The team will describe
their approach in one of more than 9,000 presentations at the 250th National Meeting & Exposition
of the American Chemical Society (ACS), the world’s largest scientific society,
taking place here through Thursday.
According to the
American Cancer Society, one in 20 Americans will develop colon cancer at some
point in his or her lifetime. While progress has been made on the detection and
treatment of colon cancer, it remains the second leading cause of
cancer-related deaths in the U.S.
In previous studies,
Neto and colleagues at the University
of Massachusetts , Dartmouth , found that chemicals derived from
cranberry extracts could selectively kill off colon tumor cells in laboratory
dishes. “We’ve identified several compounds in cranberry extracts over the
years that seemed promising, but we’ve always wanted to look at what happens
with the compounds in an animal model of cancer,” Neto says. This led to a
collaboration with Hang Xiao, Ph.D., of the University
of Massachusetts , Amherst . His team had developed a mouse model
that mimics the type of colon cancer associated with colitis, an inflammatory
bowel condition that affects hundreds of thousands of people in the U.S.
For Neto’s part, her
team generated three powdered cranberry extracts: a whole fruit powder, an
extract containing only the cranberry polyphenols, and one containing only the
non-polyphenol components of the fruit. Some evidence suggests that polyphenols
have anti-inflammatory properties, and she wanted to assess their contribution
to the cranberry’s overall impact.
The researchers mixed
the cranberry extracts into the meals of mice with colon cancer. She notes that
the mice do not seem to mind the tart flavor. After 20 weeks, the mice given
the whole cranberry extract had about half the number of tumors as mice that
received no cranberry in their chow. The remaining tumors in the cranberry-fed
mice were also smaller. Plus, the cranberry extracts seemed to reduce the
levels of inflammation markers in the mice.
“Basically, what we
found was pretty encouraging. All preparations were effective to some degree,
but the whole cranberry extract was the most effective,” says Neto. “There may
be some synergy between polyphenol and non-polyphenol constituents.” Neto’s
graduate student Sarah Frade will present the work at the ACS meeting.
In the study, the
researchers were careful not to give the mice an absurd amount of cranberry.
“This is approximately equivalent to a cup a day of cranberries if you were a
human instead of a mouse,” Neto says. However, she’s not sure someone could get
the same benefits from juice, which lacks some of the components in the skin of
the cranberry.
Currently, Neto is
looking deeper into the cranberry to see if she can isolate individual
components responsible for its anti-cancer properties. The researchers are also
analyzing the metabolites in the mice that consumed the fruit extracts to
better understand what happens due to mouse metabolism after the cranberry
components are digested.
The American Chemical
Society is a nonprofit organization chartered by the U.S. Congress. With more
than 158,000 members, ACS is the world’s largest scientific society and a
global leader in providing access to chemistry-related research through its
multiple databases, peer-reviewed journals and scientific conferences. Its main
offices are in Washington , D.C. ,
and Columbus , Ohio .
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