학술논문

Anticancer perspectives of genistein: a comprehensive review
Document Type
article
Source
International Journal of Food Properties, Vol 26, Iss 2, Pp 3305-3341 (2023)
Subject
Phytochemical
genistein
anticancer agent
human cancers
Nutrition. Foods and food supply
TX341-641
Food processing and manufacture
TP368-456
Language
English
ISSN
10942912
1532-2386
1094-2912
Abstract
ABSTRACTThere is a significant load of degenerative and chronic illnesses, especially cancer, which is one of the main reasons for morbidity and death globally. Polyphenolic phytochemicals found in many plant diets have been shown in epidemiologic and preclinical studies to have chemopreventive activities against numerous cancer types. As a result, there is growing interest in possible cancer chemopreventive medicines derived from natural compounds, such as polyphenols, which may provide a novel, cost-effective way to reduce the global cancer burden. Various epidemiologic researchers have found a link between a soy-rich diet and tumor avoidance, which has been linked to the existence of genistein, a phenolic component found in soy-based diets. Genistein controlled strong anti-inflammatory actions through the blocking of different signaling pathways such as (PGs) Prostaglandins, pro-inflammatory (ROS) reactive oxygen species and cytokines, (iNOS) inducible nitric oxide synthase and (NF-κB) nuclear factor kappa-B. Furthermore, therapeutic effects of genistein have been conveyed in various pathological situations through modifying intracellular paths such as Akt, mTOR, PI3K, PPARγ, NF-κB, Nrf2 and AMPK. Genistein works as a chemotherapeutic drug against several cancers, primarily through modifying the cell cycle, apoptosis, and angiogenesis, as well as limiting metastasis. Genistein also exhibits a synergistic attitude with renowned anticancer medicines including adriamycin, tamoxifen and docetaxel indicating a possible role in grouping treatment. The study presents the recent data available on genistein’s beneficial effects against various forms of cancers.