MARIOS DIMOPOULOS

MARIOS DIMOPOULOS
Marios Dimopoulos Clinical Nutritionist, Author, Fellow of the American Council of the Applied Clinical Nutrition

Κυριακή 9 Φεβρουαρίου 2014

Tocotrienols kill cancer cells

Researchers have demonstrated for the first time that gamma tocotrienol accumulates in cancer cells and delays tumor growth by promoting death signals to the cancer, based on new evidence from animal and cell studies.
“These results, to our knowledge, are the first demonstration of specific accumulation of gamma-tocotrienol and delta-tocotrienol in tumors and suggest that tocotrienol accumulation is critical for the anti-tumor activities of tocotrienols,” wrote lead author Yuhei Hiura in the The Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry.
“Intriguingly, we found that tocotrienols were detected in tumor, but not in normal tissues,” wrote the researchers. Because tocotrienols did not activate specific components of the immune system the researchers believe that the “anti-tumor effect may be due to the direct effect of tocotrienols on tumor cells.  In conclusion, our results suggested that accumulation is critical for the anti-tumor activity of tocotrienols.”
Tocotrienols posses a unique side chain molecule that enables it to attach itself to the inside of cell membranes and exert both anti-oxidant and cell-signaling properties – in a way that plain d-alpha tocopherol vitamin E simply cannot do. This is the first study to show that tocotrienols have an affinity for cancer cells, and their accumulation within them is a powerful tool of natural defense.

Source
Yuhei Hiura, Hirofumi Tachibana, Ryo Arakawa, Natsuki Aoyama, Masaaki Okabe, Midori Sakai, Koji Yamada. Specific accumulation of γ- and δ-tocotrienols in tumor and their antitumor effect in vivo. The Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry.  2008 September
Faculty of Agriculture, Laboratory of Food Chemistry, Division of Applied Biological Chemistry, Department of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Kyushu University, Fukuoka 812-8581, Japan.

Study Abstract:

In contrast to extensive studies on tocopherols, very little is understood about tocotrienols (T3). We evaluated the antitumor activities of γ-T3 and δ-T3 in murine hepatoma MH134 cells in vitro and in vivo. We found that δ-T3 inhibited the growth of MH134 cells more strongly than γ-T3 by inducing apoptosis. In C3H/HeN mice implanted with MH134, it was found that γ-T3 and δ-T3 feeding significantly delayed tumor growth. On the other hand, both T3 had no significant effect on body weight, normal-tissue weight and immunoglobulin levels. Intriguingly, we found that T3 was detected in tumor, but not in normal tissues. These results, to our knowledge, are the first demonstration of specific accumulation of γ-T3 and δ-T3 in tumors and suggest that T3 accumulation is critical for the antitumor activities of T3.
From press release:
Tocotrienols, members of the vitamin E family, may exert their anti-cancer benefits by accumulating in cancer cells and delaying tumour growth, says a new study from Japan.
Both gamma- and delta-tocotrienols may accumulate in cancer cells, and promote the death of the tumours, according to data from in vitro and in vivo studies by researchers from Kyushu University.
The potential anti-cancer benefits of tocotrienols are not new, but the Japanese researcher claim that their study is the first to show accumulation of the compounds in cancer cells.
“These results, to our knowledge, are the first demonstration of specific accumulation of gamma-tocotrienol and delta-tocotrienol in tumours and suggest that tocotrienols accumulation is critical for the anti-tumour activities of tocotrienols,” wrote lead author Yuhei Hiura in the The Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry.
The vitamin E family
There are eight forms of vitamin E: four tocopherols (alpha, beta, gamma, delta) and four tocotrienols (alpha, beta, gamma, delta). Alpha-tocopherol is the main source found in supplements and in the European diet, while gamma-tocopherol is the most common form in the American diet.
Tocotrienols (TCT) are only minor components in plants, although several sources with relatively high levels include palm oil, cereal grains and rice bran.
While the majority of research on vitamin E has focused on alpha-Toc, studies into tocotrienols account for less than one per cent of all research into vitamin E.
New study
The Japanese researchers studied the effects of gamma- and delta-tocotrienol on mouse cancer cells (murine hepatoma MH134) both in vitro and in vivo. For the cell study, the tumour cells were cultured in the tocotrienols, and they found that the delta-version inhibited cell growth more than the gamma-type. This was related to an induction of apoptosis (programmed cell death).
For the animal studies, the researchers used C3H/HeN mice and implanted the tumour cells. The animals were then fed a normal diet, or the diet supplemented with 0.1 per cent gamma-tocotrienol or 0.1 per cent delta-tocotrienol for four weeks.
At the end of the study, a significant delay in tumour growth was observed for both groups supplemented with the tocotrienols. No effects on body weight were recorded.
“Intriguingly, we found that tocotrienols was detected in tumour, but not in normal tissues,” wrote the researchers.
In terms of the added that the tocotrienols had no effect on levels of immunoglobulin levels in the animals, suggesting that the tocotrienols’ potential anti-cancer benefits were not related to immune function, “and that the anti-tumour effect may be due to the direct effect of T3 on tumour cells”, they said.
“In conclusion, our results suggested that accumulation is critical for the anti-tumour activity of tocotrienols.”

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