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EMBARGOED UNTIL
MONDAY, APRIL 19, 2004
Contact: Donna Krupa
703.967.2751 (cell)
703.527.7357 (office)
djkrupa1@aol.com
APS Newsroom: April 17-21, 2004
Washington, DC Convention Center
East Registration Area/Flex Unit
Telephone: 202.249.4009
New Study Finds Certain Compounds In Beer And Wine
Effective In Slowing Breast Cancer Cell Growth
Results may lead to a new
examination of the relationship between alcohol and a deadly women’s cancer
Washington, DC – Numerous studies have been
published showing that consuming alcohol increases the risk for
breast cancer. That’s what makes a new research finding from Portugal so
intriguing. The study has determined that certain compounds found in wine,
beer (and tea) have contributed to a significant decrease in breast cancer
cell proliferation.
Background
Numerous studies have found that regular, moderate use
of alcohol affects the levels of important female hormones, especially for
postmenopausal women whose bodies make much less estrogen and progesterone
than before they entered menopause. As a consequence, women’s breast cells
are exposed to higher levels of estrogen if alcohol was consumed. This may
in turn trigger the cells, which are estrogen sensitive in such women, to
become cancerous.
Phenolic phytochemicals are widely distributed in the
plant kingdom. In various experiments, it has been shown that selected
polyphenols, mainly flavonoids, confer protective effects on the
cardiovascular system and have anticancer, antiviral and antiallergic
properties. Flavonoids are low molecular weight compounds composed of a
three-ring structure with various substitutions, which appear to be
responsible for the antioxidant and antiproliferative properties. It is
well known that consumption of red wine in moderation is associated with
reduced risk of cardiovascular disease. Many believe that the low incidence
of coronary artery disease found among the French could be partially related
to the pharmacological properties of polyphenolic compounds present in red
wine.
A New Study
Three researchers from the Universidade do Porto,
Portugal set out to examine whether phenolic compounds could have properties
that would be effective in fighting breast cancer, the most commonly
diagnosed nondermatologic cancer and the second leading cause of
cancer-related deaths among women in the United States. They
investigated the effect of three phenolic compounds --
epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG), xanthohumol (XN) and resveratrol (RES) --
substances present in significant concentrations in tea, beer and red wine,
respectively, on the growth of a human breast cancer cell line, MCF-7.
The authors of the study entitled “Phenolic Compounds
in the Control of Breast Cancer Cell Growth” are S. Pinheiro-Silva, I.
Azevedo, and C. Calhau, all at the Universidade do Porto, Porto, Portugal.
They will present their findings at the American Physiological Society’s (APS)
(www.the-aps.org)
annual scientific conference, Experimental Biology 2003, being held
April 17-21, 2004, at the Washington, D.C. Convention Center.
Methodology
The cell line (MCF-7) was cultured
in appropriate medium, in different cell plates, under control conditions or
in the presence of any of the three polyphenols: EGCG, XN or RES. Various
concentrations and various time periods of treatment were tested for each
compound. At the chosen time points, the cells were taken off the plates
and counted in a Neubauer chamber after exposure to tryptan blue (0.4
percent). The colorant is excluded from live cells, and so the method allows
simultaneously quantifying the number of cells (index of proliferation) and
cytotoxicity (ratio between dead and live cells). In other experiments,
3H-thymidine incorporation was evaluated in each time and
treatment condition, indicating the effect of treatment on DNA synthesis.
Results
All three polyphenolic compounds
tested showed a significant effect, decreasing breast cancer cells
proliferation. The effects were observed both over the number of cells after
each time period, and over 3H-thymidine incorporation.
Cytotoxicity depended on the compound concentration and duration of
treatment.
XN, found in beer, was the most
potent polyphenol over breast cancer cell growth: it showed its effect more
rapidly and at a lower concentration (24 hours, one to 10 μM). On the other
hand, cytotoxicity was observed only at 50 to 100 μM concentrations, and
usually after longer time periods. XN IC50 for 3H-thymidine
incorporation, at 24 h of treatment, was found to be 18.3 μM.
RES did also show an anti-proliferative
effect over the growth of the breast cancer cell line, albeit with less
potency than XN: at 24 hours, treatment anti-proliferative effect was
significant only for the higher tested concentrations, 50 and 100 μM.
On the other hand, the effects of
RES over 3H-thymidine incorporation were not in linear
correlation with the effects over cell number, indicating that it is
probably acting on more than one biochemical event. Its IC50 for
3H-thymidine incorporation decrease, at 24 hours treatment, was
found to be 71.2 μM.
EGCG showed an inhibitory effect upon cell growth, but
was less potent than XN and RES. Only at the highest concentration tested,
100 μM, the proliferative inhibitory effect was statistically significant
after 24 hours of treatment. At 50 μM, the inhibitory effect was significant
only after 72 hours exposure. On the other hand, EGCG showed no cytotoxicity.
Conclusions
The
researchers concluded the following:
-
three
polyphenolic compounds, EGCG, XN and RES, known to be abundant in tea,
beer and red wine, respectively, when present in the nutritive medium of a
breast cancer cell line (MCF-7), were all able to reduce cell
proliferation. These effects could be observed at concentrations that were
not cytotoxic.
-
a decrease in 3H-thymidine
incorporation, a commonly used index of DNA synthesis, was also observed
in the presence of the compounds, very much in correspondence with the
anti-proliferative effect in the case of XN. EGCG, in this selection of
polyphenols, was the least potent on a weight basis, although that may
have no therapeutic meaning since it was also the least toxic compound
(i.e. it can be given in higher doses).
-
these biochemical results, over breast
cancer cells, add support and meaning to epidemiological studies that
relate consumption of certain beverages with a lesser incidence and
prevalence of cancer.
Caveat
This study does not call for women
to increase alcohol consumption as a means of breast cancer prevention. The
authors state that their findings suggest that further studies, namely in
vivo studies, are necessary to fully support the inclusion of these
compounds and/or beverages in diet recommendations in the perspective of
cancer prevention.
- end -
The
American Physiological Society (APS) was founded in 1887 to foster basic and
applied science, much of it relating to human health. The Bethesda, MD-based
Society has more than 11,000 members and publishes 3,800 articles in its 14
peer-reviewed journals every year.
***
Editor’s
Note: For further information or to schedule an interview with a member of
the research team, please contact Donna Krupa at 703.967.2751 (cell),
703.527.7357 (office) or at
djkrupa1@aol.com. Or contact the APS newsroom at 202.249.4009 between
9:00 AM and 6:00 PM EDT April 17-21, 2004.
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