Sulforaphane-Activated Functional Nucleic Acids for Cancer Therapy: Mechanisms, Delivery Strategies, and Nanomedicine Advances

Int J Mol Sci. 2026 Apr 30;27(9):4033. doi: 10.3390/ijms27094033.

ABSTRACT

Cancer therapy is increasingly shaped by the need for agents that are both mechanistically precise and clinically tolerable. Sulforaphane (SFN), a dietary isothiocyanate enriched in cabbage-family vegetables such as cauliflower and Brussels sprouts, has emerged as a pleiotropic modulator of tumor biology. This review synthesizes current evidence that SFN regulates diverse cancer-relevant processes, including redox homeostasis, cell-cycle progression, apoptosis, autophagy and epigenetic remodeling, largely through coordinated effects on transcriptional (for example, Nrf2, MAPK, NF-ฮบB and AP-1), post-transcriptional (microRNAs and messenger RNAs) and epigenetic (DNA methyltransferases and histone deacetylases) networks. We then examine how functional nucleic acids, including aptamers, small interfering RNAs, microRNAs and tetrahedral DNA nanostructures, can be engineered to guide SFN to tumor cells, amplify pathway-specific effects and overcome resistance. Particular emphasis is placed on nanotechnology-enabled delivery platforms that enhance SFN stability, bioavailability and tumor selectivity. Finally, we outline key challenges, such as context-dependent Nrf2 activity, inter-individual variability in metabolism and incomplete clinical validation, and propose priorities for translating SFN-based functional nucleic acid systems into rational, combination-ready strategies for precision oncology.

PMID:42123607 | PMC:PMC13163298 | DOI:10.3390/ijms27094033

Tags