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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
March
Components in grapes inhibit
enzyme key to proliferation of cancer cells
Jim Barlow,
Life Sciences Editor
217-333-5802; jebarlow@uiuc.edu
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Kwame Ross |
In
the conservatorium in the Plant Sciences Lab Mary
Ann Lila, left, a professor of natural resources and
environmental sciences,
shows grape samples, and Elvira Gonzalez de Mejia,
professor of food science, shows the extract
from the grape cell cultures. |
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3/29/05
CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. — Components in grapes, including some newly identified ones,
work together to dramatically inhibit an enzyme crucial to the proliferation
of cancer cells, say scientists at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
The work – done using advanced molecular tools with grape-cell
cultures and the target enzyme for new anti-cancer strategies –
helps to identify which flavonoids in grapes and red wine are most responsible
for anti-cancer qualities, said Mary Ann Lila, a professor in the department
of natural resources and environmental
sciences.
Flavonoids are a group of organic compounds that include numerous water-soluble
plant pigments responsible for colors. They are more abundant in red
than in white grapes.
The Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry has posted the Illinois
study online ahead of regular publication. The study details a dozen
newly discovered constituents in grape-cell culture extracts and how
some of them work synergistically against an enzyme known as human DNA
topoisomerase II. The enzyme is necessary for the spread of cancer and
commonly used in cancer research to screen plant chemicals.
“The findings add to the argument for eating whole foods,”
said Elvira Gonzalez de Mejia, a professor in the department of food
science and human nutrition. “It’s very clear that the
synergy is critical. When a cell becomes malignant that enzyme is expressed
300 times more than in a normal cell. If we can find a compound or mixture
of compounds that can reduce the activity of that enzyme, the cancerous
cells will die.”
The synergistic activity involves specific phytochemicals from the proanthocyanidin
and anthocyanin classes of the varied flavonoid family. They worked
more effectively against the enzyme than do the previously identified
flavonoids quercetin and resveratrol. Alone, the individual compenents
had less effect on the enzyme.
“We definitely had very potent activity against the particular
antibody system we were using, which was that of the critical proliferation
stage of carcinogenesis,” Lila said. “In our subsequent
studies now under way in animal models, we are getting direct evidence
that these components in grapes work synergistically in fighting cancer.
They have to work together to obtain the potency that works.”
The researchers are tracking where specially radiolabeled flavonoids
congregate in rats, in a project funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
“We are finding that these flavonoids are very bioavailable,”
de Mejia said. “By eating the fruit, we know that the bioactive
component involved goes into your bloodstream and relocates to other
regions. Before now, we didn’t really know that.”
Lila, de Mejia and co-author Jeong-Youn Jo, a doctoral student in Lila’s
lab, produced the grape-cell cultures they tested from red-grape plants
specifically bred for their pigmentation and provided by Cornell University
researchers.
Using vegetative samples of the plants, rather than the fruit itself,
the Illinois team was able to quickly produce the whole range of grape
flavonoids in greater quantity. The researchers then extracted individual
flavonoids intact. Their analytic work involved the use of reversed
phase high-performance liquid chromatography and LC-electrospray ionization
(ESI)/mass spectrometry to profile the most bioactive components.
Eventually, Lila said, researchers may be able to determine reasonable
dosages for therapeutic consumption of flavonoid-rich grapes. Supplements
containing specific flavonoids probably won’t result in desired
benefits, de Mejia said, because complementary components required for
synergistic activity may be missing.
“Some of the compounds we identified have not been reported in
cell culture and grapes,” de Mejia said. “Some have high
inhibitory activity in the promotion and progression stages of cancer
and have a high probability to work against the disease.”
The National Institutes of Health funded the work reported in the Journal
of Agricultural and Food Chemistry.
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