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Showing papers by "Javier A. Menendez published in 2002"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The data suggest that the high virgin olive oil diet would have acted as a negative modulator of the experimental mammary carcinogenesis conferring to the tumors a more benign clinical behavior and a lower histopathological malignancy in comparison with the control and high corn oil diets.
Abstract: Effects of a high virgin olive oil diet on the promotion stage of dimethylbenz(alpha)anthracene-induced mammary carcinogenesis in rats were investigated in comparison with those of a high corn oil diet. Animals were randomly placed into 4 groups: control, fed a normolipidic control diet (3% corn oil); M, fed a high corn oil diet (20%); O, fed a high olive oil diet (3% corn oil plus 17% olive oil); and MO, fed the high olive oil diet after 33 days of high corn oil diet. Whereas the high corn oil diet clearly stimulated the mammary carcinogenesis, reducing the latency time and increasing the tumor incidence, multiplicity and volume, the high olive oil diet led to a lower tumor incidence than in the former group, a latency time similar to that of the control and lower tumor multiplicity and volume even than in the control group. Moreover, the histopathological features of the adenocarcinomas in olive oil groups were compatible with a greater degree of differentiation. These data suggest that the high virgin olive oil diet would have acted as a negative modulator of the experimental mammary carcinogenesis conferring to the tumors a more benign clinical behavior and a lower histopathological malignancy in comparison with the control and high corn oil diets.

70 citations


DOI
01 Mar 2002
TL;DR: Findings are consistent with the view that the type rather than the amount of dietary fatty acids is be more important in breast cancer development and progression.
Abstract: The dietary fat hypothesis postulates that dietary or exogenously derived fatty acids play an important role in the carcinogenesis, evolution and/or progression of breast cancer. In order to reveal possible underlying mechanisms of this hypothesis, we studied the influence of ω- 3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) -α-linolenic (ALA), eicosapentaenoic (EPA) and docosahexaenoic (DHA)-, ω-6 PUFAs-linoleic (LA), γ-linolenic (GLA) and arachidonic (ARA)- and monounsaturated ω- 9 oleic acid (OA) on the proliferation, adhesion and metastatic potential of human breast cancer cells in culture. GLA and the ω-3 PUFAs, ALA and DHA, inhibited significantly the cell growth of MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cell lines, while EPA has less marked inhibitory effects. ω-6 PUFAs, LA and ARA, or ω- 9 OA had either no effect or caused a slight increase of proliferation. The attachment of breast cancer cells to the extracellular matrix components (type IV collagen, fibronectin and Matrigel) was significantly inhibited by ω-6 GLA and ω-3 PUFAs ALA, DHA and EPA. At concentrations which had no effect on cell growth over the duration of experiments the ω-6 PUFAs, LA and GLA, and the ω-3 PUFAs, ALA, DHA and EPA, had the ability to inhibit both cellular migration and invasion into type IV collagen and Matrigel. In summary, our findings indicate important differences in the ability of ω-3, ω-6 and ω-9 fatty acids to modulate prolif eration, attachment to extracellular matrix components, mo-tility and invasiveness of human breast carcinoma cells in vitro, with the GLA and all ω-3 PUFAs being the most effective inhibitors. Our data are consistent with the view that the type rather than the amount of dietary fatty acids is be more important in breast cancer development and progression.

3 citations