Herb triggers cancer cell death
CM NEWS - A substance of popular Chinese herb huang qin (Scutellaria radix, 黃芩) triggers the death process in tumour cells, while it has virtually no effect on healthy cells, according to a new discovery of this selective function of huang qin by scientists of the German Cancer Research Centre (Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum, DKFZ).
The valuable substance extracted from huang qin is wogonin (han huang qin su, 漢黃芩素). It’s until recently that modern science has been able to uncover the molecular mechanism underlying the anti-cancerous effect of wogonin.
Defects in genes that control growth can turn a cell into a threat for the whole organism. Defective cells that might get out of control are driven into suicide by a protective mechanism called apoptosis. However, this life saving mechanism is no longer working in most tumour cells, since numerous molecules regulating apoptosis are defective.
This is why researchers have been trying for some time to restore the capability of controlled suicide in tumour cells. However, this is a risky venture, because it involves the danger of damaging healthy tissue, too, by cell death. Therefore, scientists have urgently been searching for substances that induce cell death selectively in tumour cells.
(Another CM NEWS article talks about a herb that prevents liver cancer cells to progress.)
Dr. Min Li-Weber of the Division of Immunogenetics headed by Prof. Dr. Peter Krammer has been concentrating on pure substances from herbs that are used in traditional Chinese medicine. Investigating their ability to trigger apoptosis, the scientist has recently come across an interesting candidate: the substance wogonin, a plant flavone from huang qin.
According to the researchers, wogonin causes apoptosis in leukemia cells in the culture dish, while it has virtually no damaging effect on healthy blood cells. Wogonin also led to reduced cancer growth in mice that had been transplanted human leukemia cells.
The mechanism underlying the selective effect of this plant constituent had still been unclear. There are two different ways by which the apoptosis program can be started in a cell: by external stimuli or by signals from within the cell as a response to factors such as radioactive radiation or reactive oxygen compounds such as hydrogen peroxide (H2O2).
Li-Weber has now shown that wogonin leads to highly increased formation of hydrogen peroxide in tumour cells compared to healthy cells. The peroxide, in turn, produces a calcium response which triggers the apoptosis reaction cascade. In addition, tumour cells contain a higher number of those membrane channels through which calcium flows from its intracellular storages into the cytoplasm.
Min Li-Weber¡’s results so far are based on experiments in the culture dish and in the animal model. The scientists rate the data as convincing enough to continue testing the suitability of wogonin as a therapeutic agent for leukemias.
Earlier, CM NEWS reports that wogonin possesses potent anti-HBV activity and could be used in combating hepatitis B.
[Blood, DOI: 10.1182/blood-2007-06-096198]
Tags: cancer, wogoninRelated posts
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I have this plant growing on my propperty. Which part of the plant is used to kill cancer? Is it the root?
Thank you for your time
Christa
[...] Chinese Medicine News December 28, 2007 [...]
hi christa, i think it’s the roots, as indicated in the latin word “radix” in Scutellaria radix. however, the useful substance of Scutellaria radix - or the anti-cancerous substance - is wogonin, which has to be extracted and treated. if you want to try Scutellaria radix as a TCM, i’d suggest consult a TCM doctor first. he/she can instruct you how to boil and take Scutellaria radix and accompanied herbs.
i quickly googled a bit and found this site also (note: i have no connection with them) http://www.supplementwatch.com/suplib/supplement.asp?DocId=2156
i believe Scutellaria radix might be sold in supplement/pill form. again, check it out with your doctor or pharmacist.
hope this helps.
[...] Chinese Medicine News December 28, 2007 [...]