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Eating Well
Food News
Fresh Reasons to Eat Variety
of Veggies:
Plant Compounds Slow Growth of Tumor Cells
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Visit a greenmarket for fresh vegetables and relaxed shopping. Photo, J.S.
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April 6, 1999. Researchers at UW-Madison report
in the current issue of the Journal of Nutrition that small concentrations
of two compounds from edible plants suppress the growth of three kinds
of human cancer cells cultured in the laboratory.
"Our
studies showed that cancer cells were more sensitive to these compounds
than normal cells and that the two compounds had a stronger effect when
combined than we would have expected from the action of either alone,"
says Charles Elson, a nutritional scientist in the College of Agricultural
and Life Sciences.
"Our findings strengthen the idea that
a diet rich in plants is beneficial because of the large array of plant
compounds rather than the singular action of one kind of plant or one
compound in plants," Elson adds.
Elson suggests that the anticarcinogenic
activity of this class of plant compounds differs from the mechanism
of other agents that block or suppress cancer cell growth.
"The two compounds we studied suppress
an enzyme," Elson says. "We think that this deprives tumor
cells of chemical intermediates they need to multiply. The two compounds
even work on human tumor cell lines that have mutations known to promote
cancer."
How
Do Fruits and Veggies Help?
People who eat a diet high in fruits,
vegetables and grains have a reduced risk of many types of cancer, including
lung, alimentary tract, liver, pancreas, bladder, kidney, breast, endometrium,
cervix and prostate.
What is it about these foods that limits
cancer? The current crop of scientists, going beyond the search for
vitamins begun in the last century, are trying to identify the beneficial
compounds in the fruits, vegetables and grains we eat that control tumor
growth.
Plants contain many beneficial compounds
including fiber and micronutrients such as vitamins and their precursors.
According to Elson, research initially focused on compounds such as
vitamin A, vitamin E and folic acid. Other scientists have been examining
non-nutritive compounds in plants.
Elson has been studying isoprenoids, a
huge group of more than 22,000 compounds. All of the come from a parent
compound called mevalonic acid. Limonene (in citrus fruits) and lycopene
(which gives tomatoes, strawberries and some other fruits their red
color) are examples of isoprenoids that have been shown to inhibit cancers
including prostate cancer.
Like limonene in citrus, many isoprenoids
contribute to plants' distinctive flavors and fragrances, Elson says.
In plants, isoprenoids help regulate germination, growth, flowering
and dormancy while attracting pollinators and protecting plants from
insects and fungi.
Elson says he began working with isoprenoids
because in animals some can reduce cholesterol levels. Initially he
hoped that depriving tumor cells of cholesterol would make them susceptible
to cancer treatments. Elson found that he could not lower the cholesterol
in tumor cells by feeding animals isoprenoids, but the isoprenoids slowed
tumor growth.
Testing
Specific Compounds
To find which isoprenoids stop tumors
growing, Elson tests them against a cell line developed from an extremely
aggressive form of mouse melanoma. He has identified many isoprenoids
that can slow the growth of this cell line. Among these is a compound
found in cereal grains, gamma-tocotrienol, suppresses cancer growth
at the low concentrations that might occur in diets.
Gamma-tocotrienol has a chemical structure
related to vitamin E. In research published in 1997, Elson's group showed
that substituting gamma-tocotrienol for vitamin E in a diet fed to mice
slowed the growth of tumors transplanted to those mice. It was the first
research demonstrating that an isoprenoid slowed cancer growth and prolonged
the life of mice when fed at a level that an animal might consume.
In the current paper, Elson and his graduate
student, Huanbiao Mo, found that gamma-tocotrienol slowed the growth
of cell lines from human leukemia and breast cancer. They also tested
beta-ionone -- an isoprenoid found widely in fruits and vegetables.
Beta-ionone is related structurally to beta carotene, the precursor
of vitamin A. Elson and Mo showed that beta-ionone also suppressed the
growth of cell lines for human leukemia and breast cancer, as well as
human colon cancer. The human cell lines were even more sensitive to
the action of the isoprenoids than the mouse melanoma cells, according
to Elson.
"We found that the human cancer cell
lines were three times more sensitive to the isoprenoids than a non-cancerous
cell line," Elson says. "This raises the issue of why cancer
cells might be more sensitive to these plant compounds than non-cancerous
cells."
Isoprenoids
Interfere With Cell Division
Mo and Elson found that the isoprenoids
interfered with the maturation of lamin B, a material cells need when
they divide. Many of the tumor cells treated with the isoprenoids accumulated
in a pre-division phase while many others entered apoptosis, or programmed
cell death. The researchers showed that the isoprenoids suppressed the
activity of 3 hydroxy-3-methyglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG CoA) reductase,
an enzyme critical for the maturation of lamin B as well as the synthesis
of cholesterol.
"We've known since the 1950s that
tumor cells are more sensitive to reductions of HMG CoA reductase than
healthy cells," Elson says. "When isoprenoids inhibit the
activity of this enzyme they disrupt the processing of mevalonic acid
via the mevalonate pathway. We think the tumor cells need chemical intermediates
produced from the breakdown of mevalonic acid for lamin B maturation
and that isoprenoids slow tumor growth by depriving tumor cells of those
intermediates."
Elson does not anticipate that his research
will lead to a single critical isoprenoid or vegetable that people can
eat to protect themselves from cancer. "These compounds act as
a group to inhibit cancer growth," he says, "with some enhancing
the effectiveness of others."
Nor does Elson believe in an exclusively
vegetarian diet. "I don't think that it's the presence of meat
in diets that leads to health problems, but the lack of enough fruits,
grains and vegetables. The people who eat a lot of animal products are
often the same individuals that don't eat enough fruits and vegetables,"
he says.
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