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Compounds
that color fruits and veggies may protect
against Colon Cancer
Newswise —
Understanding the molecular structures of
compounds that give certain fruits and
vegetables their rich colors may help
researchers find even more powerful cancer
fighters, a new study suggests.
Evidence from
laboratory experiments on rats and on human
colon cancer cells also suggests that
anthocyanins, the compounds that give color
to most red, purple and blue fruits and
vegetables appreciably slow the growth of
colon cancer cells.
The findings also bring
scientists a step closer to figuring out
what exactly gives fruits and vegetables
their cancer-fighting properties.
“These foods contain
many compounds, and we’re just starting to
figure out what they are and which ones
provide the best health benefits,” said
Monica Giusti, the lead author of the study
and an assistant professor of food science
at Ohio State University.
Giusti presented the
findings, which represent the collaborative
efforts of Giusti and her colleagues, on
August 19 at the national meeting of the
American Chemical Society in Boston.
Giusti and her
colleagues found that in some cases, slight
alterations to the structure of anthocyanin
molecules made these compounds more potent
anti-cancer agents.
In their studies on
human colon cancer cells grown in laboratory
dishes, the researchers tested the
anti-cancer effects of anthocyanin-rich
extracts from a variety of fruits and
vegetables. They retrieved these
anthocyanins from some relatively exotic
fruits and other plants, including grapes,
radishes, purple corn, chokeberries,
bilberries, purple carrots and elderberries.
The plants were chosen
due to their extremely deep colors, and
therefore high anthocyanin content. Some of
these plants are also used as a source of
food coloring.
The researchers
determined the amount of extract needed from
each plant to cut the growth of human colon
cancer cells in half. Altering pigment
structures slightly by adding an extra sugar
or acid molecule changed the biological
activity of these extracts.
The researchers added
different extracts to flasks that contained
colon cancer cells. They used an analytical
technique called high-performance liquid
chromatography – mass spectrometry in order
to determine the exact chemical structure of
each compound. They used biological tests to
determine the number of cancer cells left
after anthocyanin treatment.
The researchers found
that the amount of anthocyanin extract
needed to reduce cancer cell growth by 50
percent varied among the plants. Extract
derived from purple corn was the most
potent, in that it took the least amount of
this extract (14 micrograms per milliliter
of cell growth solution) to cut cell numbers
in half. Chokeberry and bilberry extracts
were nearly as potent as purple corn. Radish
extract proved the least potent, as it took
nine times as much (131 µg/ml) of this
compound to cut cell growth by 50 percent.
“All fruits and
vegetables that are rich in anthocyanins
have compounds that can slow down the growth
of colon cancer cells, whether in
experiments in laboratory dishes or inside
the body,” Giusti said.
In additional
laboratory studies, she and her colleagues
found that anthocyanin pigments from radish
and black carrots slowed the growth of
cancer cells anywhere from 50 to 80 percent.
But pigments from purple corn and
chokeberries not only completely stopped the
growth of cancer cells, but also killed
roughly 20 percent of the cancer cells while
having little effect on healthy cells.
In animal studies, rats
induced with colon cancer cells were fed a
daily diet of anthocyanin extracts either
from bilberries and chokeberries, which are
most often used as flavorings or to make
jams and juices. The dietary addition of the
anthocyanin extracts reduced signs of colon
tumors by 70 and 60 percent, respectively,
when compared to control rats.
Giusti says the results
suggest that anthocyanins may protect
against certain gastrointestinal cancers.
“Very little
anthocyanin is absorbed by the bloodstream,”
Giusti said. “But a large proportion travels
through the gastrointestinal tract, where
those tissues absorb the compound.”
In fact, other
researchers at Ohio State have found that
black raspberries may help reduce the growth
of esophageal and colon cancers tumors.
Still, Giusti stops
short of recommending one kind of fruit or
vegetable over another. She and her
colleagues are continuing to study how the
chemical structure of anthocyanins
contributes to the potential health benefits
of food as well as how changes to these
structures may affect the body’s ability to
use the compounds.
“There are more than
600 different anthocyanins found in nature,”
she said. “While we know that the
concentration of anthocyanins in the GI
tract is ultimately affected by their
chemical structures, we’re just beginning to
scratch the surface of understanding how the
body absorbs and uses these different
structures.”
She pointed out that
her team is also evaluating how these
pigments interact with other compounds in
foods – such interactions could ultimately
affect the health benefits of the food or
the anthocyanin itself.
“It is possible to use
natural, anthocyanin-based food colorants
instead of synthetic dyes,” Giusti said.
“Doing so still maintains the wonderful
colors of foods while enhancing their
health-promoting properties.”
This work received
support from a U.S. Department of
Agriculture-National Research Initiative
grant.