Hete pepers bestrijden prostaatkanker.*
De bioactieve stof capsaïcine die verantwoordelijk is voor de hitte van rode pepers blijkt prostaatkankercellen effectief te kunnen doden. Bij proeven met muizen bleek dat 80% van de kankercellen door deze stof in de pepers gedood worden. Ook het PSA werd hierdoor duidelijk gereduceerd. De hoeveelheid capsaïcine die de muizen gevoerd kregen is te vergelijken bij mensen met drie keer per week 3-8 verse hete pepers, afhankelijk van de hoeveelheid actieve stof in de pepers.
Pepper
Component Hot Enough To Trigger Suicide In Prostate Cancer Cells
Capsaicin,
the stuff that turns up the heat in jalapeños, not only causes the tongue
to burn, it also drives prostate cancer cells to
kill themselves, according to studies published in the issue of Cancer
Research.
According to a
team of researchers from the Samuel Oschin Comprehensive
Cancer Institute at
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, in collaboration with colleagues
from UCLA, the pepper component caused human prostate cancer cells to
undergo programmed cell death or apoptosis.
Capsaicin
induced approximately 80 percent of prostate cancer cells growing in mice to
follow the molecular pathways leading to apoptosis. Prostate cancer tumors
treated with capsaicin were about one-fifth the size of tumors in
non-treated mice.
"Capsaicin
had a profound anti-proliferative effect on human prostate cancer cells in
culture," said Sören Lehmann, M.D., Ph.D., visiting scientist at the
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and the UCLA School of Medicine. "It also
dramatically slowed the development of prostate tumors formed by those human
cell lines grown in mouse models."
Lehmann
estimated that the dose of pepper extract fed orally to the mice was
equivalent to giving 400 milligrams of capsaicin three times a week to a 200
pound man, roughly equivalent to between three and eight fresh habañera
peppers – depending on the pepper's capsaicin content. Habañeras are the
highest rated pepper for capsaicin content according to the Scoville heat
index. Habañero peppers, which are native to the Yucatan, typically contain
up to 300,000 Scoville units. The more popular Jalapeño variety from Oaxaca,
Mexico, and the southwest United States, contains 2,500 to 5,000 Scoville
units.
As
described in their study, the scientists observed that capsaicin inhibited
the activity of NF-kappa Beta, a molecular mechanism that participates in
the pathways leading to apoptosis in many cell types.
Apoptosis
is a normal cellular event in many tissues that maintains a balance between
newer replacement cells and aged or worn cells. In contrast, cancer cells
seek to be immortal and often dodge apoptosis by mutating or deregulating
the genes that participate in programmed cell death.
"When
we noticed that capsaicin affected NF-kappa Beta, that was an indication
that we might expect some of the apoptotic proteins to be affected,"
said the study's senior author, Phillip Koeffler, M.D., director of
Hematology and Oncology, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, and professor at UCLA.
The
pepper extract also curbed the growth of prostate cancer cells through
regulation of androgen receptors, the steroid activated proteins that
control expression of specific growth relating genes.
In
prostate cancer cells whose growth is dependent on testosterone, the
predominant male sex steroid, capsaicin reduced cell proliferation in a
dose-dependent manner. Increased concentrations of capsaicin caused more
prostate cancer cells to freeze in a non-proliferative state, called G0/G1.
Prostate
cancer cells that are androgen independent reacted to capsaicin in a similar
manner. Capsaicin reduced the amount of androgen receptor that the tumor
cells produced, but did not interfere with normal movement of androgen
receptor into the nucleus of the cancer cells where the steroid receptor
acts to regulate androgen target genes such as prostate specific antigen (PSA).
Capsaicin also interfered with the action of androgen receptors even in
cells that were modified to produce excess numbers of androgen receptors.
The
hot pepper component also reduced cancer cell production of PSA, a protein
that often is produced in high quantities by prostate tumors and can signal
the presence of prostate cancer in men. PSA content in the blood of men is
used as a diagnostic prostate cancer screening measure. PSA is regulated by
androgens, and capsaicin limited androgen-induced increases of PSA in the
cancer cell lines.
More
men in the United States develop prostate cancer than any other type of
malignancy. Every year, more than 232,000 new cases of prostate cancer are
diagnosed in the U.S., and more than 680,000 develop the disease worldwide.
Approximately 30,000 men die from prostate cancer in the U.S. each year,
which is about 13 percent of all new cases. Worldwide, there are 221,000
deaths – approximately 31 per cent – among men with prostate cancer.
Lehman
conducted the studies in Koeffler's laboratory in collaboration with UCLA
cancer researchers Akio Mori, James O'Kelly, Takishi Kumagai, Julian Desmond,
Milena Pervan, and William McBride. Mosahiro Kizaki, a former post-doctoral
fellow in Koeffler's laboratory who initiated the capsaicin studies, is
currently at the Keio University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
( april 2006)
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