Effect of Diets Fortified with Tomatoes or Onions with Variable Quercetin-glycoside Content on Azoxymethane-induced Aberrant Crypt Foci in the Colon of Rats
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Background: Onion and tomato are vegetables widely consumed by humans and epidemiological studies show an inverse association between vegetable consumption and colon cancer risk; however, the effect on colon cancer of diets containing high levels of vegetables like onion and tomato are not clear.
Aims Of The Study: To investigate whether tomatoes and onions,with low or high quercetin-glycoside content, could reduce azoxymethane (AOM)-induced Aberrant Crypt Foci (ACF), preneoplastic lesions in the colon of rats.
Methods: Male Fisher 344 rats were fed the following diets: a) high fat (HF) diet (control diet); b) HF diet containing 20 % (w/w) tomatoes with a low quercetin-glycoside content (final concentration in the diet: 5 mg/kg of quercetin aglycone equivalents); c) HF diet containing 20% (w/w) high quercetin-glycoside tomatoes (100 mg/kg final concentration of quercetin aglycone equivalents); d) HF diet containing 20 % (w/w) low quercetin-glycoside onions (14 mg/kg of quercetin aglycone equivalents in the diet); e) HF diet containing 20 % (w/w) high quercetin-glycoside onions (360 mg/kg quercetin aglycone equivalents in the diet). After 2 wks of feeding, all rats were treated twice, 1 wk apart, with AOM (12 mg/kg, s. c.). The dietary treatments continued until sacrifice, 7 wks after the first injection with AOM.
Results: ACF induction did not vary in animals fed low or high quercetin-glycoside tomatoes relative to controls. On the contrary, rats fed 20% (w/w) onion-based diets, with low or high quercetin-glycoside content, showed an increase in number, multiplicity and "large" ACF compared to the control group (number of ACF/colon 145 +/- 15 (SE), 255 +/- 11 and 218 +/- 16 in controls, low and high-quercetin-glycoside groups, respectively; p < 0.01). Proliferative activity of the colon did not vary between animals fed control and high quercetin-glycoside tomato diet. The height of the crypts in normal mucosa of rats fed high quercetinglycoside onions was significantly increased compared to control rats (cells/emicrypt 38.4 +/- 1.2 (SE) and 41.3 +/- 0.6 in controls and high quercetin-glycoside onions group, p < 0.05).
Conclusions: None of the diets supplemented with onion or tomato with variable quercetin-glycoside content demonstrated a potential chemopreventive effect on ACF-induction by AOM in rats.
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