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Web address:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/12/
081223121135.htm |
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How Certain Vegetables Combat Cancer

Women should go for the broccoli when the
relish tray comes around during holiday celebrations this season. (Credit:
iStockphoto/Shawn Gearhart)
ScienceDaily (Dec. 29, 2008) — Women should
go for the broccoli when the relish tray comes around during holiday
celebrations this season.
While it has been known for some time that
eating cruciferous vegetables, such as broccoli, cauliflower, and cabbage,
can help prevent breast cancer, the mechanism by which the active substances
in these vegetables inhibit cell proliferation was unknown — until now.
Scientists in the UC Santa Barbara
laboratories of Leslie Wilson, professor of biochemistry and pharmacology,
and Mary Ann Jordan, adjunct professor in the Department of Molecular,
Cellular, and Developmental Biology, have shown how the healing power of
cruciferous vegetables works at the cellular level. Their research is
published in this month's journal Carcinogenesis.
"Breast cancer, the second leading cause of
cancer deaths in women, can be protected against by eating cruciferous
vegetables such as cabbage and near relatives of cabbage such as broccoli
and cauliflower," said first author Olga Azarenko, who is a graduate student
at UCSB. "These vegetables contain compounds called isothiocyanates which we
believe to be responsible for the cancer-preventive and anti-carcinogenic
activities in these vegetables. Broccoli and broccoli sprouts have the
highest amount of the isothiocyanates.
"Our paper focuses on the anti-cancer
activity of one of these compounds, called sulforaphane, or SFN," Azarenko
added. "It has already been shown to reduce the incidence and rate of
chemically induced mammary tumors in animals. It inhibits the growth of
cultured human breast cancer cells, leading to cell death."
Azarenko made the surprising discovery that
SFN inhibits the proliferation of human tumor cells by a mechanism similar
to the way that the anticancer drugs taxol and vincristine inhibit cell
division during mitosis. Mitosis is the process in which the duplicated DNA
in the form of chromosomes is accurately distributed to the two daughter
cells when a cell divides.
Hundreds of tiny tube-like structures,
called microtubules, make up the machinery that cells use to separate the
chromosomes. SFN, like the more powerful anticancer agents, interferes with
microtubule functioning during mitosis in a similar manner to the more
powerful anticancer drugs. However SFN is much weaker than these other
plant-based drugs, and thus much less toxic.
"SFN may be an effective cancer preventive
agent because it inhibits the proliferation and kills precancerous cells,"
said Wilson. It is also possible that it could be used as an addition to
taxol and other similar drugs to increase effective killing of tumor cells
without increased toxicity.
University of California - Santa Barbara
(2008, December 29). How Certain Vegetables Combat Cancer. ScienceDaily.
Retrieved January 3, 2009, from http://www.sciencedaily.com
/releases/2008/12/081223121135.htm
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