Phenethyl isothiocyanate / NRF2 Cancer Research Results

PEITC, Phenethyl isothiocyanate: Click to Expand ⟱
Features:
Phenethyl isothiocyanate (PEITC) is a naturally occurring small-molecule phytochemical best known for its role in cancer chemoprevention research. It belongs to the isothiocyanate class of organosulfur compounds and has the chemical formula C₉H₉NS.
Source: Derived from glucosinolates in cruciferous vegetables
PEITC in plants exists mainly as the glucosinolate precursor (gluconasturtiin). Upon tissue disruption (chewing, chopping), myrosinase converts gluconasturtiin → PEITC.
-PEITC bioavailability from fresh, chopped microgreens is high
-Co-consumption with other isothiocyanates is additive/synergistic
-Peak plasma levels: ~1–3 hours post-consumption
-Half-life: ~4–6 hours
-Generally well tolerated up to 40 mg/day (mild GI irritation at higher dose)

PEITC is best characterized for its dual role in xenobiotic metabolism:
Inhibition of Phase I enzymes
-Suppresses cytochrome P450 enzymes (e.g., CYP1A1, CYP2E1)
-Reduces activation of pro-carcinogens

-Selectively depletes GSH in cancer cells
-Directly increases ROS beyond buffering capacity

Key pathways in cancer cells
-GSH depletion
-Mitochondrial ROS amplification
-ASK1/JNK apoptosis

Chemo relevance
-Frequently chemo-sensitizing
-Opposite of NAC/GSH

Induction of Phase II enzymes
-Activates NRF2–KEAP1 signaling
-Increases expression of detoxification and antioxidant enzymes such as:
 -Glutathione S-transferases (GSTs)
 -NAD(P)H quinone oxidoreductase 1 (NQO1)
 -Heme oxygenase-1 (HMOX1)

In preclinical systems, PEITC has been shown to:
-Deplete intracellular glutathione (GSH), increasing oxidative stress in cancer cells
-Induce mitochondrial dysfunction and apoptosis
-Inhibit histone deacetylases (HDACs) (context-dependent)
-Suppress pro-survival signaling pathways (e.g., STAT3, NF-κB)
-Target cancer stem–like cells in some models

Dietary origins

PEITC present in vegetables such as:
-Watercress (the richest source)
-Broccoli
-Cabbage
-Brussels sprouts
-Radish

Bioavailability depends on:
-Food preparation
-Gut microbiota (myrosinase activity if plant enzyme is inactive)

watercress microgreens generally have higher PEITC (and/or its precursor gluconasturtiin) per gram than mature watercress.
-The enrichment is most pronounced per unit fresh weight in the 7–14 day window.
-Absolute values vary substantially with cultivar, light intensity, sulfur/nitrogen nutrition, and post-harvest handling.
| Growth stage    |      Age | PEITC potential (mg / 100 g FW) |         Relative |
| --------------- | -------: | ------------------------------: | ---------------: |
| **Microgreens** |   7–10 d |                     **3.0–6.0** | **~2–4×** mature |
| **Microgreens** |  11–14 d |                     **2.5–5.0** |            ~2–3× |
| Baby leaf       |  21–28 d |                         1.5–3.0 |            ~1–2× |
| Mature leaf     | 35–45+ d |                         0.8–1.5 |         baseline |

Dry weight basis
| Growth stage          | PEITC potential (mg / g DW) |
| --------------------- | --------------------------: |
| Microgreens (7–10 d)  |                 **1.8–3.5** |
| Microgreens (11–14 d) |                     1.5–3.0 |
| Mature leaf           |                     0.6–1.2 |

Expect 2–5× variability depending on:
-Light spectrum (blue light ↑ glucosinolates)
-Sulfur availability

Practical optimization tips
Lighting
-12–16 h/day
-150–300 µmol/m²/s PAR (typical shop LEDs at 20–30 cm distance)
Soil
-Peat or peat-blend preferred
-Avoid over-watering (dilutes concentration)
Nutrition (optional but effective)
-One light watering with ¼-strength sulfate-containing fertilizer around day 4–5 can increase PEITC ~15–30%
Harvest & use
-Cut, rest 5–10 minutes, then consume (allows myrosinase to fully convert gluconasturtiin → PEITC)

Dose: (100 g fresh microgreens ≈ 2–4 mg bioavailable PEITC)
-ie below doses are not really acheivable from fresh microgreens
Minimum biologically active dose (humans): ~10–15 mg PEITC/day
Common efficacy range used in human trials: 20–40 mg/day
Upper short-term doses studied (generally tolerated): 60 mg/day
Diet-achievable with watercress microgreens: Yes, at realistic portions
These doses are chemopreventive / pathway-modulating, not cytotoxic chemotherapy.
| PEITC dose (mg/day) | Dominant biological effects                     |
| ------------------: | ----------------------------------------------- |
|         **5–10 mg** | Phase II enzymes, mild NRF2                     |
|        **10–20 mg** | HDAC inhibition, ROS signaling                  |
|        **20–40 mg** | Apoptosis, cell-cycle arrest, anti-inflammatory |
|        **40–60 mg** | Strong redox stress in cancer cells             |
|              >60 mg | Limited data; GI irritation risk                |



Rank Pathway / Target Axis Direction Primary Effect Notes / Cancer Relevance Ref
1 GSH / thiol buffering (PEITC–GSH conjugation → GSH depletion) ↓ GSH Upstream redox collapse PEITC drives a GSH-iron-ROS axis; GSH depletion is upstream of multiple death programs (ref)
2 ROS accumulation ↑ ROS Oxidative stress trigger PEITC increases intracellular ROS, which then drives mitochondrial disruption and apoptosis (ref)
3 Ferroptosis (lipid peroxidation; anti-ferroptotic machinery overwhelmed) ↑ ferroptosis Iron-dependent oxidative death Direct evidence that PEITC induces ferroptosis (alongside other death programs) via GSH-iron-ROS mechanisms (ref)
4 Mitochondrial integrity (ΔΨm; cytochrome-c release) ↓ ΔΨm / ↑ cytochrome-c release Mitochondrial dysfunction PEITC promotes ROS, decreases ΔΨm, increases cytochrome-c release in cancer cells (ref)
5 Intrinsic apoptosis (caspase-9 → caspase-3) ↑ caspase activation / ↑ apoptosis Execution-phase cell death PEITC activates caspase-9 and caspase-3 and induces apoptosis downstream of mitochondrial dysfunction (ref)
6 Akt → JNK → Mcl-1 axis ↓ Akt / ↑ JNK / ↓ Mcl-1 Pro-survival signaling collapse Leukemia study: PEITC-initiated death is linked to Akt inactivation → JNK activation → Mcl-1 downregulation (ref)
7 NF-κB signaling ↓ NF-κB transcriptional activity / ↓ p65 nuclear translocation Reduced pro-survival / inflammatory transcription PEITC inhibits NF-κB activity and NF-κB–regulated genes (e.g., cyclin D1, VEGF, Bcl-xL) in prostate cancer cells (ref)
8 JAK–STAT3 signaling ↓ STAT3 activation Reduced survival / growth signaling PEITC inhibits IL-6–driven JAK–STAT3 activation in prostate cancer cells (STAT3 signaling direction shown) (ref)
9 Cell-cycle regulation ↑ G2/M arrest Proliferation blockade PEITC inhibits proliferation and induces G2/M cell-cycle arrest in prostate cancer cells (ref)
10 Autophagy program ↑ autophagy Stress response (can interact with death) PEITC induces autophagy along with ferroptosis and apoptosis in osteosarcoma cells (ref)
11 Migration / invasion (MMPs, FAK, RhoA) ↓ migration & invasion / ↓ MMPs Anti-metastatic phenotype PEITC suppresses migration/invasion and downregulates MMP-2/-7/-9 and motility regulators (FAK, RhoA) (ref)
12 In vivo anti-tumor effect ↓ tumor burden / ↑ survival (model-dependent) Demonstrated efficacy in animal model Leukemia study reports PEITC anti-leukemic activity including mechanistic signaling changes and in vivo efficacy evidence (ref)


NRF2, nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2: Click to Expand ⟱
Source: TCGA
Type: Antiapoptotic
Nrf2 is responsible for regulating an extensive panel of antioxidant enzymes involved in the detoxification and elimination of oxidative stress. Thought of as "Master Regulator" of antioxidant response.
-One way to estimate Nrf2 induction is through the expression of NQO1.
NQO1, the most potent inducer:
SFN 0.2 μM,
quercetin (2.5 μM),
curcumin (2.7 μM),
Silymarin (3.6 μM),
tamoxifen (5.9 μM),
genistein (6.2 μM ),
beta-carotene (7.2μM),
lutein (17 μM),
resveratrol (21 μM),
indol-3-carbinol (50 μM),
chlorophyll (250 μM),
alpha-cryptoxanthin (1.8 mM),
and zeaxanthin (2.2 mM)

1. Raising Nrf2 enhances the cell's antioxidant defenses and ↓ROS. This strategy is used to decrease chemo-radio side effects.
2. Downregulating Nrf2 lowers antioxidant defenses and ↑ROS. In cancer cells this leads to DNA damage, and cell death.
3. However there are some cases where increasing Nrf2 paradoxically causes an increase in ROS (cancer cells). Such as cases of Mitochondial overload, signal crosstalk, reductive stress

-In some cases, Nrf2 is overexpressed in cancer cells, which can lead to the activation of genes involved in cell proliferation, angiogenesis, and metastasis. This can contribute to the development of resistance to chemotherapy and targeted therapies.
-Increased Nrf2 expression: Lung, Breast, Colorectal, Prostrate.
Decreased Nrf2 expression: Skine, Liver, Pancreatic.
-Nrf2 is a cytoprotective transcription factor which demonstrated both a negative effect as well as a positive effect on cancer
- "promotes Nrf2 translocation from the cytoplasm to the nucleus," means facilitates the movement of Nrf2 into the nucleus, thereby enhancing the cell's antioxidant and cytoprotective responses. -Major regulator of Nrf2 activity in cells is the cytosolic inhibitor Keap1.

Nrf2 Inhibitors and Activators
Nrf2 Inhibitors: Brusatol, Luteolin, Trigonelline, VitC, Retinoic acid, Chrysin
Nrf2 Activators: SFN, OPZ EGCG, Resveratrol, DATS, CUR, CDDO, Api
- potent Nrf2 inducers from plants include sulforaphane, curcumin, EGCG, resveratrol, caffeic acid phenethyl ester, wasabi, cafestol and kahweol (coffee), cinnamon, ginger, garlic, lycopene, rosemany

Nrf2 plays dual roles in that it can protect normal tissues against oxidative damage and can act as an oncogenic protein in tumor tissue.
– In healthy tissues, NRF2 activation helps protect cells from oxidative damage and maintains cellular homeostasis.
– In many cancers, constitutive activation of NRF2 (often through mutations in NRF2 itself or loss-of-function mutations in KEAP1) leads to an enhanced antioxidant capacity.
– This upregulation can promote tumor cell survival by enabling cancer cells to thrive under oxidative stress, resist chemotherapeutic agents, and sustain metabolic reprogramming.
– Elevated NRF2 levels have been implicated in promoting tumor growth, metastasis, and resistance to therapy in various malignancies.
– High or sustained NRF2 activity is frequently associated with aggressive tumor phenotypes, poorer prognosis, and decreased overall survival in several cancer types.
– While its activation is essential for protecting normal cells from oxidative stress, aberrant or sustained NRF2 activation in tumor cells can lead to enhanced survival, therapeutic resistance, and tumor progression.

NRF2 inhibitors: (to decrease antioxidant defenses and increase cell death from ROS).
-Brusatol: most cited natural inhibitors of Nrf2.
-Luteolin: luteolin can reduce Nrf2 activity in specific cancer models and may enhance cell sensitivity to chemotherapy. However, luteolin is also known as an antioxidant, and its influence on Nrf2 can sometimes be context dependent.
-Apigenin: certain studies to down‑regulate Nrf2 in cancer cells: Dose and context dependent .
-Oridonin:
-Wogonin: although its effects might be cell‑ and dose‑specific.
- Withaferin A

Scientific Papers found: Click to Expand⟱
5015- Xan,  PEITC,    Comparison of the Impact of Xanthohumol and Phenethyl Isothiocyanate and Their Combination on Nrf2 and NF-κB Pathways in HepG2 Cells In Vitro and Tumor Burden In Vivo
- in-vitro, HCC, HepG2
NRF2↓, ROS↑, NF-kB↓, COX2↓, Apoptosis↑, NRF2↑, SOD↑, NQO1↑,

Showing Research Papers: 1 to 1 of 1

* indicates research on normal cells as opposed to diseased cells
Total Research Paper Matches: 1

Pathway results for Effect on Cancer / Diseased Cells:


Redox & Oxidative Stress

NQO1↑, 1,   NRF2↓, 1,   NRF2↑, 1,   ROS↑, 1,   SOD↑, 1,  

Cell Death

Apoptosis↑, 1,  

Immune & Inflammatory Signaling

COX2↓, 1,   NF-kB↓, 1,  
Total Targets: 8

Pathway results for Effect on Normal Cells:


Total Targets: 0

Scientific Paper Hit Count for: NRF2, nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2
Query results interpretion may depend on "conditions" listed in the research papers.
Such Conditions may include : 
  -low or high Dose
  -format for product, such as nano of lipid formations
  -different cell line effects
  -synergies with other products 
  -if effect was for normal or cancerous cells
Filter Conditions: Pro/AntiFlg:%  IllCat:%  CanType:%  Cells:%  prod#:388  Target#:226  State#:%  Dir#:1
wNotes=0 sortOrder:rid,rpid

 

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