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			by Emily Caldwell 
			May 20, 2013 
			
			from
			
			
			ResearchAndInnovationCommunications-OhioStateUniversity 
			Website 
			 
  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			New research suggests that 
			
			a compound abundant in
			
			the Mediterranean diet  
			
			takes away cancer cells' "superpower" to 
			escape death. 
			
			Scientists Design ‘Fishing’ Technique 
			
			to Show How Foods Improve Health. 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			
			  
			
			Mediterranean salad.
			 
			
			(Credit: © M.studio / 
			Fotolia) 
			 
  
			
			  
			
			By altering a very specific step in gene 
			regulation, this compound essentially re-educates cancer cells into 
			normal cells that die as scheduled. 
			 
			One way that cancer cells thrive is by inhibiting a process that 
			would cause them to die on a regular cycle that is subject to strict 
			programming.  
			
			  
			
			This study in cells, led by Ohio State University 
			researchers, found that a compound in certain plant-based foods,
			
			called apigenin, could stop 
			breast cancer cells from inhibiting their own death. 
			 
			Much of what is known about the health benefits of nutrients is 
			based on epidemiological studies that show strong positive 
			relationships between eating specific foods and better health 
			outcomes, especially reduced heart disease.  
			
			  
			
			But how the actual molecules within 
			these healthful foods work in the body is still a mystery in many 
			cases, and particularly with foods linked to lower risk for cancer. 
			
				
					- 
					
					Parsley  
					- 
					
					Celery   
					- 
					
					Chamomile tea,  
				 
			 
			
			...are the most common sources of 
			apigenin, but it is found in many fruits and vegetables. 
			 
			The researchers also showed in this work that apigenin binds with an 
			estimated 160 proteins in the human body, suggesting that other 
			nutrients linked to health benefits - called "nutraceuticals" 
			- might have similar far-reaching effects.  
			
			  
			
			In contrast, most pharmaceutical drugs 
			target a single molecule. 
			
				
				"We know we need to eat 
				healthfully, but in most cases we don't know the actual 
				mechanistic reasons for why we need to do that," said said
				
				Andrea Doseff, associate 
				professor of 
				
				internal medicine and
				
				molecular genetics at Ohio 
				State and a co-lead author of the study.  
				  
				
				"We see here that the beneficial 
				effect on health is attributed to this dietary nutrient 
				affecting many proteins. In its relationship with a set of 
				specific proteins, apigenin re-establishes the normal profile in 
				cancer cells. We think this can have great value clinically as a 
				potential cancer-prevention strategy." 
			 
			
			Andrea Doseff oversaw this work 
			with co-lead author 
			
			Erich Grotewold, 
			professor of molecular genetics and director of Ohio State’s 
			
			Center for Applied Plant Sciences 
			(CAPS).  
			
			  
			
			The two collaborate on studying the 
			genomics of apigenin and other flavonoids, a family of plant 
			compounds that are believed to prevent disease.  
			
			  
			
			The research (Molecular 
			Basis for the Action of a Dietary Flavonoid Revealed by the 
			Comprehensive Identification of Apigenin Human Targets) 
			appears this week in the online early edition of the journal 
			Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 
			 
			Though finding that apigenin can influence cancer cell behavior was 
			an important outcome of the work, Grotewold and Doseff point to 
			their new biomedical research technique as a transformative 
			contribution to nutraceutical research. 
			 
			They likened the technique to "fishing" for the human proteins in 
			cells that interact with small molecules available in the diet. 
			
				
				"You can imagine all the potentially 
				affected proteins as tiny fishes in a big bowl. We introduce 
				this molecule to the bowl and effectively lure only the truly 
				affected proteins based on structural characteristics that form 
				an attraction," Doseff said.  
				  
				
				"We know this is a real partnership 
				because we can see that the proteins and apigenin bind to each 
				other." 
			 
			
			Through additional experimentation, the 
			team established that apigenin had relationships with proteins that 
			have three specific functions. Among the most important was a 
			protein called hnRNPA2. 
			 
			This protein influences the activity of messenger RNA, or mRNA, 
			which contains the instructions needed to produce a specific 
			protein. The production of mRNA results from the splicing, or 
			modification, of RNA that occurs as part of gene activation.  
			
			  
			
			The 
			nature of the splice ultimately influences which protein 
			instructions the mRNA contains. 
			 
			Doseff noted that abnormal splicing is the culprit in an 
			estimated 80 percent of all cancers. In cancer cells, two types of 
			splicing occur when only one would take place in a normal cell - a 
			trick on the cancer cells' part to keep them alive and reproducing. 
			 
			In this study, the researchers observed that apigenin's connection 
			to the hnRNPA2 protein restored this single-splice characteristic to 
			breast cancer cells, suggesting that when splicing is normal, cells 
			die in a programmed way, or become more sensitive to 
			chemotherapeutic drugs. 
			
				
				"So by applying this nutrient, we 
				can activate that killing machinery. The nutrient eliminated the 
				splicing form that inhibited cell death," said Doseff, also an 
				investigator in Ohio State's
				
				Davis Heart and Lung Research Institute.
				 
				  
				
				"Thus, this suggests that when we 
				eat healthfully, we are actually promoting more normal 
				splice forms inside the cells in our bodies." 
			 
			
			The beneficial effects of nutraceuticals 
			are not limited to cancer, as the investigators previously showed 
			that apigenin has anti-inflammatory activities. 
			 
			The scientists noted that with its multiple cellular targets, 
			apigenin potentially offers a variety of additional benefits that 
			may even occur over time.  
			
				
				"The nutrient is targeting many 
				players, and by doing that, you get an overall synergy of the 
				effect," Grotewold explained. 
			 
			
			Doseff is leading a study in mice, 
			testing whether food modified to contain proper doses of this 
			nutrient can change splicing forms in the animals' cells and produce 
			an anti-cancer effect. 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			Note: 
			
			  
			
			Additional co-authors are, 
			
				
			 
			
			Doseff, Arango and Parihar are 
			affiliated with Ohio State’s
			
			Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, Critical Care 
			and Sleep Medicine. 
			 
  
			
			  
			
			Contacts:  
			
				
			 
			
			
			  
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