Home | Products | News | Contact Us
   

Nutraceutical News

Australia rethinks nutrient labelling and health claims standards
EFSA approves new vitamins and minerals for foods and supplements
Children positive on organic, free-range and hormone-free
Calcium sales growth suffering from lack of novelty
West follow East's functional lead?
Women Looking For An Alternative To Black Cohosh






 

Lycopene Clinical Study


Prostate cells exposed to lycopene in vitro liberate lycopene-enriched exosomes.

Goyal A, Delves GH, Chopra M, Lwaleed BA, Cooper AJ.

Urology Research Group, Department of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth, UK.

OBJECTIVES
To investigate whether cellular exosomes liberated by prostatic cell lines in culture might be acting as the transport vehicles for the dietary antioxidant lycopene, known to be sequestered in the prostate gland and to reduce the risk of developing benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and prostate cancer; its subsequent secretion into seminal plasma also confers protection to spermatozoa against oxidative free-radical damage.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Using benign and malignant human prostatic cell culture models, we assessed the role that their exosomes (the putative in vitro analogues of prostasomes) might have in the transport of lycopene.

RESULTS
Cells exposed to lycopene in vitro accumulated the molecule and secrete lycopene-enriched exosomes. This continued after the lycopene exposure was stopped. Extraction of lycopene from the exosomes, followed by high-performance liquid chromatography, confirmed nanogram quantities of lycopene per milligram of exosomal protein. Packaging into exosomes for export resulted in reduced degradation of this labile antioxidant, and therefore maximized the effectiveness of delivery to the sites of action.

CONCLUSION
These results support the likelihood that these organelles act as the transport vehicles for this important lipophilic agent known to have a role in the chemoprevention of various urological pathologies such as BPH, prostate cancer and male infertility.

PMID: 16978292 [PubMed - in process]


<< Back to All Natural Products List

© Copyright 2007 - Nutraceutical Ingredients - All Rights Reservec