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New
Compound May Protect Against Liver Cancer Researchers
have identified a new compound called CDDO-Im that protects against the development
of liver cancer in laboratory
animals, according to an announcement by the National Cancer Institute. The compound
appears to stimulate the enzymes that remove toxic substances from the cells,
thereby increasing the cells' resistance to cancer-causing toxins. The
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences and the National Cancer Institute,
agencies of the federal National Institutes of Health, provided funding to researchers
at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health for the two-year study. The
compound's effectiveness at very low doses suggests it may have similar cancer-fighting
properties in humans. Researchers believe it may be particularly effective in
preventing cancers with a strong inflammatory component, such as liver, colon,
prostate and gastric cancers. The compound could eventually play a preventive
role in a wide range of other illnesses such as neurodegenerative disease, asthma
and emphysema. The
study results are featured on the cover of the February 15, 2006 issue of the
journal Cancer Research. "The results show that the potency of this
compound is more than 100 times as great as that of other chemopreventive agents
in protecting against cancer," said NIEHS Director David A. Schwartz, M.D.
"This protective effect, combined with the compound's anti-inflammatory properties,
make it an exciting avenue for the prevention of other diseases as well." CDDO-Im
belongs to a class of cancer-fighting compounds called triterpenoids. It is a
synthetic compound derived from oleanolic acid, a naturally occurring substance
found in plants all over the world. Research with other oleanolic derivatives
showed marked anti-tumor activity in both animals and humans. To
test the effectiveness of CDDO-Im, researchers treated laboratory rats with either
0.1, 0.3, 1.0, 3.0 or 10 micromole doses of the compound. Two days after treatment
with CDDO-Im, the rats were treated with aflatoxin, a naturally occurring toxin
that causes liver cancer in animals. Evaluation
of the rat livers showed that the lowest concentration of CDDO-Im led to an 85
percent reduction in pre-cancerous lesions, abnormal growths that have a greater
likelihood of developing into actual cancers. "This compound has a much greater
effect at a far lower dose than any other compound currently used for preventing
aflatoxin-induced cancer in humans," said Thomas Kensler, Ph.D., a cancer
biologist with the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and lead author
on the study. According
to Kensler, CDDO-Im activates a protein called Nrf2 that plays a central role
in protecting the cells against the toxic effects of environmental agents. "Nrf2
directs certain genes to stimulate the cell's defense mechanisms," he said.
"The protein also stimulates key enzymes that can detoxify harmful agents
like aflatoxin and remove them from the cell." Like
other compounds derived from oleanolic acid, CDDO-Im also has strong anti-inflammatory
properties that make it ideally suited to the prevention of certain cancers. "When
cells become inflamed, they can produce reactive molecules called free radicals
that can damage DNA and promote cancer development," said Kensler. "CDDO-Im
can also inhibit cancer formation by interfering with this inflammatory process." Because
it can stimulate the body's cancer-fighting capabilities at such low doses, Kensler
believes that CDDO-Im is an excellent candidate for cancer prevention use in humans.
"If this compound can produce such a potent and dramatic reduction in the
number of pre-cancerous growths, it should have an equally dramatic impact on
the development of actual cancers," he said. In
addition to serving as a valuable tool in the development of new cancer prevention
interventions, CDDO-Im may offer protection in a wide range of other disease settings.
"We know that the Nrf2 protein plays a role in regulating many different
kinds of genes involved in protecting the cell from harmful agents," said
Kensler. "It follows that activation of the Nrf2 pathway with CDDO-Im could
provide protection against a number of diseases where environmental agents play
important roles in their causes."
NIEHS, a component of the National
Institutes of Health, supports research to understand the effects of the environment
on human health. For more information on cancer prevention and other environmental
health topics, please visit the NIEHS website at http://www.niehs.nih.gov/home.htm. NOTE:
Triterpenoid compounds are currently under development by Dr. Michael Sporn and
colleagues at Dartmouth Medical School. Source National
Institute of Health Reference M
Yates and others. Potent Protection against Aflatoxin-Induced Tumorigenesis through
Induction of Nrf2-Regulated Pathways by the Triterpenoid 1-[2-Cyano-3-,12-Dioxooleana-1,9(11)-Dien-28-Oyl]Imidazole.
Cancer Research 66(4), February 2006.
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