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Featured researches published by Eric Gugger.


The Journal of Urology | 1999

Inhibition of Murine Bladder Tumorigenesis by Soy Isoflavones Via Alterations in the Cell Cycle, Apoptosis and Angiogenesis

Jin-Rong Zhou; Purna Mukherjee; Eric Gugger; Toshihide Tanaka; George L. Blackburn; Steven K. Clinton

Soy isoflavones exhibit a number of biological effects, suggesting that they may have a role in cancer prevention. Our objectives are to determine whether components of soy products or purified soy isoflavones can inhibit the progression of bladder cancer. We compared the in vitro effects of pure soy isoflavones and soy phytochemical concentrate on growth curves, cell cycle progression, and apoptosis in murine and human bladder cancer cell lines. Pure soy isoflavones (genistein, genistin, daidzein, and biochanin A) and soy phytochemical concentrate exhibit dose-dependent growth inhibition of murine (MB49 and MBT-2) and human (HT-1376, UM-UC-3, RT-4, J82, and TCCSUP) bladder cancer cell lines, although the degree of inhibition varies among lines. Soy isoflavones induce a G2-M cell cycle arrest in all human and murine lines evaluated by flow cytometry. In addition, some bladder cancer lines show DNA fragmentation consistent with apoptosis. We next evaluated the ability of genistein, soy phytochemical concentrate, and soy protein isolate, respectively, to inhibit the growth of transplantable murine bladder cancer in vivo. C57BL/6 mice were randomly assigned to treatment groups (n = 12/group): (a) AIN-76A diet; (b) AIN-76A diet plus genistein, i.p., 50 mg/kg body weight/day; (c) AIN-76 diet with soy phytochemical concentrate at 0.2% of the diet; (d) AIN-76 diet with soy phytochemical concentrate at 1.0% of the diet; and (e) AIN-76A diet with soy protein isolate, 20% by weight. Mice were inoculated s.c. with 5 x 10(4) syngeneic MB49 bladder carcinoma cells, and tumor growth was quantitated. Neither genistein nor soy products reduced body weight gain. Tumor volumes from mice treated with genistein, dietary soy phytochemical concentrate at 1%, or dietary soy protein isolate were reduced by 40% (P < 0.007), 48% (P < 0.001), or 37% (P < 0.01), respectively, compared with controls. We characterized the effects of treatment on several biomarkers in tumor tissue: proliferation index by proliferating cell nuclear antigen staining, apoptotic index by terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end labeling staining, and angiogenesis by microvessel quantitation. Soy products reduced angiogenesis, increased apoptosis, and slightly reduced proliferation while showing no histopathological effects on the normal bladder mucosa. Our data suggest that soy isoflavones can inhibit bladder tumor growth through a combination of direct effects on tumor cells and indirect effects on the tumor neovasculature. Soy products warrant further investigation in bladder cancer prevention and treatment programs or as antiangiogenic agents.


Journal of Nutrition | 1999

Soybean Phytochemicals Inhibit the Growth of Transplantable Human Prostate Carcinoma and Tumor Angiogenesis in Mice

Jin-Rong Zhou; Eric Gugger; Toshihide Tanaka; Yanping Guo; George L. Blackburn; Steven K. Clinton


Cancer Research | 1998

Inhibition of Murine Bladder Tumorigenesis by Soy Isoflavones via Alterations in the Cell Cycle, Apoptosis, and Angiogenesis

Jin-Rong Zhou; Purna Mukherjee; Eric Gugger; Toshihide Tanaka; George L. Blackburn; Steven K. Clinton


Archive | 1997

Production of isoflavone enriched fractions from soy protein extracts

Eric Gugger; Daniel G Dueppen


Archive | 1998

Method of preparing and using isoflavones

Mark Empie; Eric Gugger


Archive | 1998

Method of preparing and using phytochemicals

Mark Empie; Eric Gugger


Archive | 1998

Process for production of isoflavone fractions from soy

Eric Gugger; Richard D. Grabiel


Archive | 2000

Method of preparing and using isoflavones for the treatment of neurological symptoms

Mark Empie; Eric Gugger


Archive | 2002

Method of preparing and using compositions extracted from vegetable matter for the treatment of neurological conditions

Mark Empie; Eric Gugger


Archive | 2000

Method of preparing and using isoflavones for the treatment of cancer

Mark Empie; Eric Gugger

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Mark Empie

Archer Daniels Midland

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Jin-Rong Zhou

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Yanping Guo

Archer Daniels Midland

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