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Graeme Baldwin
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Good quality extra-virgin olive oil contains health-relevant
chemicals, 'phytochemicals', that can trigger cancer cell death. New
research published in the open access journal BMC Cancer sheds more light on the suspected association between olive oil-rich Mediterranean diets and reductions in breast cancer risk.
Javier
Menendez from the Catalan Institute of Oncology and Antonio
Segura-Carretero from the University of Granada in Spain led a team of
researchers who set out to investigate which parts of olive oil were
most active against cancer. Menendez said, "Our findings reveal for the
first time that all the major complex phenols present in extra-virgin
olive oil drastically suppress overexpression of the cancer gene HER2
in human breast cancer cells".
Extra-virgin olive oil is the
oil that results from pressing olives without the use of heat or
chemical treatments. It contains phytochemicals that are otherwise lost
in the refining process. Menendez and colleagues separated the oil into
fractions and tested these against breast cancer cells in lab
experiments. All the fractions containing the major extra-virgin
phytochemical polyphenols (lignans and secoiridoids) were found to
effectively inhibit HER2.
Although these findings provide
new insights on the mechanisms by which good quality oil, i.e.
polyphenol-rich extra-virgin olive oil, might contribute to a lowering
of breast cancer risk in a HER2-dependent manner, extreme caution must
be applied when applying the lab results to the human situation. As the
authors point out, "The active phytochemicals (i.e. lignans and
secoiridoids) exhibited tumoricidal effects against cultured breast
cancer cells at concentrations that are unlikely to be achieved in real
life by consuming olive oil".
Nevertheless, and according to
the authors, "These findings, together with the fact that that humans
have safely been ingesting significant amounts of lignans and
secoiridoids as long as they have been consuming olives and
extra-virgin oil, strongly suggest that these polyphenols might provide
an excellent and safe platform for the design of new anti breast-cancer
drugs".
Source: BioMed Central
Original article: Javier A Menendez, Alejandro Vazquez-Martin, Rocio Garcia-Villalba, Alegria Carrasco-Pancorbo, Cristina Oliveras-Ferraros, Alberto Fernandez-Gutierrez and Antonio Segura-Carretero. Anti-HER2 (erbB-2) oncogene effects of phenolic compounds directly isolated from commercial Extra-Virgin Olive Oil (EVOO). BMC Cancer 2008,
8:377.
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