioned medium absence or presence TPS for 24 h. In the upper
148
chamber, approximately 1 × 104 tumor cells were seeded with serum-free culture me-
149
dium, while culture medium including 10% FBS was added into the lower chamber.
150
The culture medium containing TPS (40-160 µg/ml) was added into the upper cham-
151
ber. About 24 hours later, crystal violet staining was used to observe the invaded cells.
152
The number of invaded cells was calculated under microscope.
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
153
AOM/DSS-induced CAC carcinogenesis and TPS treatment
154
6-8 weeks BALB/c mice were from Medical Laboratory Animal Center, Medical
155
College, Nanchang University. All animals used in this experiment were kept for ac-
156
cording to the guidelines published in the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory
157
Animals (NRC 2011), and this experiment gained admission from Nanchang Univer-
158
sity Animal Ethnics Committee, Nanchang University, China. The AOM/DSS mice
159
model was widely used in the study of the occurrence and progression of colon cancer
160
and a powerful model for chemopreventive intervention studies.31 The AOM/DSS
161
mice were intraperitoneally (ip) injected with AOM (10 mg/kg, dissolved in saline)
162
and maintained on a regular food and water for 7 days. 2% DSS drinking water for a
163
further 7 days. Then all experimental animals were given regular water continued for
164
14 days and suffered 2 more 2% DSS water cycles. The CAC mice were randomly
165
divided into 4 groups (n = 10). TPS-treated animals received TPS intervention every
166
day via gastric incubation from Week 4 to the end of the study. Whereas the model
167
control group was given 0.9% saline. The body weights of mice were monitored 3
168
times per week. On Day 112, all experimental animals were sacrificed and the colon
169
tissues, spleen samples, and thymus samples were obtained. The colon samples were
170
opened longitudinally, and counted the number of megascopic tumors with a caliper.
171
and then stored at −80 °C for further detection.
172
Immunofluorescence of colon tissue
173
The macrophage (CD68+), the neutrophil (Gr-1+) and B lymphocyte (CD3+) in-
174
filtration analyses were performed on paraffin section of mice colon tissue.32-33 Briefly,
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 16 of 38
Page 17 of 38
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
175
the thin-tissue sections were deparaffinized, rehydrated and washed with PBS. Then
176
the sections were treated with H2O2 and blocked with 5% BSA reacted with an-
177
ti-CD68+, anti-Gr-1+ and anti-CD3+ antibodies (1:100) for 1 h. The slides were
178
co-incubated with DAPI about 30 min. Images were observed with a fluorescent mi-
179
croscope (Olympus, Lake Success, NY).
180
Immunohistochemistry of colon tissue
181
The protein expression levels of STAT3, pSTAT3, IL-6, and cyclin-Dl in the co-
182
lonic tissues were judged by immunohistochemistry. The thin-tissue sections were
183
rehydrated, in sequence, from xylene to graded ethanol solutions. The paraffin sec-
184
tions were blocked with TBST containing 5% BSA for 2 h, and the sections were then
185
co-incubated with first antibodie at a dilution of 1:100 overnight. The tissue sections
186
were co-incubated with the matched secondary antibodie for 2 h. With the manufac-
187
turer’s instructions, the slides co-incubated with DAB kit for 10 min. All immuno-
188
histochemical staining was assessed by two pathologists blinded to the specimen in-
189
formation.
190
Cytokine Assay
191
The supernatant of the colonic tissue homogenate was harvested and purified.
192
The concentrations of IL-2, IL-6, IL-10, TNF-α and IFN-γ were determined by ELISA
193
kits (Boster Biotechnology, Wuhan, China) according to the manufacturers’ instruc-
194
tions.
195
Western blot analysis
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
196
The expression levels of STAT3, pSTAT3, Cyclin-Dl, MMP2, survivin and
197
VEGF were determined by Western blotting analysis. Aim proteins were separated by
198
SDS-PAGE and were transferred to a PVDF membrane. Blots were blocked with
199
TBST containing 5% BSA for 2 h and further incubated overnight at 4 ℃ with the
200
first antibodies. After washed with TBST 3 times, the PVDF membranes were
201
co-incubated with the secondary antibody RT for 1.5 h. After a further 3 times wash-
202
ing, and the PVDF membranes was visualized by using the enhanced chemilumines-
203
cence detection system (Bio-Rad, CA, USA).
204
Statistical analysis
205
Data were expressed as means ± SD. One-way ANOVA was used to determine
206
the difference between various groups. All statistical results were analyzed by SPSS
207
17.0 software. P values less than 0.05 was deemed to be statistically significant.
208
RESULTS
209
TPS inhibited the growth of CT26 cells exposed to the conditional culture me-
210
dium from IL-6-activated RAW 264.7 cells
211
IL-6 was reported to be a determining factor of the alternative activation of
212
macrophages and was associated with poor survival.34-35 The growth and invasive ca-
213
pacity of CT26 cells were also detected in vitro. The non-contact culture system was
214
used in this study.36 The CT26 cells were exposed to culture medium from
215
IL-6-stimulated RAW 264.7 cells to determine the bioactivity of TPS on the devel-
216
opment of inflammation-associated cancer. It was found that the conditional culture
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 18 of 38
Page 19 of 38
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
217
medium from IL-6-stimulated macrophages promoted the growth of CT26 cells (Fig-
218
ure 1A). Conversely, the treatment with TPS significantly slowed the growth of CT26
219
cells in a dose-dependent manner (Figure 1A). Similar to the results from cell prolif-
220
eration assay, matrigel invasion assay showed that the invasion ability of CT26 cells
221
was significantly decreased by treatment with TPS at concentrations 40-160 µg/ml for
222
24 h (Figure 1B and C).
223
TPS inhibited IL-6-activated STAT3 pathway in CT26 cells
224
Dysregulation of IL-6/STAT3 pathway has a important role in the development
225
of colorectal cancer.37-38 Western blotting analysis showed that TPS suppressed the
226
conditional medium-induced activation of STAT3 in a concentration dependent man-
227
ner (Figure 2). Furthermore, the conditional medium induced the protein expression
228
levels of STAT3 downstream proteins, including MMP2, cyclin-Dl, survivin and
229
VEGF. Oppositely, TPS reduced the expression levels of these proteins (Figure 2). In
230
conclusion, TPS inhibited the activation of STAT3 pathway stimulated by the condi-
231
tional medium from IL-6-induced RAW264.7 cells in murine colon carcinoma cells.
232
TPS inhibited the occurrence and progression of CAC
233
We used the AOM/DSS-induced colonic carcinogenesis BALB/c mouse model to
234
determine the anti-tumor effect of TPS on CAC tumorigenesis (Figure 3 A). We found
235
that TPS was well tolerated among the BALB/c mice, and no toxic effect and adverse
236
reaction were observed in any organ examined of all the mice in experimental groups
237
until 112 days (Table 1). Compared to the AOM/DSS group, TPS significantly in-
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
238
creased the survival rate of CAC mice throughout the experiment (Figure 3B). As
239
shown in Figure 3C, TPS at high-dose markedly increased the body weight of CAC
240
mice, and the body weights among all intervention groups were higher than the
241
AOM/DSS group at the end of the study. Also, as shown in Figure 4A, the size of tu-
242
mor was smaller and the number was lower in the TPS-intervention groups, and the
243
colons were longer in TPS-treated groups than the AOM/DSS group at Day 112. The
244
statistical analysis of tumor size, tumor number and colon length showed that TPS
245
dramatically attenuated the development of CAC in the AOM/DSS mice (Figure
246
4B-D).
247
The HE staining technique was used to assess the inflammation status in colonic
248
tissue slice (Figure 4E). Macroscopically, multiple nodular-like colonic adenocarci-
249
noma with heterogeneous population of cells and cellular cleavage were discovered in
250
the distal colon of CAC mice. All findings are consistent with a previous report.39
251
Surprisingly, TPS at a high dose was found to inhibit AOM/DSS induced chronic co-
252
litis and extensive infiltration of inflammatory cells (Figure 4E). In conclusion, these
253
results indicated that TPS relieved colitis-associated colorectal carcinogenesis, and
254
thereby attenuating tumor progression in the CAC mice.
255
TPS relieved the extent of inflammatory cells infiltration
256
Inflammation, especially the chronic inflammation of tumor microenvironment
257
can cause the gradually losing of the host’s antitumor immune effect, and might pro-
258
mote the growth of malignant tumor.40 To evaluate the pathological degree and sever-
259
ity of colonic inflammation of AOM/DSS mice, we stained the section to test the de-
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 20 of 38
Page 21 of 38
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
260
gree of macrophage (CD68+), neutrophil (Gr-1+) and B lymphocyte (CD3+) infiltra-
261
tion. A higher macrophages, neutrophils, and B lymphocytes were accumulated in the
262
tumor regions of AOM/DSS mice. Obviously, TPS reduced the clustering of the in-
263
flammatory cells into the tumor tissue regions compared with those in the AOM/DSS
264
mice (Figure 5A-F). It’s worth noting that high-dose TPS group showed more signifi-
265
cantly than the other two TPS- treated groups in inhibiting the inflammatory cellular
266
infiltration.
267
TPS changed cytokine secretion in the colon tissues
268
The immunosuppressive cytokines produced by the tumor cells were closely re-
269
lated to the occurrence and development of inflammatory-associated cancer.41-42 TPS
270
treatment was found to change the secretion cytokines in the colon tissue, such as
271
IL-2, IL-6, IL-10,TNF-α and IFN-γ (Table 2). Significant decreases in the levels of
272
IL-2, IL-6, IL-10,TNF-α and IFN-γ were found in TPS-treated CAC mice, and the
273
contents of IL-10 were significantly increased in the 100 mg/kg and 200 mg/kg TPS
274
groups compared with the AOM/DSS group on Day 112 (P < 0.05). There was no ob-
275
vious differences of TNF-α, IFN-γ and IL-10 secretion between 50 mg/kg TPS treat-
276
ment group and AOM/DSS group at Day 112.
277
TPS inhibited STAT3 activation via regulating IL-6/STAT3 pathway
278
IL-6/STAT3 cascade is an important regulator of the proliferation and deprava-
279
tion of tumor-initiating intestinal epithelial cells.43 In our study, we determined
280
whether TPS might be able to inhibit the activation STAT3. We measured the levels of
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
281
phosphorylated STAT3 [p-STAT3 (Tyr705)] and total STAT3 (t-STAT3) in the
282
AOM/DSS and TPS-treated groups. It was found that TPS inhibited the phosphoryla-
283
tion of STAT3. Moreover, we examined the expression levels of the downstream pro-
284
teins of STAT3, including survivin, cyclin D1, MMP-2, and VEGF by western blots.
285
The data showed that TPS significantly decreased the levels of pSTAT3, Cyclin D1,
286
survivin, MMP-2 and VEGF (Figure 6). In addition, the protein levels of STAT3,
287
pSTAT3, Cyclin D1 and IL-6 in mouse colon tissues were examined by immuno-
288
histochemical staining. TPS was found to inhibit the expression of phosphorylated
289
STAT3 in colonic tumor tissues of CAC mice (Figure 7). These results suggested that
290
TPS may suppress colon tumorigenesis, at least in part, via inhibiting the activation of
291
the IL-6/STAT3 signaling pathway.
292
DISCUSSION
293
The colorectal cancer is one of the most common malignant cancers, whose
294
global incidence rates have been increased gradually. Aside from hereditary factors,
295
environmental factors may play key roles in colon carcinogenesis.44 Chronic inflam-
296
mation is closely related to the progression of the carcinogenesis of colon. Patients
297
with colon carcinoma were mainly treated by surgery and assisted with some other
298
ways, such as chemotherapy, radiotherapy and so on.45-46 However, the chemotherapy
299
drugs are limited and have apparent toxic side effects which may cause severe damage
300
to the body's immune system and hematopoietic system.47 So it is necessary to devel-
301
op novel chemopreventive agents with high selectivity and minor toxic side effects.
302
Many clinical studies have reported the pharmacological bioactivities of tea, in-
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 22 of 38
Page 23 of 38
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
303
cluding anti-inflammatory, anti-oxidant, hypolipidemic effects, anti-tumor and im-
304
munomodulating effects.48-53 Tea polysaccharides and polyphenols are the major bio-
305
active components and may have a bright future in the application in medicine.54 Most
306
of natural polysaccharides are extracted from Chinese herbal plants, such as ginseng
307
and edible fungi, such as Ganoderma lucidum, but they are expensive. More and more
308
researchers are studying the use of tea polysaccharides extracted from the low-grade
309
tea in food and medicine industries. Our previous studies have reported that polysac-
310
charides might be beneficial for the colon health in mice.55-57
311
In this study, we established the AOM/DSS mice model and macrophages-colon
312
cancer cells co-culture model to determine the anti-tumor bioactivity of TPS. Our data
313
showed that TPS substantially improved the survival rate of AOM/DSS mice (Figure
314
3B). Besides, it played a noticeable function to attenuate intestinal chronic inflamma-
315
tion and inhibit carcinogenesis caused by AOM/DSS without side effects (Table 1).
316
TPS significantly reduced the tumor number, tumor size, and occurrence of large size
317
colonic adenomas in the CAC mice (Figure 4). Exploring the molecular mechanism
318
by which TPS exhibits anti-tumor activity is very important. Tumor occurrence and
319
development were driven in various occasions by inflammatory immune cells, which
320
produced cytokines and chemokines that stimulate the development and survival of
321
tumor cells.12 Furthermore, several cytokines, chemokines and tumor growth factors
322
secreted by inflammatory cells and tumor cells exerts critical pro-tumorigenic effects
323
to support the growth of colorectal cancer cells.58 There are increasing experimental
324
evidence and clinical data showing that carcinoma cells, immunosuppressive cells and
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
325
immune effector cells within the tumor microenvironment control antitumor immuni-
326
ty and immune escape.59-61
327
In order to confirm our visual observations, we carried out a series of quantita-
328
tive analyses in the study. TPS was found to remarkably alleviate DSS-induced exten-
329
sive infiltration of inflammatory cells as determined by HE and immunofluorescence
330
staining (Figure 4E and 5). A significant decline in the number of macrophages
331
(CD68+), neutrophils (Gr-1+) and B lymphocytes (CD20+) infiltration into the tumor
332
sites was observed in the TPS-treated groups (Figure 5). Furthermore, ELISA analysis
333
showed that TPS effectively reduced the levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines, IL-2,
334
IL-6, INF-γ and TNFα in the distal colon (Table 2). It was noteworthy that TPS in-
335
creased the production of anti-inflammatory cytokine, IL-10.
336
We further explored the molecular mechanism underlying the anti-tumor activity
337
of TPS. In this experiment, we examined the effect of TPS on IL-6/STAT3 pathway
338
under inflammatory conditions in vivo and in vitro. STAT3 is in the intersection of
339
some distinct but cross-linked pathways, and has appeared as a potential target for
340
tumor immunotherapy.62 The aberrantly activation of STAT3 was reported to promote
341
further release of pro-inflammatory cytokines, formed the vicious cycle of cytokine
342
crosstalk, and accelerate the growth of malignant tumors.63 In vivo results confirmed
343
that TPS inhibited the activation of STAT3 and the levels of downstream proteins’ ex-
344
pression (Figure 7). In order to verify our speculation, we established the non-contact
345
co-cultured cell system in vitro (CT26 cells exposed to the conditioned culture media
346
from IL-6-activated RAW264.7). The CCK8 assay and western blotting analysis in-
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 24 of 38
Page 25 of 38
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
347
dicated TPS significantly inhibited the proliferation of CT26 cells in the co-cultured
348
cell system (Figure 1). Further, TPS reduced the activation of STAT3 and the expres-
349
sion of STAT3 downstream proteins, such as MMP2, cyclin-Dl, survivin and VEGF
350
(Figure 2).
351
Taken together, this study has shown that TPS inhibited the progression of CAC
352
and regulated the biological behaviors of CT26 cells via inhibiting STAT3 activation.
353
Therefore, TPS might be a promising tumor chemopreventive agent for treating in-
354
flammation-associated colon cancer in the future.
355
Funding Sources
356 357
The Excellent Youth Foundation of National Natural Science Foundation of China(No.31422042)
358
Key Program of National Natural Science Foundation of China (No.31130041)
359
National Natural Science Foundation of China (No: 31560438)
360
Natural Science Foundation of Jiangxi Province, China (20161BAB214163)
361 362
363
Notes The authors declare that there are no conflicts of interest.
Acknowledgements
364
The financial support for this study by National Key Technology R& D Program
365
of China, Key Program of National Natural Science Foundation of China, the Pro-
366
gram for New Century Excellent Talents in University and Research Project of State
367
Key Laboratory of Food Science and Technology, is gratefully acknowledged.
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Page 26 of 38
368 369
REFERNCES
370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408
1. Marmol, I.; Sanchez-de-Diego, C.; Pradilla Dieste, A.; Cerrada, E.; Rodriguez Yoldi, M. J., Colorectal carcinoma: a general overview and future perspectives in colorectal cancer. International journal of molecular sciences 2017, 18 (1). 2. Siegel, R. L.; Miller, K. D.; Jemal, A., Cancer statistics, 2016. CA-Cancer J. Clin. 2016, 66 (1), 7-30. 3. Siegel, R. L.; Miller, K. D.; Fedewa, S. A.; Ahnen, D. J.; Meester, R. G. S.; Barzi, A.; Jemal, A., Colorectal cancer statistics, 2017. CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians 2017, 67 (3), 177-193. 4. Jess, T.; Rungoe, C.; Peyrin-Biroulet, L., Risk of colorectal cancer in patients with ulcerative colitis: a meta-analysis of population-based cohort studies. Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology 2012, 10 (6), 639-645. 5. Robles, A. I.; Traverso, G.; Zhang, M.; Roberts, N. J.; Khan, M. A.; Joseph, C.; Lauwers, G. Y.; Selaru, F. M.; Popoli, M.; Pittman, M. E.; Ke, X.; Hruban, R. H.; Meltzer, S. J.; Kinzler, K. W.; Vogelstein, B.; Harris, C.
C.;
Papadopoulos,
N.,
Whole-exome
sequencing
analyses
of
inflammatory
bowel
disease−associated colorectal cancers. Gastroenterology 2016, 150 (4), 931-943. 6. Qu, D.; Shen, L.; Liu, S.; Li, H.; Ma, Y.; Zhang, R.; Wu, K.; Yao, L.; Li, J.; Zhang, J., Chronic inflammation confers to the metabolic reprogramming associated with tumorigenesis of colorectal cancer. Cancer biology & therapy 2017, 18 (4), 237-244. 7. Gomez-Chou, S.; Swidnicka-Siergiejko, A.; Badi, N.; Chavez-Tomar, M.; Lesinski, G. B.; Bekaii-Saab, T.; Farren, M. R.; Mace, T. A.; Schmidt, C.; Liu, Y.; Deng, D.; Hwang, R. F.; Zhou, L.; Moore, T. T.; Chatterjee, D.; Wang, H.; Leng, X.; Arlinghaus, R. B.; Logsdon, C. D.; Cruz-Monserrate, Z., Lipocalin-2 promotes pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma by regulating inflammation in the tumor microenvironment. Cancer research 2017. 8. Oshima, H.; Nakayama, M.; Han, T. S.; Naoi, K.; Ju, X.; Maeda, Y.; Robine, S.; Tsuchiya, K.; Sato, T.; Sato, H.; Taketo, M. M.; Oshima, M., Suppressing TGFbeta signaling in regenerating epithelia in an inflammatory microenvironment is sufficient to cause invasive intestinal cancer. Cancer research 2015, 75 (4), 766-76. 9. Meeker, S.; Seamons, A.; Maggio-Price, L.; Paik, J., Protective links between vitamin D, inflammatory bowel disease and colon cancer. World journal of gastroenterology 2016, 22 (3), 933-948. 10. Lee, J. H.; Khor, T. O.; Shu, L.; Su, Z. Y.; Fuentes, F.; Kong, A. N., Dietary phytochemicals and cancer prevention: Nrf2 signaling, epigenetics, and cell death mechanisms in blocking cancer initiation and progression. Pharmacology & therapeutics 2013, 137 (2), 153-71. 11. Shi, N.; Clinton, S. K.; Liu, Z.; Wang, Y.; Riedl, K. M.; Schwartz, S. J.; Zhang, X.; Pan, Z.; Chen, T., Strawberry phytochemicals inhibit azoxymethane/dextran sodium sulfate-induced colorectal carcinogenesis in Crj: CD-1 mice. Nutrients 2015, 7 (3), 1696-715. 12. Grivennikov, S.; Karin, E.; Terzic, J.; Mucida, D.; Yu, G. Y.; Vallabhapurapu, S.; Scheller, J.; Rose-John, S.; Cheroutre, H.; Eckmann, L.; Karin, M., IL-6 and Stat3 are required for survival of intestinal epithelial cells and development of colitis-associated cancer. Cancer cell 2009, 15 (2), 103-13. 13. Park, J. H.; van Wyk, H.; McMillan, D. C.; Quinn, J.; Clark, J.; Roxburgh, C. S.; Horgan, P. G.;
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 27 of 38
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452
Edwards, J., Signal transduction and activator of transcription-3 (STAT3) in patients with colorectal cancer: associations with the phenotypic features of the tumor and host. Clinical cancer research : an official journal of the American Association for Cancer Research 2017, 23 (7), 1698-1709. 14. Lesina, M.; Kurkowski, Magdalena U.; Ludes, K.; Rose-John, S.; Treiber, M.; Klöppel, G.; Yoshimura, A.; Reindl, W.; Sipos, B.; Akira, S.; Schmid, Roland M.; Algül, H., Stat3/Socs3 activation by IL-6 transsignaling promotes progression of pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia and development of pancreatic cancer. Cancer cell 2011, 19 (4), 456-469. 15. Oshima, H.; Oshima, M., The inflammatory network in the gastrointestinal tumor microenvironment: lessons from mouse models. Journal of gastroenterology 2012, 47 (2), 97-106. 16. Feng, L.; Yan, Z.; Sun, B.; Cai, C.; Jiang, H.; Kua, E. H.; Ng, T. P.; Qiu, C., Tea consumption and depressive symptoms in older people in rural China. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society 2013, 61 (11), 1943-7. 17. Olennikov, D. N.; Kashchenko, N. I.; Chirikova, N. K., Meadowsweet teas as new functional beverages: comparative analysis of nutrients, phytochemicals and biological effects of four filipendula species. Molecules 2016, 22 (1). 18. Xiao, J. B.; Jiang, H., A review on the structure-function relationship aspect of polysaccharides from tea materials. Critical reviews in food science and nutrition 2015, 55 (7), 930-8. 19. Xiao, J.; Huo, J.; Jiang, H.; Yang, F., Chemical compositions and bioactivities of crude polysaccharides from tea leaves beyond their useful date. International journal of biological macromolecules 2011, 49 (5), 1143-1151. 20. Yang, J.; Chen, B.; Gu, Y., Pharmacological evaluation of tea polysaccharides with antioxidant activity in gastric cancer mice. Carbohydrate polymers 2012, 90 (2), 943-7. 21. Haller, D. G.; Tabernero, J.; Maroun, J.; de Braud, F.; Price, T.; Van CutSD, E.; Hill, M.; Gilberg, F.; Rittweger, K.; Schmoll, H.-J., Capecitabine plus oxaliplatin compared with fluorouracil and folinic acid as adjuvant therapy for stage III colon cancer. J Clin Oncol 2011, 29 (11), 1465-1471. 22. Chen, H.; Zhang, M.; Qu, Z.; Xie, B., Compositional analysis and preliminary toxicological evaluation of a tea polysaccharide conjugate. Journal of agricultural and food chemistry 2007, 55 (6), 2256-60. 23. Cui, H. Y.; Wu, S. F.; Shang, Y. F.; Li, Z. J.; Chen, M. H.; Li, F. J.; Wang, C. L. Pleurotus nebrodensis polysaccharide(PN50G) evokes A549 cell apoptosis by the ROS/AMPK/PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway to suppress tumor growth. Food & Function 2016, 7(3), 1616-1627. 24. Huang, J. Q.; Nie, Q. X.; Liu, X. Z.; Zhang, S. S.; Nie, S. P.; Huang, D. F.; Xie, M. Y. Ganoderma atrum polysaccharide modulates TNF-alpha secretion and mRNA expression in macrophages of S-180 tumor-bearing mice. Food Hydrocolloids 2016, 53, 24-30. 25. Li, H. Y.; Gu, L. L.; Zhong, Y. Y.; Chen, Y. J.; Zhang, L.; Zhang, A. R. Administration of polysaccharide from Panax notoginseng prolonged the survival of H22 tumor-bearing mice. Oncotargets And Therapy 2016, 9, 3433-3441. 26. Ren, D. Y.; Wang, N.; Guo, J. J.; Yuan, L.; Yang, X. B. Chemical characterization of Pleurotus eryngii polysaccharide and its tumor-inhibitory effects against human hepatoblastoma HepG-2 cells. Carbohydrate Polymers 2016, 138, 123-133. 27. Yuan, C. F.; Wang, C. D.; Wang, J. J.; Kumar, V.; Anwar, F.; Xiao, F. X. Inhibition on the growth of human MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells in vitro and tumor growth in a mouse xenograft model by Se-containing polysaccharides from Pyracantha fortuneana. Nutrition Research 2016, 36(11), 1243-1254.
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496
28. Zhu, Z. Y.; Dong, F. Y.; Liu, X. C.; Lv, Q.; Liu, Y. Y. Effects of extraction methods on the yield, chemical structure and anti-tumor activity of polysaccharides from Cordyceps gunnii mycelia. Carbohydrate Polymers 2016, 140, 461-471. 29. Ding, J. S.; Isolation and fine structure of acidic polysccharide from green tea. [D] Nanchang University, Nanchang, Jiangxi, China, 2015. 30. Ding, J. S.; Nie, S. P.; L.Feng, Y.; Q.Wang, J.; Que, Z. Q., Isolation, purification and physico-chemical properties of acidic polysaccharides from green tea. Food Sicience . 2014, 35, 57-60. 31. Robertis, M. D.; Massi, E.; Poeta, M. L.; Carotti, S.; Morini, S.; Cecchetelli, L.; Signori, E.; Fazio, V. M., The AOM/DSS murine model for the study of colon carcinogenesis: From pathways to diagnosis and therapy studies. Journal of carcinogenesis 2011, 10, 9. 32. Galon, J.; Costes, A.; Sanchez-Cabo, F.; Kirilovsky, A.; Mlecnik, B.; Lagorce-Pagès, C.; Tosolini, M.; Camus, M.; Berger, A.; Wind, P.; Zinzindohoué, F.; Bruneval, P.; Cugnenc, P.-H.; Trajanoski, Z.; Fridman, W.-H.; Pagès, F., Type, Density, and location of immune cells within human colorectal tumors predict clinical outcome. Science 2006, 313 (5795), 1960-1964. 33. Tuckermann, J. P.; Kleiman, A.; Moriggl, R.; Spanbroek, R.; Neumann, A.; Illing, A.; Clausen, B. E.; Stride, B.; Förster, I.; Habenicht, A. J. R.; Reichardt, H. M.; Tronche, F.; Schmid, W.; Schütz, G., Macrophages and neutrophils are the targets for immune suppression by glucocorticoids in contact allergy. Journal of Clinical Investigation 2007, 117 (5), 1381-1390. 34. Mauer, J.; Chaurasia, B.; Goldau, J.; Vogt, M. C.; Ruud, J.; Nguyen, K. D.; Theurich, S.; Hausen, A. C.; Schmitz, J.; Bronneke, H. S.; Estevez, E.; Allen, T. L.; Mesaros, A.; Partridge, L.; Febbraio, M. A.; Chawla, A.; Wunderlich, F. T.; Bruning, J. C., Signaling by IL-6 promotes alternative activation of macrophages to limit endotoxemia and obesity-associated resistance to insulin. Nat Immunol 2014, 15 (5), 423-430. 35. Heusinkveld, M.; de Vos van Steenwijk, P. J.; Goedemans, R.; Ramwadhdoebe, T. H.; Gorter, A.; Welters, M. J. P.; van Hall, T.; van der Burg, S. H., M2 macrophages induced by prostaglandin E2 and IL-6 from cervical carcinoma are switched to activated M1 macrophages by CD4+ Th1 cells. The Journal of Immunology 2011, 187 (3), 1157-1165. 36. Sun, Y.; Zhao, Y.; Wang, X.; Zhao, L.; Li, W.; Ding, Y.; Kong, L.; Guo, Q.; Lu, N., Wogonoside prevents colitis-associated colorectal carcinogenesis and colon cancer progression in inflammation-related microenvironment via inhibiting NF-kappaB activation through PI3K/Akt pathway. Oncotarget 2016, 7 (23), 34300-15. 37. Naugler, W. E.; Karin, M., The wolf in sheep's clothing: the role of interleukin-6 in immunity, inflammation and cancer. Trends in Molecular Medicine 2008, 14 (3), 109-119. 38. Wang, L.; Zhao, M.; Guo, C.; Wang, G.; Zhu, F.; Wang, J.; Wang, X.; Wang, Q.; Zhao, W.; Shi, Y.; Chen, Y. H.; Zhang, L., PDCD4 deficiency aggravated colitis and colitis-associated colorectal cancer via promoting IL-6/STAT3 pathway in mice. Inflammatory bowel diseases 2016, 22 (5), 1107-1118. 39. Tanaka, T.; Kohno, H.; Suzuki, R.; Yamada, Y.; Sugie, S.; Mori, H., A novel inflammation-related mouse colon carcinogenesis model induced by azoxymethane and dextran sodium sulfate. Cancer science 2003, 94 (11), 965-73. 40. Liu, Q.; Zhu, H.; Zhang, C.; Chen, T.; Cao, X., Small GTPase RBJ promotes cancer progression by mobilizing MDSCs via IL-6. Oncoimmunology 2017, 6 (1), e1245265. 41. Liu, L.; Nie, S.; Xie, M., Tumor microenvironment as a new target for tumor immunotherapy of polysaccharides. Critical reviews in food science and nutrition 2016, 56 Suppl 1, S85-94.
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 28 of 38
Page 29 of 38
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540
42. Schreiber, R. D.; Old, L. J.; Smyth, M. J., Cancer immunoediting: integrating immunity’s roles in cancer suppression and promotion. Science 2011, 331 (6024), 1565-1570. 43. Grivennikov, S.; Karin, E.; Terzic, J.; Mucida, D.; Yu, G.-Y.; Vallabhapurapu, S.; Scheller, J.; Rose-John, S.; Cheroutre, H.; Eckmann, L.; Karin, M., IL-6 and Stat3 are required for survival of intestinal epithelial cells and development of colitis-associated cancer. Cancer cell 2009, 15 (2), 103-113. 44. Bice, B. D.; Stephens, M. R.; Georges, S. J.; Venancio, A. R.; Bermant, P. C.; Warncke, A. V.; Affolter, K. E.; Hidalgo, J. R.; Angus-Hill, M. L., Environmental enrichment induces pericyte and IgA-dependent wound repair and lifespan extension in a colon tumor model. Cell reports 2017, 19 (4), 760-773. 45. Missiaglia, E.; Jacobs, B.; D'Ario, G.; Di Narzo, A. F.; Soneson, C.; Budinska, E.; Popovici, V.; Vecchione, L.; Gerster, S.; Yan, P.; Roth, A. D.; Klingbiel, D.; Bosman, F. T.; Delorenzi, M.; Tejpar, S., Distal and proximal colon cancers differ in terms of molecular, pathological, and clinical features. Annals of oncology : official journal of the European Society for Medical Oncology 2014, 25 (10), 1995-2001. 46. van Leeuwen, B. L.; Pahlman, L.; Gunnarsson, U.; Sjovall, A.; Martling, A., The effect of age and gender on outcome after treatment for colon carcinoma. A population-based study in the Uppsala and Stockholm region. Critical reviews in oncology/hematology 2008, 67 (3), 229-36. 47. Zheng, Y. Y.; Viswanathan, B.; Kesarwani, P.; Mehrotra, S., Dietary agents in cancer prevention: an immunological perspective. Photochemistry and photobiology 2012, 88 (5), 1083-98. 48. Park, H. R.; Hwang, D.; Suh, H. J.; Yu, K. W.; Kim, T. Y.; Shin, K. S., Antitumor and antimetastatic activities of rhamnogalacturonan-II-type polysaccharide isolated from mature leaves of green tea via activation of macrophages and natural killer cells. International journal of biological macromolecules 2017, 99, 179-186. 49. Nakamura, M.; Miura, S.; Takagaki, A.; Nanjo, F., Hypolipidemic effects of crude green tea polysaccharide on rats, and structural features of tea polysaccharides isolated from the crude polysaccharide. International journal of food sciences and nutrition 2017, 68 (3), 321-330. 50. Chen, X.; Fang, Y.; Nishinari, K.; We, H.; Sun, C.; Li, J.; Jiang, Y., Physicochemical characteristics of polysaccharide conjugates prepared from fresh tea leaves and their improving impaired glucose tolerance. Carbohydrate polymers 2014, 112, 77-84. 51. Wang, Y.; Chen, J.; Zhang, D.; Zhang, Y.; Wen, Y.; Li, L.; Zheng, L., Tumoricidal effects of a selenium (Se)-polysaccharide from Ziyang green tea on human osteosarcoma U-2 OS cells. Carbohydrate polymers 2013, 98 (1), 1186-90. 52. Wang, Y.; Yang, Z.; Wei, X., Antioxidant activities potential of tea polysaccharide fractions obtained by ultra filtration. International journal of biological macromolecules 2012, 50 (3), 558-64. 53. Monobe, M.; Ema, K.; Kato, F.; Maeda-Yamamoto, M., Immunostimulating activity of a crude polysaccharide derived from green tea (Camellia sinensis) extract. Journal of agricultural and food chemistry 2008, 56 (4), 1423-7. 54. Du, L. L.; Fu, Q. Y.; Xiang, L. P.; Zheng, X. Q.; Lu, J. L.; Ye, J. H.; Li, Q. S.; Polito, C. A.; Liang, Y. R., Tea polysaccharides and their bioactivities. Molecules 2016, 21 (11). 55. Hu, J. L.; Nie, S. P.; Min, F. F.; Xie, M. Y., Polysaccharide from seeds of plantago asiatica L. increases short-chain fatty acid production and fecal moisture along with lowering pH in mouse colon. Journal of agricultural and food chemistry 2012, 60 (46), 11525-11532.
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559 560 561
56. Hu, J. L.; Nie, S. P.; Xie, M. Y., High pressure homogenization increases antioxidant capacity and
562
Figure captions
563
Figure 1. TPS inhibited the cell proliferation and invasion ability of CT26 cells
564
cultured in the conditioned medium from recombinant IL-6-activated RAW
565
264.7 cells.
566
(A) CCK8 assays of CT26 cells were performed to evaluate the bioactivity of TPS on
567
the cell proliferation. (B) Transwell migration assays were performed to evaluate the
568
effect of TPS on the cell invasion ability. (C) Quantification of volume of the
569
Transwell migration assay.
570
experiments performed. *P