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Biologists show how Veggies work in
Cancer-Fighting Diet
Newswise, March 8, 2011 --Mothers around the
world now collectively can say, “I told you
so.”
Your
vegetables are good for you, says a research
review published by scientists from the
University of Alabama at Birmingham in the
journalClinical
Epigenetics.
In particular,
vegetables such as broccoli and cabbage are
filled with compounds that could help
reverse or prevent cancers and other
aging-related diseases as part of the
“epigenetics diet,” a new lifestyle concept
coined after the article’s publication.
“Your mother
always told you to eat your vegetables, and
she was right,” says co-author Trygve
Tollefsbol, Ph.D., D.O., a biology professor
in the UAB College of Arts and Sciences.
“But now we better understand why she was
right — compounds in many of these foods
suppress gene aberrations that over time
cause fatal diseases.”
Epigenetics is
the study of the changes in human gene
expressions with time, changes that can
cause cancer and Alzheimer’s, among other
diseases. In recent years, epigenetics
research worldwide, including numerous
studies conducted at UAB, have identified
specific food compounds that inhibit
negative epigenetic effects.
Those foods
include soybeans, cauliflower, broccoli and
cabbage. Green tea, fava beans, kale, grapes
and the spice turmeric round out the diet.
“The
epigenetics diet can be adopted easily,
because the concentrations of the compounds
needed for a positive effect are readily
achievable,” says lead author Syed Meeran,
Ph.D., a research assistant professor in
Tollefsbol’s UAB Department of Biology
laboratory.
For example,
Meeran says sipping tea compounds called
polyphenols in daily amounts that are
equivalent to approximately three cups of
green tea has been shown to reverse breast
cancer in laboratory mice by suppressing the
gene that triggers the disease.
Similarly, a
daily cup of broccoli sprouts, which has
sulforaphane as an active compound, has been
shown to reduce the risk of developing many
cancers.
“Our review
article has drawn everything together from
global studies, and the common theme is that
compounds in the epigenetics diet foods can,
at the very least, help us lead healthier
lives and help our bodies prevent
potentially debilitating diseases like
breast cancer and Alzheimer’s,” Tollefsbol
says.
About the UAB
College of Arts and Sciences
The UAB College of Arts and Sciences is home
to academic disciplines that include the
arts, humanities, sciences and the School of
Education. The college’s unique structure
advances research and learning in both K-12
and higher education, and its courses are
taught by world-class faculty. Committed to
the UAB spirit of independence and
innovation, the college enables students to
design their own majors, participate in
undergraduate and graduate research or
complete graduate degrees on a five-year
fast track. Through productive partnerships,
flexible curricula and a bold,
interdisciplinary approach to learning and
teaching, the college is preparing students
for success in the ever-changing global
marketplace of commerce and ideas.