Washington, D.C.
February 9, 2006
Need another reason to eat your
vegetables? New research shows that some of them contain
chemicals that appear to enhance DNA repair in cells, which
could lead to protection against cancer development, say
Georgetown University
Medical Center researchers.
In a study
published in the British
Journal of Cancer (published by the research journal
Nature) the researchers show that in laboratory tests,
a compound called indole-3-carinol (I3C), found in broccoli,
cauliflower and cabbage, and a chemical called genistein, found
in soy beans, can increase the levels of BRCA1 and BRCA2
proteins that repair damaged DNA.
Although the
health benefits of eating your vegetables—especially cruciferous
ones, such as broccoli—aren’t particularly new, this study is
one of the first to provide a molecular explanation as to how
eating vegetables could cut a person’s risk of developing
cancer, an association that some population studies have found,
says the study’s senior author,
Eliot M. Rosen, MD, PhD,
professor of oncology, cell biology, and radiation medicine at
Georgetown’s
Lombardi
Comprehensive Cancer Center.
“It is now clear
that the function of crucial cancer genes can be influenced by
compounds in the things we eat,” Rosen says. “Our findings
suggest a clear molecular process that would explain the
connection between diet and cancer prevention.”
In this study,
Rosen exposed breast and prostate cancer cells to increasing
doses of 13C and genistein, and found that these chemicals
boosted production of BRCA1, as well as its sister repair
protein, BRCA2. Mutations in either of these genes can lead to
development of breast, prostate and ovarian cancers.
Since decreased
amounts of the BRCA proteins are seen in cancer cells, higher
levels might prevent cancer from developing, Rosen says, adding
that the ability of I3C and genistein to increase production of
BRCA proteins could explain their protective effects.
The study was
funded by the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation and the
National Cancer Institute and co-authors include Drs. Saijun
Fan, MD, PhD, Qinghui Meng, MS, Karen Auborn, PhD, and Timothy
Carter, PhD.
The Lombardi
Comprehensive Cancer Center, part of
Georgetown
University Medical Center and
Georgetown University Hospital, seeks to improve the
diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of cancer through
innovative basic and clinical research, patient care, community
education and outreach, and the training of cancer specialists
of the future. Lombardi is one of only 39 comprehensive cancer
centers in the nation, as designated by the
National Cancer
Institute, and the only one in the Washington, DC, area. |