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Food and Chemical Toxicology 2017-Sep

Rice protein prolamin promotes anti-leukemia immunity and inhibits leukemia growth in vivo.

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Chien-Kuo Liu
Chien-An Chen
Tzung-Yan Lee
Hen-Hong Chang
Hui-Fen Liao
Yu-Jen Chen

Keywords

Abstract

Prolamin is a heat-stable storage protein of rice (Oryza sativa). This study aimed to examine the effect of prolamin on anti-tumor immune response in vitro and leukemia growth in vivo. The prolamin-enriched rice fractions were prepared to stimulate peripheral blood mononuclear cells (MNC) from mice spleen. The MNC-conditioned medium (MNC-CM) was collected to treat leukemia L1210 cells. Human MNC-CM was prepared to treat Jurkat acute T cell leukemia cells. Purified prolamin was orally administered to syngeneic L1210-bearing DBA/2 mice to assess weights of tumor, liver and spleen, liver histopathology, peripheral blood neutrophil count and cytokine levels. Prolamin-prepared MNC-CM inhibited the viability of murine leukemia L1210 cells and human leukemia Jurkat cells, indicating an immunomodulatory effect. In syngeneic L1210-bearing DBA/2 mice, oral administration of purified prolamin dose-dependently decreased the tumor weight and attenuated the leukemia-induced reduction of liver and spleen weights. Prolamin inhibited the increase of peripheral blood leukocyte count. The levels of tumor necrosis factor-α and interferon-γ in MNC-CM and mice serum were significantly increased by prolamin treatment. No significant change in body weight, serum alanine aminotransferase and creatinine levels was noted by prolamin treatment. Rice prolamin could effectively promote anti-tumor immunity and inhibit leukemia growth without significant toxicity.

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