Journal of Food and Drug Analysis | 2021

Quercetin Blocks the Aggressive Phenotype of Triple Negative Breast Cancer by Inhibiting IGF1/IGF1R-Mediated EMT Program

 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


The cancer-preventive activities of quercetin have been extensively studied in invasive breast cancer; however, the role of quercetin on triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) with overexpression of insulin-like growth factor-1 receptor (IGF1R) has not been resolved. In this article, we demonstrated that quercetin inhibited the activation of IGF1R and its downstream kinases Akt and Erk1/2 in a dose-dependent manner in human MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells (TNBC cell line). Related to this, quercetin markedly suppressed the metastatic phenotype and epithelialemesenchymal transition (EMT) of MDA-MB-231 cells by inhibiting the expression of EMT transcription factors Snail and Slug. Quercetin also increased the secretion of IGF-binding protein-3 in the conditioned medium of MDA-MB-231 cells while reducing the secretion of IGF1; thus, quercetin interrupted the autocrine or paracrine loop of IGF1 signaling. In xenograft mouse models, the administration of quercetin blocked the growth of MDA-MB-231 tumor xenografts and their lung metastasis, accompanied by the inactivation of IGF1R and the downregulation of the expression of Snail, Slug, and mesenchymal markers fibronectin and vimentin. These results suggest that quercetin has cancer-preventive value for TNBC by inhibiting IGF1/IGF1R signaling and preventing the consequent EMT and metastasis of TNBC.

Volume 29
Pages 98-112
DOI 10.38212/2224-6614.3090
Language English
Journal Journal of Food and Drug Analysis

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