Publication | Closed Access
Ketogenic Diet Elicits Antitumor Properties through Inducing Oxidative Stress, Inhibiting MMP-9 Expression, and Rebalancing M1/M2 Tumor-Associated Macrophage Phenotype in a Mouse Model of Colon Cancer
93
Citations
61
References
2020
Year
Many advanced cancers are characterized by metabolic disorders. A dietary therapeutic strategy was proposed to inhibit tumor growth through administration of low-carbohydrate, average-protein, and high-fat diet, which is also known as ketogenic diet (KD). <i>In vivo</i> antitumor efficacy of KD on transplanted CT26<sup>+</sup> tumor cells in BALB/c mice was investigated. The results showed that the KD group had significantly higher blood β-hydroxybutyrate and lower blood glucose levels when compared with the normal diet group. Meanwhile, KD increased intratumor oxidative stress, and TUNEL staining showed KD-induced apoptosis against tumor cells. Interestingly, the distribution of CD16/32<sup>+</sup> and iNOS<sup>+</sup> M1 tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) increased in the KD-treated group, with concomitantly less arginase-1<sup>+</sup> M2 TAMs. Moreover, KD treatment downregulated the protein expression of matrix metalloproteinase-9 in CT26<sup>+</sup> tumor-bearing mice. Western blot analysis demonstrated that the expression levels of HDAC3/PKM2/NF-κB 65/p-Stat3 proteins were reduced in the KD-treated group. Taken together, our results indicated that KD can prevent the progression of colon tumor <i>via</i> inducing intratumor oxidative stress, inhibiting the expression of the MMP-9, and enhancing M2 to M1 TAM polarization. A novel potential mechanism was identified that KD can prevent the progression of colon cancer by regulating the expression of HDAC3/PKM2/NF-κB65/p-Stat3 axis.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1