Green Tea's
Cancer-Fighting Allure Becomes More Potent
Green tea's ability to fight cancer is even more potent and varied than
scientists suspected, say researchers who have discovered that
chemicals in green tea shut down one of the key
molecules that tobacco relies upon to cause cancer. It?s a find that
could
help explain why people who drink green tea are less likely to develop
cancer.
The finding by scientists at the University of Rochester?s
Environmental Health Science Center appears in the July 21 issue of Chemical
Research in Toxicology, published by the American Chemical Society.
Graduate student Christine
Palermo and adviser Thomas Gasiewicz, Ph.D., set out to measure the
effects
of the chemicals found in green tea on a molecule known as the aryl
hydrocarbon
(AH) receptor, a molecule that frequently plays a role in turning on
genes
that are oftentimes harmful. Gasiewicz has previously shown how both
tobacco
smoke and dioxin manipulate the molecule ? a favorite target of toxic
substances ? to cause havoc within the body, and currently he?s working
with scientists at the James P. Wilmot Cancer Center to clarify exactly
how substances like tobacco smoke cause cancer.
The team isolated the chemicals that make up green tea and found two
that inhibit AH activity. The two substances, epigallocatechingallate
(EGCG) and epigallocatechin (EGC), are close molecular cousins to other
flavonoids found in broccoli, cabbage, grapes and red wine that are
known to help prevent cancer.
While green tea has been much-ballyhooed for its anti-cancer effects as
well as other purported abilities such as preventing rheumatoid
arthritis and lowering cholesterol, just how the substance works has
been a mystery. Scientists do know that green tea contains chemicals
that are anti-oxidants and quench harmful molecules. But its effects on
the AH receptor have not been thoroughly evaluated until now.
?It?s likely that the compounds in green tea act through many different
pathways,? says Gasiewicz, professor and chair of Environmental
Medicine and director of Rochester?s Environmental Health Science
Center. ?Green tea may work differently than we thought to exert its
anti-cancer activity.?
Gasiewicz and Palermo showed that the chemicals shut down the AH
receptor in cancerous mouse cells, and early results indicate the same
is true in human cells as well.
In the laboratory the AH-inhibiting effects of green tea become evident
when EGCG and EGC reach levels typical of those found in a cup of green
tea. But the scientists say that how green tea is metabolized by the
body is crucial to its effectiveness, and that
results in the laboratory don?t necessarily translate directly to the
dinner
table.
?Right now we don?t know if drinking the amount of green tea that a
person normally drinks would make a difference, but the work is giving
us insight into how the proteins work,? says Palermo, who enjoys cold
green tea herself. ?There are a lot of differences between various
kinds of green tea, so a lot more research is needed.?
For this work Palermo received the award for best poster in the
chemical carcinogenesis specialty section at the meeting of the Society
of Toxicology in March. Now she is studying exactly how green tea
inhibits the AH receptor. After she graduates Palermo plans to study
links between environmental agents and childhood leukemia.
In addition to Palermo and
Gasiewicz, other authors are former post-doctoral associate Jose Martin
Hernando
and chemist Andrew Kende, who teased apart the components of green tea
extract; and Stephen Dertinger, a former student who first had the idea
to test green tea?s effects on the AH receptor. The work was funded by
the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences and the
American Institute for Cancer Research.