Medindia LOGIN REGISTER
Medindia

Grapes, Red Wine may Help in Treating Familial Breast Cancer

by Hannah Punitha on Oct 11 2008 5:20 PM

Researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have identified a compound found in grapes and red wine as an excellent candidate for treatment of inherited breast cancer.

During the study, lead author Dr. Chu-Xia Deng from the Genetics of Development and Diseases Branch at the NIH, and colleagues also identified some of the elusive downstream molecules that play a critical role in the development and progression of familial breast cancer.

About 8 percent of breast cancer cases are caused by mutations in tumour suppressor genes, such as breast cancer associated gene-1 (BRCA1).

BRCA1 is the most frequently mutated tumour suppressor gene found in inherited breast cancers and BRCA1 mutation carriers have a 50-80 percent risk of developing breast cancer by age 70.

First, the researchers investigated the relationship among BRCA1, SIRT1 and Survivin.

SIRT1 is a protein and histone deacetylase involved in numerous critical cell processes including metabolism, DNA repair and programmed cell death, known as apoptosis.

SIRT1 has been implicated in tumorigenesis, but no concrete role in cancer initiation or progression has been identified.

Advertisement
Survivin is an apoptosis inhibitor that is dramatically elevated in many types of tumours. Research has suggested that Survivin may serve to maintain the tumour and promote growth.

The researchers found that BRCA1 functioned as a tumour suppressor by maintaining SIRT1 expression, which in turn inhibited Survivin expression.

Advertisement
When BRCA1 was not functioning properly, SIRT levels decreased and Survivin levels increased, allowing BRCA1-deficient cells to overcome apoptosis and undergo malignant transformation.

Then, the researchers went on to show that the compound resveratrol strongly inhibited BRCA1-mutant tumour growth in cultured cells and animal models.

Resveratrol is an important constituent of traditional Japanese and Chinese medicine that has recently been shown to inhibit some types of cancer by inducing apoptosis with very little associated toxicity.

In the study, resveratrol enhanced SIRT1 activity, this leading to reduced Survivin expression and subsequent apoptosis of BRCA1 deficient cancer cells.

These findings identify SIRT1 and Survivin as downstream mediators of BRCA1-regulated tumour suppression and identify resveratrol as a potent inhibitor of BRCA1-mutant cancer cells.

Resveratrol may serve as an excellent compound for targeted therapy for BRCA1 associated breast cancers, said Dr. Deng.

The study is published by Cell Press in the October 10th issue of the journal Molecular Cell.



Source-ANI
SPH/SK


Advertisement