Restricted
diet may help slow down breast cancer
Calorie restriction, a kind
of dieting in which food intake is decreased by a certain percentage, may help
slow down breast cancer, according to a new study.
Researchers found that the
triple negative subtype of breast cancer - one of the most aggressive forms -
is less likely to spread, or metastasise, to new sites in the body when mice
were fed a restricted diet.
"The diet turned on a
epigenetic programme that protected mice from metastatic disease," said
senior author Nicole Simone, an associate professor in the department of
Radiation Oncology at Thomas Jefferson University.
When mouse models of
triple negative cancer were fed 30 per cent less than what they ate when given
free access to food, the cancer cells decreased their production of microRNAs
17 and 20.
Researchers have found
that this group of miRs is often increased in triple negative cancers that
metastasise.
The study found that
microRNAs - a type of RNA that regulates other genes in the cell - specifically
miR 17 and 20, decreased the most when mice were treated with both radiation
and calorie restriction .
This decrease in turn
increased the production of proteins involved in maintaining the extracellular
matrix.
"Calorie restriction
promotes epigenetic changes in the breast tissue that keep the extracellular
matrix strong," said Simone.
"A strong matrix
creates a sort of cage around the tumour, making it more difficult for cancer
cells to escape and spread to new sites in the body," Simone said.
Understanding the link to
miR 17 also gives researchers a molecular target for diagnosing cancers that
are more likely to metastasise and, potentially, for developing a new drug to treat
the cancers.
In theory, a drug that
decreased miR 17 could have the same effect on the extracellular matrix as calorie
restriction.
However, targeting a
single molecular pathway, such as the miR17 is unlikely to be as effective as
calorie restriction, said Simone.
Triple negative breast
cancers tend to be quite different genetically from patient to patient.
If calorie restriction is
as effective in women as it is in animal models, then it would likely change
the expression patterns of a large set of genes, hitting multiple targets at
once without toxicity, researchers said.
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