Researchers decoded a complete cascade of signals
within breast tumor cells activated by virgin olive oil, and concluded that
benefits include decrease in the activity of the oncogene p21Ras, changes in
protein signaling pathways, stimulation of tumor cell death and prevention of
DNA damage. The study was carried out in an experimental model and researchers
have already begun a new study with human cell lines.
Breast cancer is the most common type of cancer in
Western countries. Researches carried out with animal models demonstrate that a
diet rich in fats is directly related to the incidence of cancer. Some types of
fats however can play a protective role against the development of these
tumors.
Such is the case of virgin olive oil, rich in
oleic acid, a mono-unsaturated fatty acid, and containing several bioactive
compounds such as antioxidants. A moderate and regular intake of virgin olive
oil, characteristic of the Mediterranean diet, is associated with low
incidences of specific types of cancer, including breast cancer, as well as
with having a protective role against coronary diseases and other health
problems.
The study carried out by UAB researchers decoded
the mechanisms operating within the tumor cell and induced by the intake of
olive oil, in comparison to those activated by corn oil, rich in n-6
polyunsaturated fatty acids, which increase the aggressiveness of tumors.
Scientists demonstrated that virgin olive oil is
associated with higher incidences of benign breast tumors and at the same time
with a decrease in the activity of the p21Ras oncogene, which spurs
uncontrolled cell proliferation and stimulates the growth of tumors.
In addition, olive oil suppresses the activity of
some proteins, such as the AKT, essential for the survival of cells since they
prevent apoptosis, the cell’s “suicide” programme. Between proliferation and
apoptosis in tumor cells, these effects tip the balance towards cell death,
thereby slowing the growth of tumors.
Another result obtained by researchers is the
protection of DNA in the cell nucleus. Cells from animals fed a diet rich in
virgin olive oil contained less DNA lesions than those fed a control diet.
Scientists of the UAB Breast Cancer Study
Multidisciplinary Group (GMECM) have spent over twenty years working to
determine the effects fats have on breast cancer, and in particular the effects
of virgin olive oil.
Previous studies of the group revealed the
beneficial effects of this component of the human diet on the clinical conduct
of mammary tumors and on their histological grade (malignancy). Scientists also
described several molecular mechanisms producing these effects and in 2004 the
same group was the one to identify the four genes involved in the effects
dietary fats have on experimental breast cancer. The mechanism recently
discovered was published in the journal Carcinogenesis.
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