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How Vitamin C
stops the "Big C”
Newswise — Nearly 30
years after Nobel laureate Linus Pauling
famously and controversially suggested that
vitamin C supplements can prevent cancer, a
team of Johns Hopkins scientists have shown
that in mice at least, vitamin C - and
potentially other antioxidants - can indeed
inhibit the growth of some tumors ― just not
in the manner suggested by years of
investigation.
The conventional wisdom
of how antioxidants such as vitamin C help
prevent cancer growth is that they grab up
volatile oxygen free radical molecules and
prevent the damage they are known to do to
our delicate DNA.
The Hopkins study, led
by Chi Dang, M.D., Ph.D., professor of
medicine and oncology and Johns Hopkins
Family Professor in Oncology Research,
unexpectedly found that the antioxidants’
actual role may be to destabilize a tumor’s
ability to grow under oxygen-starved
conditions. Their work is detailed this week
in Cancer Cell.
“The potential
anticancer benefits of antioxidants have
been the driving force for many clinical and
preclinical studies,” says Dang. “By
uncovering the mechanism behind
antioxidants, we are now better suited to
maximize their therapeutic use.”
“Once again, this work
demonstrates the irreplaceable value of
letting researchers follow their scientific
noses wherever it leads them,” Dang adds.
The authors do caution
that while vitamin C is still essential for
good health, this study is preliminary and
people should not rush out and buy bulk
supplies of antioxidants as a means of
cancer prevention.
The Johns Hopkins
investigators discovered the surprise
antioxidant mechanism while looking at mice
implanted with either human lymphoma (a
blood cancer) or human liver cancer cells.
Both of these cancers produce high levels of
free radicals that can be suppressed by
feeding the mice supplements of
antioxidants, either vitamin C or N-acetylcysteine
(NAC).
However, when the
Hopkins team examined cancer cells from
cancer-implanted mice not fed the
antioxidants, they noticed the absence of
any significant DNA damage. “Clearly, if DNA
damage was not in play as a cause of the
cancer, then whatever the antioxidants were
doing to help was also not related to DNA
damage,” says Ping Gao, Ph.D, lead author of
the paper.
That conclusion led Gao
and Dang to suspect that some other
mechanism was involved, such as a protein
known to be dependent on free radicals
called HIF-1 (hypoxia-induced factor), which
was discovered over a decade ago by Hopkins
researcher and co-author Gregg Semenza,
M.D., Ph.D., director of the Program in
Vascular Cell Engineering. Indeed, they
found that while this protein was abundant
in untreated cancer cells taken from the
mice, it disappeared in vitamin C-treated
cells taken from similar animals.
“When a cell lacks
oxygen, HIF-1 helps it compensate,” explains
Dang. “HIF-1 helps an oxygen-starved cell
convert sugar to energy without using oxygen
and also initiates the construction of new
blood vessels to bring in a fresh oxygen
supply.”
Some rapidly growing
tumors consume enough energy to easily suck
out the available oxygen in their vicinity,
making HIF-1 absolutely critical for their
continued survival. But HIF-1 can only
operate if it has a supply of free radicals.
Antioxidants remove these free radicals and
stop HIF-1, and the tumor, in its tracks.
The authors confirmed
the importance of this “hypoxia protein” by
creating cancer cells with a genetic variant
of HIF-1 that did not require free radicals
to be stable. In these cells, antioxidants
no longer had any cancer-fighting power.
The research was funded
by the National Institutes of Health.
Authors on the paper
are Dean Felsher of Stanford; and Gao,
Huafeng Zhang, Ramani Dinavahi, Feng Li, Yan
Xiang, Venu Raman, Zaver Bhujwalla, Linzhao
Cheng, Jonathan Pevsner, Linda Lee, Gregg
Semenza and Dang of Johns Hopkins.
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