Wouldn't it be lovely (Chrysin)
This is a test-tube study from Taiwan of a botanical chrysin (available for sale now in specialtly stores) that they theorize could be as effective as oxaliplatin/5FU. Of course, this is preliminary information, but wouldn't it be lovely if it panned out?
http://www.mdpi.com/1422-0067/19/6/1763/htm
Chrysin Attenuates Cell Viability of Human Colorectal Cancer Cells through Autophagy Induction Unlike 5-Fluorouracil/Oxaliplatin.
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We found that chrysin exhibited similar inhibition of cell viability as the 5-FU combination in a panel of human CRC cells. Furthermore, the results showed that chrysin significantly increased the levels of LC3-II, an autophagy-related marker, in CRC cells, which was not observed with the 5-FU combination. More importantly, blockage of autophagy induction restored chrysin-attenuated CRC cell viability. Further mechanistic analysis revealed that chrysin, not the 5-FU combination, induced ROS generation, and in turn, inhibited the phosphorylation of protein kinase B (Akt) and mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR). Collectively, these results imply that chrysin may be a potential replacement for the 5-FU and oxaliplatin combination to achieve antitumor activity through autophagy for CRC treatment in the future.
Comments
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Great stuff
Hadn't heard of this before. Thanks for sharing.
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Wow
That would be great. 5FU has so many side effects so if this one didn't it would be great.
Kim
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Great articles
Lying here 3 days post Folfox the idea of a kindler gentler chemo sounds fabulous! Appreciate this articel and also the one regarding lung mets. There is such hope on the Horizon!
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Don't get your hopes too high
That study was "in vitro" they tested against CRC cells in a lab culture. The study notes that it may be hard to apply chrysin to animals & humans as the molecule is rapidly eliminated. The molecule will need to be modified & testing in lab animals, then humans. Long way off.
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Thanks for the interesting
Thanks for the interesting links.
Here's another one along the same line. It's a university study, so quite interesting:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3985046/pdf/apjtb-04-05-337.pdf
Another interesting one (something you may want to read a bit more critically, but still interesting):
https://www.beenefits.com/propolis-and-cancer.pdf
Cheers, BG
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Thanks for post
On mTOR which was mentioned in the study -
I've noticed that mTOR ( mammalian target of rapamycin) comes up over and over again in aging studies as well as cancer. Too much cell signialing from the mTOR complex is apprently not good for aging or some forms of cancer.
One stimultor of mTOR is insulin. Insulin, in turn, is regulated, in part, by glucose and protein (don't want too much of either). Which, apparently, is why some forms of short term fasting and dietary restriction seem to help with some types of cancer. And why I am still puzzled that oncologists aren't more careful about insulin and glucose control in their patients, especially around each treatment session. Speculation, but one of the benefits of excercise may be the mTOR lowering effects by way of lowering glucose and insulin.
Also, there seem to be several other natural substances which can inhibit mTOR a bit. Partial list from my notes: EGCG (green tea), curcumin, (tumeric), caffiene, resveratrol, quercetin (onions, apples). Also, one of several studies -
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3775843/pdf/nihms-512572.pdf
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