Structure-cytotoxicity relationships for dietary flavonoids

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The cytotoxicity of a large series of dietary flavonoids was tested in a non-tumorigenic mouse and two human cancer cell lines, using the neutral red dye exclusion assay. All compounds tested exhibited a concentration-dependent cytotoxic action in the employed cell lines. The relative cytotoxicity of the flavonoids, however, was found to vary greatly among the different cell lines. With a few exceptions, the investigated flavonoids were more cytotoxic to the human cancer cell lines, than the mouse cell line. The differences in cytotoxicity were accounted for in part by differences in cellular uptake and metabolic capacity among the different cell types. In 3T3 cells fairly consistent structure-cytotoxicity relationships were found. The most cytotoxic structures tested in 3T3 cells were flavonoids with adjacent 3',4' hydroxy groups on the B-ring, such as luteolin, quercetin, myricetin, fisetin, eriodictyol, and taxifolin. The structural requirements for cytotoxicity in the human cell lines, however, were less clear. Reduction of the cytotoxic response of the 3',4'-hydroxylated flavonoid, quercetin, by the hydroxyl radical scavenger mannitol and the metal chelator desferoxamine suggests that reactive oxygen species, produced from redox cycling of the catechol structure with molecular oxygen, is responsible in part for the cytotoxicity of this subgroup of flavonoids.

Original languageEnglish
JournalIn Vitro and Molecular Toxicology: Journal of Basic and Applied Research
Volume11
Issue number2
Pages (from-to)193-206
Number of pages14
ISSN1097-9336
Publication statusPublished - 1998
Externally publishedYes

ID: 254771931