Anticarcinogenic activity
of green tea polyphenols.
Jpn J Clin Oncol 1993 Jun;23(3):186-90
Komori A; Yatsunami J; Okabe S; Abe S; Hara K; Suganuma
M; Kim SJ; Fujiki H
Cancer Prevention Division, National Cancer Center Research Institute,
Tokyo.
The main physiologically active polyphenol in green tea
extract is (-)-epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG). Green tea
extract has an advantage over EGCG as a cancer chemopreventive
agent for humans, as is apparent from the Japanese custom
of injesting green tea on a daily basis. Green tea extract
similarly inhibited protein kinase C activation by teleocidin,
a tumor promoter, as did EGCG. In addition, EGCG and green
tea extract showed inhibitory effects on the growth of lung
and mammary cancer cell lines with similar potencies. An
experiment using the estrogen-dependent MCF-7 cell line showed
the mechanisms of action of these compounds to be inhibiting
the interaction of estrogen with its receptors. Considering
our previous results of a single application of EGCG to mouse
skin inhibiting the specific binding of 3H-12-0-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate
(3H-TPA) and 3H-okadaic acid, we postulated that EGCG and
compounds in green tea extracts would block the interaction
of tumor promoters, hormones and growth factors with their
receptors: a kind of sealing effect. The sealing effect would
account for reversible growth arrest, and may be induced
by various kinds of compound. |