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Citrus Shows Promise For
Certain Childhood Cancers
Orange juice and cancer don't mix. In fact,
the popular citrus drink could become a cocktail to prevent or
stop the deadly disease in humans.
Research by Texas Agriculture Experiment Station scientists has
shown that citrus compounds called limonoids targeted and stopped
neuroblastoma cells in the lab. They now hope to learn the reasons
for the stop-action behavior and eventually try the citrus concoction
in humans.
Neuroblastomas account for about 10 percent of all cancer in children,
Harris said, and is usually a solid tumor in the neck, chest,
spinal cord or adrenal gland. The finding in citrus is promising
not only for its potential to arrest cancer, but because limonoids
induce no side affects, according to Dr. Ed Harris, Experiment
Station biochemist who collaborated on the study with Dr. Bhimu
Patil, a plant physiologist at the Texas A&M University-Kingsville
Citrus Center in Weslaco.
''Limonoids are naturally occurring compounds,'' Harris said.
''Unlike other anti-cancer drugs that are toxic, limonoids apparently
do not hurt a person. That's the beautiful potential.''
Patil calls citrus fruit ''a vast reservoir of anti-carcinogens.''
As a plant physiologist, he has succeeded in isolating and purifying
a number of limonoids from citrus so that the biochemists could
evaluate and compare their anti-cancer abilities at the molecular
level.
''Limonoids are unique to citrus,'' Patil said. ''They are not
present in any other fruits or vegetables. My goal is to find
the direct benefits of citrus on human health. ''
He said a challenging task is to isolate the limonoid compounds,
''because some are present in very small concentrations.''
In fact, citrus breeders seeking to improve the fruit's tastiness
for consumers and yield for producers led researchers to discover
limonoids -- eight of which have been characterized from extractions
at the Weslaco facility, according to the researchers.
''If I ask why one should drink orange juice every day,'' Harris
noted, ''almost everyone would say for vitamin C. That's true,
but we also need to learn two new words -- flavonoids and limonoids.''
Harris explained that flavonoids and limonoids -- nutrient-packed
pigments that give color and taste to fruit -- may work against
cancer in any of three ways: prevent it from forming, slow the
growth of existing cancer, or kill cancer cells.
''The limonoids, which differ structurally from flavonoids, seem
to do all three,'' he said of tests in his lab by one of Patil's
graduate students, Shibu Poulose, who also worked in Harris' College
Station lab. Their work emphasized the compounds' ability to kill
existing the neuroblastoma cells with the rationale that if the
method and time limonoids take to obliterate the cancer could
be found, perhaps scientists could exploit it to help cure the
disease.
What Poulose found with the extracted limonoid was that the neuroblastoma
cells died with relatively small amounts of concentrated limonoids
and all in 48 hours or less.
They tested this in several ways. First, the limonoids were put
through a test to see whether they would quench the oxygen radicals
-- cancer-causing substances that are destructive to normal cells.
The limonoids appeared to be as effective as vitamin C in some
of the tests.
Test of cell viability were more impressive, however. The neuroblastoma
cells were all dead within two days with just 5, 10 and 50 micromoles
of limonoids. A micromole is about the equivalent of a tiny skin
flake. Some limonoids were more effective than others, but all
had killing potential. These amounts of limonoids could easily
be obtained from a glass of orange or grapefruit juice.
Next, cell viability tests aimed at whether the cell death was
caused by apoptosis -- a programmed cell death that spirals in
an unstoppable fashion unstoppably once the vulnerable spot on
the cell is hit.
''Suppose we have cancer and the cancer cell mutates repeatedly
until it takes over our organs,'' he said. ''So, a compound comes
in and spots those cells with the unusual metabolism and kills
them by degrading the cells' protein and fragmenting their DNA
until the cells succumb.
''Apoptosis is beneficial. It's the immunity system in the body
that causes the white cells to recognize things that are not supposed
to be there and attack them,'' Harris explained. Apoptosis early
in life removes those white cells that would attack the body's
own protein, for example.
To test this, the researchers applied 1, 5, 10 and 50 micromolar
amounts of limonoids to neuroblastoma cells, then put an apoptosis-blocking
chemical on an identical comparison set. Neuroblastoma cells with
the blocker did not die, indicating that the limonoids trigger
apoptosis which in turn results in the cell death. In their tests,
the cancer cells treated with limonoids -- but not the apoptosis
blocker -- all died within 36 hours.
The researchers also looked at caspases, destructive enzymes that
are activated to cause chain reactions that lead to cell death.
''A question was whether limonoids turn on apoptosis which then
turn on the caspases and if so, whether that means there is caspases
resting in our cells (that could be activated to help fight cancer
in us),'' he said.
This part of the research revealed that with only 5 micromoles
of a limonoid known as LG, the cancer cells were dying in as little
as 12 hours.
''The last phase in killing cancer is to make sure the DNA is
destroyed because that is the death knell for the cell,'' Harris
said. ''It's intriguing that this amount appeared to have no effect
on normal cells and only certain types of cancer cells are vulnerable.
Fortunately, breast cancer cells are on the list of vulnerable
cells. This makes it all the more imperative to learn how the
process works.
''We don't have the answer to that yet,'' he said, ''but we have
observed that those limonoids with the greatest potency have a
closed ring in their chemical structure and that is different
from other compounds.''
Limonoids with a sugar unit attached, the so-called limonoid glucosides,
are water soluble and tasteless; those without the sugar, the
aglycons, are responsible for bitterness of some citrus. It was
the limonoid glucosides, in this study that had ''a dramatic effect''
on cancer cell death.
''Now that we have seen the cancer cells die and in such a short
time,'' Harris said, ''we need to find out why they are so vulnerable
and exploit it. It could be that ultimately we are able to give
patients an oral cocktail of limonoids in such concentration as
to stop their cancer.''
Patil said the researchers also will be studying limonoids to
find the limits for adding to food. One of the limonoids, glucoside,
is tasteless, he noted, so it might become a food additive for
its health benefits, but food engineers would need to know how
much to add for human consumption.
His lab also is examining whether the compounds vary among citrus
species and at different times of the year.
Reference
Source: Science Blog December
December 3, 2004
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