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Anticancer agent sprouts up unexpectedly.


There's good news for George Bush and others who detest de·test  
tr.v. de·test·ed, de·test·ing, de·tests
To dislike intensely; abhor.



[French détester, from Latin d
 broccoli. Without ever downing another forkful of the green veggie, they can naturally enrich cc their diets with its most potent anti-cancer constituent. All they need to do is sprinkle a few tablespoons of sprouts on a salad--broccoli sprouts, that is.

Paul Talalay and his coworkers at Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions in Baltimore surprised cancer researchers in 1992 when they isolated sulforaphane, a compound in broccoli and its botanical kin that inhibits the development of cancer (SN: 3/21/92, p. 183). The compound works by turning on detoxifying phase-2 enzymes.

The hoopla hoop·la  
n. Informal
1.
a. Boisterous, jovial commotion or excitement.

b. Extravagant publicity: The new sedan was introduced to the public with much hoopla.

2.
 over sulforaphane soon died down, however. Researchers realized that to get enough of the compound even from broccoli, its richest source, a diner would have to consume unrealistic amounts each week--about 2 pounds of the brassica brassica

Any plant of the large genus Brassica, in the mustard family, containing about 40 Old World species and including the cabbages, mustards, and rapes. B. oleracea has many edible varieties, such as broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, cauliflower, kale, and kohlrabi.
, which some people find bitter (SN: 7/12/97, p. 24).

Undeterred, Talalay's team began testing broccoli throughout its life cycle to find how sulforaphane forms and when. "To our surprise," Talalay says, "we found that the seeds were extraordinarily high in [phase-2] enzyme activity Enzyme activity
A measure of the ability of an enzyme to catalyze a specific reaction.

Mentioned in: Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase Deficiency
." So were 3-day-old broccoli sprouts, which he says are considerably more edible than the seeds. "The sprouts aren't bitter and don't taste like broccoli," he says, though they do possess "a little zing."

Both seeds and sprouts contain a compound that is turned into sulforaphane when their cells are crushed during chewing. As the plants grow, this initial store of sulforaphane's precursor becomes diluted. Indeed, mature plants contain only 2 to 5 percent as much per gram as sprouts do. Even the sulforaphane precursor dramatically inhibits chemically induced chemically induced,
adj initiating biologic action or response by the introduction of a chemical.
 cancers in rats, Talalay's team reports in the Sept. 16 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, usually referred to as PNAS, is the official journal of the United States National Academy of Sciences. .

Though diets rich in vegetables inhibit cancer development, Talalay's group is one of the few to execute "the very difficult, nitty-gritty studies" of the mechanisms, says Lee W. Wattenberg of the University of Minnesota (body, education) University of Minnesota - The home of Gopher.

http://umn.edu/.

Address: Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.
 in Minneapolis. Such work raises the prospect of mining broccoli for extracts that might be administered as cancer-fighting dietary supplements, he says.

Talalay is developing a center to certify that any sprouts ultimately marketed contain high quantities of the sulforaphane precursor.
COPYRIGHT 1997 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:broccoli sprouts
Author:Raloff, Janet
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Sep 20, 1997
Words:364
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