Antiproliferation Properties of Grain Sorghum Dry Distiller’s Grain Lipids in Caco-2 Cells
Autor: | Vicki Schlegel, Timothy P. Carr, Susan L. Cuppett, Richard Zbasnik, Keum Taek Hwang, Curtis L. Weller, Lijun Wang |
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Rok vydání: | 2009 |
Předmět: |
Ethanol
Food Handling Plant Extracts Cell growth Linoleic acid Campesterol Vitamin E medicine.medical_treatment General Chemistry Biology Lipids chemistry.chemical_compound chemistry Biochemistry Caco-2 Cell culture Lactate dehydrogenase medicine Humans Food science Caco-2 Cells General Agricultural and Biological Sciences Sorghum Cell Proliferation |
Zdroj: | Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry. 57:10435-10441 |
ISSN: | 1520-5118 0021-8561 |
DOI: | 10.1021/jf902136p |
Popis: | Antiproliferative properties of lipids extracted from grain sorghum (GS) dry distiller's grain (DDG) were analyzed to determine the feasibility of developing GS coproducts as a source for human health dietary ingredients. The lipid extract of GS-DDG was delivered to human colon carcinoma (Caco-2) cells by solubilizing 0-1000 microg/mL of GS-DDG lipids in 100 microg/mL increments with micelles. A significant reduction in cell viability (25-50%) resulted at treatment levels of 400-1000 microg/mL GS-DDG lipids (p0.05). Alternatively, total protein levels of cells treated with 400, 500, and 600 microg/mL of GS-DDG lipid were not significantly different from the control, indicating cell growth during the treatment period. Total cell counts for the control were not significantly different from the GS-DDG lipid treated cells, but dead cell counts increased by approximately 10% for the latter sample with a concomitant increase of the intercellular protein lactate dehydrogenase leakage (30-40%) in the medium. Preliminary analysis by the fluorescence-activated cell method (FACs) demonstrated that nonviable cells were in either the early apoptotic, late apoptotic, or necrotic stage post-treatment with 400, 500, and 600 microg/mL GS-DDG lipids. Physiochemical characterization of the GS-DDG lipids used for the antiproliferation study showed the presence of vitamin E (predominantly gamma-tocopherol), triacylglycerides (predominantly linoleic acid), policosanols, aldehydes, and sterols (predominantly campesterol and stigmasterol), each of which or as synergistic/additive group of constituents may be responsible for the antiproliferative effect. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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