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Impact of CYP24A1 overexpression on growth of colorectal tumour xenografts in mice fed with vitamin D and soy

Authors :
Enikö Kállay
Julia Höbaus
Walter Berger
Rodrig Marculescu
Samawansha Tennakoon
Doris M. Hummel
Ursula Thiem
Charlotte Groeschel
Petra Heffeter
Abhishek Aggarwal
Source :
International Journal of Cancer
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
John Wiley and Sons Inc., 2015.

Abstract

Our previous studies showed that the 1,25‐dihydroxyvitamin D (1,25‐D3) catabolizing enzyme, 1,25‐dihydoxyvitamin D 24 hydroxylase (CYP24A1) was overexpressed in colorectal tumours and its level correlated with increased proliferation. We hypothesised that cells overexpressing CYP24A1 have growth advantage and a diet rich in vitamin D and soy would restore sensitivity to the anti‐tumourigenic effects of vitamin D. Soy contains genistein, a natural CYP24A1 inhibitor. To determine causality between CYP24A1 and tumour growth, we established xenografts in male SCID mice with HT29 cells stably overexpressing either GFP‐tagged CYP24A1 or GFP. Mice were fed with either high (2500 IU D3/kg) or low vitamin D (100 IU D3/kg) diet in the presence or absence of soy (20% diet). In vitro, cells overexpressing CYP24A1 grew faster than controls. 1,25‐D3, the active vitamin D metabolite, reduced cell number only in the presence of the CYP24A1 inhibitor VID400. Regardless of the amount of vitamin D in the diet, xenografts overexpressing CYP24A1 grew faster, were heavier and more aggressive. Soy reduced tumour volume only in the control xenografts, while the tumours overexpressing CYP24A1 were larger in the presence of dietary soy. In conclusion, we demonstrate that CYP24A1 overexpression results in increased aggressiveness and proliferative potential of colorectal tumours. Irrespective of the dietary vitamin D3, dietary soy is able to increase tumour volume when tumours overexpress CYP24A1, suggesting that combination of vitamin D3 and soy could have an anti‐tumourigenic effect only if CYP24A1 levels are normal.<br />What's new? Vitamin D3 supplementation is linked to reduced tumour growth in the colon, but colorectal tumours may also overexpress the vitamin‐D‐degrading enzyme CYP24A1, potentially undermining the benefits of vitamin D intake. We show that in a mouse xenograft model, CYP24A1 overexpression confers growth advantage to colorectal tumours, regardless of vitamin D intake. Combination of dietary vitamin D and soy increases volume and weight of tumours overexpressing CYP24A1. The findings warrant exploration of the effects of specific CYP24A1 inhibitors in CYP24A1‐overexpressing colorectal tumours.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10970215 and 00207136
Volume :
138
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b22793e2530604669b9151d3b785f72f