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Black
Raspberries may prevent Colon Cancer
Newswise, November 3, 2010 — Black
raspberries are highly effective in
preventing colorectal tumors in two mouse
models of the disease, according to a
University of Illinois at Chicago study.
The findings
are published in the November issue of Cancer
Prevention Research.
Colorectal
cancer is the third most common cancer and
the second leading cause of cancer-related
death in both men and women in the U.S.,
according to the National Cancer Institute.
Building on
previous research that found black
raspberries have antioxidant, anti-cancer,
anti-neurodegenerative and anti-inflammatory
properties, the researchers looked at the
fruit's ability to prevent colon cancer.
"We saw the
black raspberry as a natural product, very
powerful, and easy to access," said Dr.
Wancai Yang, assistant professor of
pathology at the UIC College of Medicine and
senior author of the study, whose research
focuses on the interactions of genetic and
nutritional factors in the development of
intestinal cancer and tumor prevention.
The
researchers used two strains of mice,
Apc1638 and Muc2, which each have a specific
gene knocked out, causing the mice to
develop either intestinal tumors (in the
case of Apc1638) or colitis in the case of
Muc2. Colitis is an inflammation of the
large intestine that can contribute to the
development of colorectal cancer.
Both mouse
strains were randomized to be fed either a
Western-style, high-risk diet (high in fat
and low in calcium and vitamin D) or the
same diet supplemented with 10 percent
freeze-dried black raspberry powder for 12
weeks.
The
researchers found that in both mouse strains
the black raspberry-supplemented diet
produced a broad range of protective effects
in the intestine, colon and rectum and
inhibited tumor formation.
In the Apc1638
mice, tumor incidence was reduced by 45
percent and the number of tumors by 60
percent. The researchers found that black
raspberries inhibited tumor development by
suppressing a protein, known as beta-catenin,
which binds to the APC gene.
In the Muc2
mice, tumor incidence and the number of
tumors were both reduced by 50 percent, and
black raspberries inhibited tumor
development by reducing chronic inflammation
associated with colitis.
The
researchers now hope to obtain funding to
begin clinical trials in humans, said Yang.
Because black raspberries not only prevent
cancer but also inflammation, they may also
protect against other diseases, such as
heart disease.
Yang is a
member of the UIC Cancer Center. Co-authors
are Xiuli Bi of UIC, Wenfeng Fang of UIC and
Wuhan University in China, and Li-Shu Wang
and Gary Stoner of the Ohio State
University.
The research
was funded by UIC's department of pathology
and the National Cancer Institute.
UIC ranks
among the nation's leading research
universities and is Chicago's largest
university with 27,000 students, 12,000
faculty and staff, 15 colleges and the
state's major public medical center. A
hallmark of the campus is the Great Cities
Commitment, through which UIC faculty,
students and staff engage with community,
corporate, foundation and government
partners in hundreds of programs to improve
the quality of life in metropolitan areas
around the world.