Vitamin E Inhibits BCa Cell Proliferation with ER+

Novel interactions of vitamin e and estrogen in breast cancer.

Chamras H, Barsky SH, Ardashian A, Navasartian D, Heber D, Glaspy JA.

The prevention of breast cancer through dietary modification is an active area of clinical and epidemiological research. It has been proposed that dietary supplementation of vitamin E may reduce a woman's risk of developing breast cancer.

However, the exact mechanism remains unknown. alpha-Tocopherol is the most biologically active form of vitamin E. We investigated the effect of vitamin E (alpha-tocopherol) on breast cancer cell growth.

A dose-dependent inhibition of cell proliferation was found in estrogen receptor (ER)-positive cells showing a potent suppression of growth at 100 muM vitamin E in MCF-7 (53%) and T47D (75%) cells.

Vitamin E reduced significantly the response of both cell lines to estrogen (10 nM), and cell proliferation was decreased in MCF-7 and T47D cells by 69% and 84%, respectively. No growth inhibition was observed when cells were grown in the absence of estrogen.

Vitamin E altered and decreased the growth inhibition induced by tamoxifen (10 muM) in MCF-7 (33%) and T47D (54%) cells.

In addition, the immunostaining of ER of MCF-7 cells was reduced by 30% in the presence of vitamin E, suggesting an effect of vitamin E on the expression of ER. This provides evidence that vitamin E may inhibit ER-positive cell growth by altering the cellular response to estrogen.

Nutr Cancer. 2005;52(1):43-8. PMID: 16091003 [PubMed - in process]


Vit B & E use REDUCES risk for breast cancer

Breast Cancer Res Treat, 2007 Oct 5; [Epub ahead of print].


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