AI Article Synopsis

  • Dietary antioxidants like anthocyanins play a crucial role in preventing diseases by balancing oxidative and antioxidative factors, and black currant is a rich source of these compounds.
  • Black currant extract has shown strong free radical scavenging ability and various health benefits, including anti-inflammatory and cardiovascular protective effects, but lacks direct evidence for cancer prevention.
  • This study reveals that black currant fruit skin extract is effective in inhibiting the growth of HepG2 liver cancer cells, suggesting potential for its use in preventing and treating liver cancer.

Article Abstract

Dietary antioxidants, such as anthocyanins, are helpful in the prevention and control of various diseases by counteracting the imbalance of oxidative and antioxidative factors in the living systems. Black currant (Ribes nigrum L., Grossulariaceae) is known to contain high amounts of anthocyanins (250 mg/100 g fresh fruit). Black currant fruits have been used in Asian and European traditional medicine for the treatment of a variety of diseases. Black currant extract has recently been found to be the second most effective amongst nine different berry extracts studied for their free radical scavenging activity. Constituents present in black currant juice have been found to exert a number of health-promoting effects, including immunomodulatory, antimicrobial and antiinflammatory actions, inhibition of low-density lipoprotein, and reduction of cardiovascular diseases. Although antioxidant and antiinflammatory effects of black currant juice could be of value in preventing and treating oxidative stress- and inflammation-driven cancers, no experimental evidence is available to now. The objective of the present study was to evaluate the potential antiproliferative effects of black currant fruit skin extract against HepG2 human liver cancer cells. The aqueous extract yielded an anthocyanin-rich fraction with cyanidin-3-O-rutinoside as one of the major anthocyanins. This fraction exhibited a potent cytotoxic effect on HepG2 cells and this effect was more pronounced than that of delphinidin and cyanidin, two major aglycones of anthocyanins present in black currant. Our results indicate, for the first time, that black currant skin containing an anthocyanin-rich fraction inhibits the proliferation of liver cancer cells, possibly due to additive as well as synergistic effects. This product could be useful in the prevention and treatment of human hepatocellular carcinoma.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

black currant
36
currant
9
currant extract
8
human hepatocellular
8
hepatocellular carcinoma
8
black
8
currant juice
8
effects black
8
liver cancer
8
cancer cells
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!