CORNELL
ANTI-CANCER FINDINGS – HOW THEY DID IT & WHAT THEY FOUND
The
Cornell University researchers, Rui Hai Liu and Chang Yong Lee used
red delicious apples grown in New York state to provide the extracts
to study the effects of phytochemicals.
The researchers compared the anti-cancer and anti-oxidant activity
in the apple flesh, and they also studied the fruit’s skin.
Using
colon cancer cells treated with the New York apple extract, the
scientists found that cell proliferation was inhibited. Colon cancer
cells treated with 50 milligrams of apple extract from the skins
were inhibited by 43 percent.
The apple flesh extract inhibited the colon cancer cells by 29 percent.
The
researchers also tested the apple extract against human liver cancer
cells.
At
50 milligrams, the extract derived from the apple with the skin
on inhibited those cancer cells by 57 percent, and the apple extract
derived from the fruit’s fleshy part inhibited cancer cells by 40
percent.
"The
consumption of whole fruits may provide the balanced anti-oxidants
needed to quench reactive oxygen species," write the researchers
in the Nature article. "Phytochemicals other than ascorbic
acid (vitamin C) … contribute significantly to the anti-oxidant
activity of apples and to the capacity to inhibit tumor cell proliferation."
Lee
began studying the enzymatic browning action of apples about 15
years ago, identifying a variety of phenolic compounds and learning
how these chemicals work during the apple’s browning action.
The
researchers learned that the amount of phenolic compounds in the
apple flesh and in the skin varied from year to year, season to
season and from growing region to growing region.
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