Black raspberries may slow cancer spread
Washington, Aug 28 : A mix of preventative agents, such as those found in
concentrated black raspberries, may effectively inhibit cancer development, according to a
new study.
According to the research, black raspberries can more effectively slow down the process
of cancer development than single agents aimed at shutting down a particular gene.
To reach the conclusion, researchers at the Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer
Center examined the effect of freeze-dried black raspberries on genes altered by a
chemical carcinogen in an animal model of esophageal cancer.
The study found that the carcinogen affected the activity of some 2,200 genes in the
animals' esophagus in only one week, but 460 of those genes were restored to normal
activity in animals that consumed freeze-dried black raspberry powder as part of their
diet during the exposure.
These findings, published in recent issue of the journal Cancer Research, also helped
identify 53 genes that may play a fundamental role in early cancer development and may
therefore be important targets for chemoprevention agents.
"We have clearly shown that berries, which contain a variety of anticancer compounds,
have a genome-wide effect on the expression of genes involved in cancer development," says
principal investigator Gary D. Stoner, a professor of pathology, human nutrition and
medicine who studies dietary agents for the prevention of esophageal cancer.
"This suggests to us that a mixture of preventative agents, which berries provide, may
more effectively prevent cancer than a single agent that targets only one or a few genes,"
Stoner added.
Stoner notes that black raspberries have vitamins, minerals, phenols and phytosterols,
many of which individually are known to prevent cancer in animals.
"Freeze drying the berries concentrates these elements about ten times, giving us a
power pack of chemoprevention agents that can influence the different signaling pathways
that are deregulated in cancer," he said.
To conduct the study, Stoner and his colleagues fed rats either a normal diet or a diet
containing 5 percent black-raspberry powder. During the third week, half the animals in
each diet group were injected three times with a chemical carcinogen,
N-nitrosomethylbenzylamine. The animals continued consuming the diets during the week of
carcinogen treatment.
After the third week, the researchers examined the animals' esophageal tissue, thereby
capturing gene changes that occur early during carcinogen exposure. Their analyses
included measuring the activity, or expression levels, of 41,000 genes. In the
carcinogen-treated animals, 2,261 of these genes showed changes in activity of 50 percent
or higher.
In the animals fed berry powder, however, a fifth of the carcinogen affected genes -
exactly 462 of them - showed near-normal levels of activity, when compared with
controls.
--ANI