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Old Mon, Jun-02-03, 08:53
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acohn acohn is offline
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Default Anti-Cancer Effects of Genistein

I know that the issue of eating soy is fraught with controversy. I am not advocating eating or avoiding it, but I thought forum readers would be interested in the following article.

Link to article

Scientists have long proposed that diets high in soy may contribute to the lower incidence of certain cancers seen in Asian countries. Now, a USC/Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center study of genistein, an active component of soy products, provides one explanation of how soy could act to protect cells against cancer.

"The study links a natural component of our diet to the control of the cellular stress response, which plays an important role in many kinds of cancer and cancer drug resistance," says Amy S. Lee, Ph.D., the Freeman Cosmetic Chair in Basic Science Research and professor of biochemistry and molecular biology.

In an article appearing in the March 4 Journal of the National Cancer Institute, Lee reports how genistein turns off the defense mechanism that cells use to survive under stressful conditions, such as starvation, malnutrition, lack of oxygen, infection, extreme heat - and cancer. In hard times, cells turn on these so-called stress response genes to protect the body. But in cancer cells, scientists think stress proteins may inadvertently make the disease worse, helping tumor cells to elude the body's immune system and resist chemotherapy and other cancer treatments.

"Our group has shown, for the first time, how genistein is able to directly suppress the mammalian stress response," says Lee, who has investigated the stress response for nearly two decades. Working with graduate research assistant Yanhong Zhou, Lee found that, in cell cultures, genistein blocks the activity of a cellular protein, a transcription activating factor that switches on the stress response genes.

"It's clear that most cancer cells make a lot more stress proteins than normal cells do, and genistein prevents that from happening. In animal models, suppression of the stress response has been shown to suppress cancer growth," Lee says. "While clinical trials using genistein are ongoing, we won't know how effective genistein will be as an anti-cancer agent until more research is completed."

Many epidemiological studies have found that Asians living in Asia have a fairly low risk of developing cancers of the prostate, breast and colon. Yet, Asians who immigrate to America typically see their risk go up. Researchers looking for an environmental cause to explain this have focused on diet, and most intensely on soy, since Asians consume 20 to 50 times more soy per capita than Americans. Soy intake falls in Asian-Americans, according to a 1996 report led by Malcolm Pike, Ph.D., the Flora L. Thornton Chair in Preventive Medicine and USC professor and chair of preventive medicine. In that study, the team found that Asian-American women who ate the most tofu had a lower risk of developing breast cancer.

Many have looked to genistein, a component of soy, to help explain soy's putative protective effects. Genistein is a natural plant estrogen with antioxidant properties. In test tube studies, the compound has been shown to halt cell growth and angiogenesis (the development of new blood vessels that tumors require for continued growth). Some researchers have theorized that genistein's protective effect in breast cancer could come from its ability to block estrogen receptors. Lee believes that genistein might act upon a number of different cellular pathways in the body, its action on the stress response being just one way that the compound influences cancer growth.

For the last decade, scientists have used genistein as a biochemical tool because of its ability to block an enzyme (tyrosine kinase) that is important in cell growth and differentiation. In earlier studies, Lee had found that it could also block the stress response. "But until now, the targets of genistein action have not been well understood. Our work provides a molecular mechanism for genistein action at the DNA level. We predict that other genes important in cancer progression may also be targets of genistein. I suspect that this finding will lead to more exciting discoveries about the anti-cancer effects of soy," Lee says.
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