Diet in human health is no longer simple nutrition but, in the light of recent findings, it might play a pivotal role on cell health status by modulating apoptosis, detoxification, and appropriate gene response to environmental stresses. Epidemiological studies suggest a role of fruits and vegetables in protection against several diseases, and nutrients have been demonstrated to alter gene expression by DNA methylation and histone modifications [1-2]. Diet has also been found to modulate micro RNA (miRNA) expression, leading to a subsequent regulation of the effectors genes [3]. Furthermore, recent studies demonstrate that some plant/food-derived microRNAs (miRNAs) regulate gene expression in a sequence specific manner [4]. On the basis of all these findings, we have carried out a pilot study, using a combined "in-silico and wet" approach, to investigate the potential effects, and elucidate the molecular mechanisms, of edible plant miRNAs on the expression of human genes involved in cancer onset and progression. In the present paper we report the results obtained by transfecting 2 colon cancer cell lines, p53 wild type and p53 knock-out, with selected miRNAs of G. max, Z. mais and M. truncatula, which we found, by in silico analysis, to have a putative targeting activity on human oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes.

Effects of edible plant microRNAs on cancer cell proliferation: a beneficial cross-kingdom interaction

Flaviana Marzano;Mariano Caratozzolo;Sabino Liuni;Domenica D'Elia;Apollonia Tullo;Domenico Catalano
2015

Abstract

Diet in human health is no longer simple nutrition but, in the light of recent findings, it might play a pivotal role on cell health status by modulating apoptosis, detoxification, and appropriate gene response to environmental stresses. Epidemiological studies suggest a role of fruits and vegetables in protection against several diseases, and nutrients have been demonstrated to alter gene expression by DNA methylation and histone modifications [1-2]. Diet has also been found to modulate micro RNA (miRNA) expression, leading to a subsequent regulation of the effectors genes [3]. Furthermore, recent studies demonstrate that some plant/food-derived microRNAs (miRNAs) regulate gene expression in a sequence specific manner [4]. On the basis of all these findings, we have carried out a pilot study, using a combined "in-silico and wet" approach, to investigate the potential effects, and elucidate the molecular mechanisms, of edible plant miRNAs on the expression of human genes involved in cancer onset and progression. In the present paper we report the results obtained by transfecting 2 colon cancer cell lines, p53 wild type and p53 knock-out, with selected miRNAs of G. max, Z. mais and M. truncatula, which we found, by in silico analysis, to have a putative targeting activity on human oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes.
2015
Istituto di Bioscienze e Biorisorse
Istituto di Tecnologie Biomediche - ITB
Inglese
Arianna Consiglio, Domenica D'Elia, Paolo Romano
NETTAB & Integrative Bioinformatics 2015 Joint Symposium: Abstract Book
NETTAB 2015 & Integrative Bioinformatics 2015
136
139
4
http://www.igst.it/nettab/2015/programme/posters/
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
14-16 October 2015
Bari
micro RNA
plants
human cancer
none
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
Marzano, Flaviana; Caratozzolo, Mariano; Liuni, Sabino; Sbisà, Elisabetta; D'Elia, Domenica; Tullo, Apollonia; Catalano, Domenico
275
04 Contributo in convegno::04.03 Poster in Atti di convegno
7
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/303965
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