From the University of
Illinois media release:
A University of Illinois study has demonstrated that agronomic
practices can greatly increase the cancer-preventive phytochemicals in broccoli and tomatoes
.
"We enriched preharvest broccoli with different bioactive components, then assessed the levels
of cancer-fighting enzymes in rats that ate powders made from these crops," said Elizabeth Jeffery, a U of I professor
of food science and human nutrition.
The highest levels of detoxifying enzymes were found in rats that
ate selenium-treated broccoli. The amount of one of the cancer-fighting compounds in broccoli was six times
higher in selenium-enriched broccoli than in standard broccoli powder, she said.
Selenium-treated broccoli was
also most active in the liver, reaching a level of bioactivity that exceeded the other foods used in the
experiment.
"We were intrigued to find that selenium initiated this amount of bioactivity," she
said.
Along with garlic and other plants of the allium family, broccoli and other plants of the
brassica family are unique in having a methylating enzyme that enables plants to store high concentrations of
selenium, she said.
"Our bodies need a certain amount of selenium, but many areas of the world,
including parts of the United States and vast areas of China, have very little selenium in the soil," she
said.
"Not only could selenium in broccoli deliver this necessary mineral, it also appears to rev
up the vegetable's cancer-fighting power," she added.
Jeffery is now working to determine
whether selenium compounds are directly responsible for the increase in bioactivity or if selenium acts indirectly by
directing new synthesis of the broccoli bioactives called glucosinolates.
In a previous study, Jeffery and U of
I colleague John W. Erdman Jr. showed that tomato and broccoli powders eaten together are more effective in slowing prostate
cancer in laboratory rats than either tomato or broccoli alone.
In their current research, they are
experimenting with ways to increase the bioactive components in these foods in order to test the efficacy of enriched
broccoli and tomatoes in a new prostate cancer study.
Rats were fed diets with food powders containing 10
percent of either standard broccoli; standard tomato; lycopene-enriched tomato; tomato enriched with lycopene and other
carotenoids; broccoli sprouts, which contain very high levels of cancer-fighting compounds; or broccoli grown on soil treated
with selenium.
The scientists found that greater amounts of bioactive components in the food powders translated
into increased levels of the compounds in body tissue and increased bioactivity in the animals.
Carotenoid
-enriched tomatoes produced more bioactivity in the liver than lycopene-enriched or standard tomatoes, yielding the most
cancer-preventive benefits.
"Carotenoids, which are phytochemical pigments found in fruits and
vegetables, are thought to be excellent antioxidants and effective in cancer prevention," said Ann G. Liu, a U
of I graduate student who worked on the study.
"A good rule is: the brighter the color, the higher
the carotenoid content. If you're growing or buying tomatoes, select plants or produce that are a very bright red.
High-lycopene tomatoes are now available through garden catalogs," she added.
"This research shows
that you can greatly increase a food's bioactive benefits through normal farming practices, without resorting to genetic
engineering. Farmers have traditionally been more concerned about yield than nutritional composition. Now we're asking, can
we grow more nutritional broccoli and tomatoes? And the answer is a definite yes," said
Jeffery.
The study was published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry.
Liu and Sonja E. Volker co-authored the paper with Jeffery and Erdman.
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