Fighting cancer from the cabbage patch.Sauerkraut a health food? Not yet. But midwestern scientists have found evidence that something in this pickled cabbage and related foods blocks the action of estrogen, a hormone that can fuel the growth of breast cancer and other reproductive-tract malignancies. Nutritionist nu·tri·tion·ist n. One who is trained or is an expert in the field of nutrition. nutritionist Dietitian, see there William G. Helferich of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Early years: 1867-1880 The Morrill Act of 1862 granted each state in the United States a portion of land on which to establish a major public state university, one which could teach agriculture, mechanic arts, and military training, "without excluding other scientific and his colleagues were trying to tease out why Polish women who have moved to the United States are far more likely to develop breast cancer than their kin remaining in the Old Country are. One distinguishing factor turned out to be consumption of cabbage. European Poles eat far more. Cabbage belongs to 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. family. A host of recent studies has shown that brassicas--which include broccoli, cauliflower, brussels sprouts, and mustard--possess cancer-fighting compounds. Helferich wondered whether fermenting such veggies Veggies of Nottingham, also known as Veggies Catering Campaign, is a campaigning group based in Nottingham, England, promoting ethicalbum alternatives to mainstream fast food. , as in making sauerkraut, would create new anticancer agents. Others might arise when stomach juices acidify a·cid·i·fy v. To make or become acid. vegetable compounds. Specifically, the researchers wondered whether the brassicas give rise to estrogen blockers. To investigate, the researchers stimulated test-tube colonies of human breast-cancer cells with estrogen, then added extracts of plain cabbage, sauerkraut, or acidified acidified /acid·i·fied/ (ah-sid´i-fid) having been made acid. brussels sprouts. Low-concentration extracts of the samples--typically 5 to 25 parts per billion--not only slowed the growth of estrogen-fed cells but also blocked estrogen's ability to turn on a particular gene. The scientists found little difference in the three vegetable preparations' potencies. At parts-per-million concentrations, however, each extract mimicked estrogen--spurring cell growth and gene activity, the researchers found. "Though it's very unlikely you'd get those higher concentrations in the blood from eating brassicas," Helferich says, he suspects that "it is realistic you could get the antiestrogenic doses." His group's findings, which will appear in the JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY, are currently available on the Internet. The Illinois scientists have partially purified antiestrogenic constituents of the extracts and distributed portions to other researchers who study brassicas' cancer-fighting compounds. It appears these newly isolated antiestrogenic agents "are novel," Helferich told SCIENCE NEWS. The study wins high marks for its methodology from endocrinologist Ana Soto of the Tufts University School of Medicine The Tufts University School of Medicine is one of the eight schools that comprise Tufts University. Located on the university's health sciences campus in the Chinatown district of Boston, Massachusetts, the medical school has clinical affiliations with thousands of doctors and in Boston. Although she finds the brassicas' dose-dependent activities interesting, both she and Paul Talalay of the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore point out that until the active agents are purified and individually tested in animals, it will be impossible to gauge whether these compounds might persist in people. Such experiments will be critical for estimating the cancer-fighting prospects of the vegetables. Scientists had thought that any anticancer benefits from brassicas traced to sulforaphane (SN: 9/20/97, p. 183) and in-dole-3 carbinol carbinol /car·bi·nol/ (kahr´bi-nol) 1. methyl alcohol. 2. any aromatic or fatty alcohol formed by substituting one, two, or three hydrocarbon groups for hydrogen in methanol. (SN: 3/6/99, p. 157). The findings by Helferich's team suggest these foods might offer even more "potentially important" agents and point toward a new class of drugs to reduce cancer risk, observes Barnett Zumoff, chief of endocrinology at Beth Israel Medical Center Beth Israel Medical Center is a hospital in New York City. It has four major locations providing health services. It acts as University Hospital and Manhattan Campus for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University. in New York. |
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