http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/252251.php
Nisin, a common food preservative, may slow or stop squamous cell head and neck cancers, a University of Michigan study found.
Tumor Growth May Be Slowed Or Halted By Common Food Preservative
Nisin, a common food preservative, may slow or stop squamous cell head and neck cancers, a University of Michigan study found.
What makes this particularly good news is that the Food and Drug
Administration and the World Health Organization approved nisin as safe
for human consumption decades ago, says Yvonne Kapila, the study's
principal investigator and professor at the University of Michigan
School of Dentistry.
This means that obtaining FDA approval to test nisin's suggested
cancer-fighting properties on patients in a clinical setting won't take
as long as a new therapy that hasn't been tried yet on people, she says.
Antibacterial agents like nisin alter cell properties in bacteria to
render it harmless. However, it's only recently that scientists began
looking to antibacterial agents like nisin to see if they altered
properties in other types of cells, such as cancer cells or cells in
tumors.
Oral cancer
is a leading cause of death worldwide, and oral squamous cell carcinoma
accounts for more than 90 percent of oral cancers. However, survival
rates for oral cancer haven't improved in decades, according to the
study.
"The poor five-year survival rates for oral cancer underscore the need
to find new therapies for oral cancer," Kapila said. "The use of small
antibacterial agents, like nisin, to treat cancer is a new approach that
holds great promise. Nisin is a perfect example of this potential
because it has been used safely in humans for many years, and now the
laboratory studies support its anti-tumor potential."
The U-M study, which looked at the use of antimicrobials to fight
cancerous tumors, suggests nisin, in part, slows cell proliferation or
causes cell death through the activation of a protein called CHAC1 in
cancer cells, a protein known to influence cell death.
The study is the first to show CHAC1's new role in promoting cancer cell
death under nisin treatment. The findings also suggest that nisin may
work by creating pores in the cancer cell membranes that allow an influx
of calcium.
It's unclear what role calcium plays in nisin-triggered cell death, but
it's well known that calcium is a key regulator in cell death and
survival.
Additionally, the findings suggest that nisin slows or stops tumor
growth by interrupting the cell cycle in "bad" cells but not the good
cells; thus nisin stops cancer cell proliferation but doesn't hurt good
cells.
"Tumor Growth May Be Slowed Or Halted By Common Food Preservative." Medical News Today. MediLexicon, Intl., 1 Nov. 2012. Web.
6 Nov. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/252251.php>
6 Nov. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/252251.php>
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