Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Tier 3 — Observational / field trialPeer-reviewedConventional

Mechanism for the suppression of the mammalian stress response by genistein, an anticancer phytoestrogen from soy

Zhou, Y., and A. S. Lee

Journal of the National Cancer Institute · 1998

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Summary

BACKGROUND: Soy products contain high levels of genistein, a phytoestrogen that is a potent inhibitor of cell proliferation and angiogenesis. Genistein has been found to inhibit the growth of carcinogen-induced cancers in rats and human leukemia cells transplanted into mice. The induction of stress proteins (e.g., glucose-related proteins and heat shock proteins) in tumor cells has been shown to protect them against programmed cell death; this stress response is inhibited by genistein. The mechanism(s) by which genistein affects certain stress response genes was explored in this study. METHODS: Mammalian cell cultures were treated with azetidine, a proline analog, which elicits a stress response that includes the induction of the expression of glucose-regulated protein GRP78 and heat shock protein HSP70. The effects of azetidine and/or genistein treatment on cellular levels of grp78 and hsp70 messenger RNAs and proteins were measured by northern blot hybridization and western blot analyses, respectively, and the binding of nuclear factors to sequence motifs in the upstream (promoter) regions of these two genes were examined by electrophoretic mobility shift assays. RESULTS: Genistein antagonized the binding of a specific transcription factor, nuclear factor-Y/CCAAT binding factor (NF-Y/CBF), to the CCAAT sequence element most proximal to the transcription start sites in the hsp70 and grp78 promoters; this CCAAT element was previously shown to be necessary for full-stress inducibility of both genes. Treatment of cells with genistein converted NF-Y/CBF into a nonbinding, transcriptionally inactive form. IMPLICATION: The anticancer effects of genistein may be related to its ability to reduce the expression of stress response-related genes.

Outcomes reported

BACKGROUND: Soy products contain high levels of genistein, a phytoestrogen that is a potent inhibitor of cell proliferation and angiogenesis. Treatment of cells with genistein converted NF-Y/CBF into a nonbinding, transcriptionally inactive form. Source report: What Your Food Ate — Montgomery & Biklé (2022), ch.9: OVERLOOKED GEMS Ref#: WYFA-0388 Original: Zhou, Y., and A. S. Lee. 1998. Mechanism for the suppression of the mammalian stress response by genistein, an anticancer phytoestrogen from soy. Journal of the National Cancer Institute 90:381–388.

Theme
Farming systems, soils & land use
Subject
Out of scope / non-food
Study type
Research
Source type
Peer-reviewed research
Status
Published
Geography
United Kingdom
System type
Other
DOI
10.1093/jnci/90.5.381
Catalogue ID
IRmqh57ll5-0c4219
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