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Scientific News Health care Preventive maintenance of diseases VITAMIN C PREVENTS CANCER BY BLOCKING HYDROGEN PEROXIDE, BUT APPLE CHEMICAL WORKS EVEN BETTER, CORNELL AND KOREAN SCIENTISTS REPORT
VITAMIN C PREVENTS CANCER BY BLOCKING HYDROGEN
PEROXIDE, BUT APPLE CHEMICAL WORKS EVEN BETTER, CORNELL AND KOREAN SCIENTISTS
REPORT
Writing in the medical journal, The
Lancet , scientists from Cornell
University and Seoul National University offer a
more precise explanation for vitamin C's anti-cancer activity. And they suggest
that a natural chemical from apples works even better than vitamin C.
Their report appears in the Jan. 12, 2002, issue
of The Lancet , (Vol. 359, No. 9301), the weekly journal for physicians
published in London.
C.Y. Lee, Cornell professor of food science and
technology, and his South Korean colleagues, Ki Won Lee, Hyong Joo Lee and
Kyung-Sun Kang, found that vitamin C blocks the carcinogenic effects of hydrogen
peroxide on intercellular communication. Until this finding, the mechanism for
vitamin C's inhibitory effects on carcinogenic tumor formation was not
understood.
However, the report notes that quercetin, a
phytochemical found in apples, has even stronger anticancer activity than
vitamin C. (Phytochemicals, such as flavanoids and polyphenols, are plant
chemicals that contain protective, disease-preventing compounds.)
"Vitamin C has been considered one of the
most important essential nutrients in our diet since the discovery in 1907 that
it prevents scurvy," says Lee. "In addition, vitamin C has several
important functions in our body for the synthesis of amino acids and collagen,
wound healing, metabolism of iron, lipids and cholesterol and others. In
particular, vitamin C is a well known anti-oxidant that scavenges free radicals."
(An anti-oxidant is one of many chemicals that reduce or prevent oxidation, thus
preventing cell and tissue damage from free radicals in the body.) "Vitamin
C prevents the inhibition of gap-junction intercellular communication (GJIC)
induced by hydrogen peroxide," says Lee. GJIC is essential for maintaining
normal cell growth. Inhibition of GJIC is strongly related to the carcinogenic
process, especially to tumor promotion. Hydrogen peroxide, a tumor promoter,
inhibits GJIC by changing a special protein, connexin43. When rat liver
epithelial cells were treated with vitamin C, the researchers report, inhibition
of GJIC induced by hydrogen peroxide was prevented.
Although vitamin C protects against oxidative DNA
damage through its free-radical scavenging activity, Lee and his coworkers
believe that the vitamin's anti-tumor action functions through a different
mechanism.
"The most powerful weapon we have in the Юght
against cancer is prevention," concludes Lee. "A diet rich in
phytochemicals and vitamin C will reduce the risk of cancer. These
phytochemicals and nutrients are most readily available in fresh fruits and
vegetables." These recommendations echo those of Lee and his Cornell
colleagues in a report in the journalNature (June 22, 2000).
Related World Wide Web sites:
The following sites provide additional
information on this news release. Some might not be part of the Cornell
University community, and Cornell has no control over their content or
availability.
o New York State Agricultural Experiment Station
(article and photograph of Lee):
http://www.nysaes.cornell.edu/pubs/press/current/leelancet02.html
.
o The Lanceta: http://www.lancet.com/.
FOR RELEASE: Jan. 21, 2002
Contact: Linda McCandless
Office: 315-787-2417
Cell: 607-227-5920
E-Mail: llm23@cornell.edu
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a Cornell
University
Publishing date: January 30, 2002
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