Biomolecules (Nov 2022)

Potential Anticancer Activity of Pomegranate (<i>Punica granatum</i> L.) Fruits of Different Color: In Vitro and In Silico Evidence

  • Maria C. Cortez-Trejo,
  • Francisco J. Olivas-Aguirre,
  • Elisa Dufoo-Hurtado,
  • Raquel Castañeda-Moreno,
  • Hassan Villegas-Quintero,
  • José L. Medina-Franco,
  • Sandra Mendoza,
  • Abraham Wall-Medrano

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biom12111649
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 11
p. 1649

Abstract

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Pomegranate (PMG; Punica granatum L.) fruits possess a well-balanced nutrient/phytochemical composition, with proven adjuvant benefits in experimental cancer chemotherapy; however, such bioactivity could be affected by PMG’s phenogenotype (varietal). Here, the chemical and phytochemical (UPLC-DAD-MS2) composition, antioxidant capacity and anticancer potential [in vitro (MTT assay) and in silico (foodinformatics)] of three PMG fruits of different aryl color [red (cv. Wonderful), pink (cv. Molar de Elche), and white (cv. Indian)] were evaluated. The macro/micronutrient (ascorbic acid, tocols, carotenoids), organic acid (citric/malic), and polyphenol content were changed by PMG’s varietal and total antioxidant activity (ABTS, alcoholic > hexane extract) in the order of red > pink > white. However, their in vitro cytotoxicity was the same (IC50 > 200 μg.mL−1) against normal (retinal) and cancer (breast, lung, colorectal) cell lines. Sixteen major phytochemicals were tentatively identified, four of them with a high GI absorption/bioavailability score [Ellagic (pink), vanillic (red), gallic (white) acids, D-(+)-catechin (white)] and three of them with multiple molecular targets [Ellagic (52) > vanillic (32) > gallic (23)] associated with anticancer (at initiation and promotion stages) activity. The anticancer potential of the PMG fruit is phenogenotype-specific, although it could be more effective in nutraceutical formulations (concentrates).

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