Food may influence cancer spread

There is mounting evidence the food on your plate can alter cancer’s growth and spread, say Cambridge scientists.

Animal research, showed breast tumours struggled without the dietary nutrient asparagine, according to BBC.

It is found in the foodies’ favourite asparagus, as well as poultry, seafood and many other foods.

In the future, scientists hope to take advantage of cancer’s “culinary addictions” to improve treatment.

 

Asparagine is an amino acid – a building block of protein – and takes its name from asparagus.

The study, conducted at the Cancer Research UK Cambridge Institute, took place on mice with an aggressive form of breast cancer.

Normally they would die in a couple of weeks as the tumour spread throughout the body.

But when the mice were given a low-asparagine diet or drugs to block asparagine then the tumour struggled to spread.

“It was a really huge change, [the cancers] were very difficult to find,” said Prof Greg Hannon.

Last year, the University of Glasgow showed cutting out the amino acids serine and glycine slowed the development of lymphoma and intestinal cancers.

Prof Hannon told the BBC: “We’re seeing increasing evidence that specific cancers are addicted to specific components of our diet.

“In the future, by modifying a patient’s diet or by using drugs that change the way that tumour cells can access these nutrients we hope to improve outcomes in therapy.”

    Fruit and veg: For a longer life eat 10-a-day

    Controlled amino acid diet ‘could help cancer treatment’

An initial tumour is rarely deadly. It is when the cancer spreads throughout the body – or metastasises – that it can become fatal.

A cancerous cell must go through huge changes in order to spread – it must learn to break off the main tumour, survive in the bloodstream and thrive elsewhere in the body.

It is this process for which researchers think asparagine is necessary.

But fear not asparagus lovers, these findings still need to be confirmed in people and asparagine is hard to avoid in the diet anyway.

In the long run, scientists think patients would be put on special drinks that are nutritionally balanced, but lack asparagine.

 

H.Z

 

You might also like
Latest news
Lebanese national resistance targets the Israeli ATA Military Company with missiles Thousands of protesters took to the streets in European countries to demand an end to Israeli attack... Araqchi: We will stand with resistance in any situation Several officials inspect shelters that host Lebanese people in Damascus countryside Zionist enemy killed 25 civilians in yesterday’s airstrikes on various Lebanese areas Filippo Grandi: Israeli attacks on Lebanon have caused a terrible crisis PM discusses with Araghchi the Syrian-Iranian coordination to offer aid to the Lebanese people who c... Ryabkov: If US moves to resume nuclear tests, Moscow will respond in kind Zionist occupation detained 25 Palestinians in the West Bank President Al-Assad meets Iranian Foreign Minister Zionist occupation killed 41,825 Palestinian civilians since last October Cuba: The US is complicit in terrorist violence Iran urges an immediate stop to Western countries’ arms delivery to the Zionist regime Maduro affirms his country’s rejection of Israeli attacks against Palestinian and Lebanese peoples Sabbagh meets with Araghchi in Damascus WHO: 73 healthcare workers killed in Lebanon due to the ongoing zionist attacks Zionist occupation kills 8 Palestinian civilians in the central of Gaza Strip The Organization of Islamic Cooperation Calls for an Immediate Cessation of Israeli Aggression on Ga... Two Israeli Soldiers Killed in a Resistance Operation by a Drone Iraqi Resistance Targets Three Israeli Enemy Sites with Drones