Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Bitter wild fruits can help treat cancer

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Nov, 2014 12:41 PM
    The compounds that give bitter flavour to wild cucurbits - cucumber, pumpkin, melon, watermelon and squash - have the potential to treat cancer and diabetes, finds a research.
     
    These compounds called cucurbitacins protect the wild plants against predators and have the potential to suppress growth of cancer cells.
     
    The fruit and leaves of wild cucurbits have been used in Indian and Chinese medicine for thousands of years, as emetics and purgatives and to treat liver disease.
     
    "You do not eat wild cucumber unless you want to use it as a purgative," said study co-author William Lucas, professor of plant biology at University of California, Davis.
     
    The researchers identified the genes responsible for the intense bitter taste of wild cucumbers.
     
    They employed the latest in DNA sequencing technology to identify the exact changes in DNA associated with bitterness.
     
    They were able to identify nine genes involved in making cucurbitacin and show that the trait can be traced to two transcription factors that switch on these nine genes, in either leaves or the fruit, to produce cucurbitacin.
     
    The new research shows how domestication tweaked cucumber genetics to make the fruit more edible.
     
    The study appeared in the journal Science.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Mother's viral infection may trigger diabetes in kids

    Mother's viral infection may trigger diabetes in kids
    The exact cause of juvenile diabetes had eluded scientists for long and researchers have now found that a mother's exposure to viruses...

    Mother's viral infection may trigger diabetes in kids

    Family meals protect kids from obesity

    Family meals protect kids from obesity
    Even having as few as one or two family meals a week during adolescence may protect your kids from being obese when they turn into adults, says a study....

    Family meals protect kids from obesity

    Teenagers' sense of invalidation linked to suicide risk

    Teenagers' sense of invalidation linked to suicide risk
    Independent of other known risk factors, measuring the sense of family or peer invalidation - or lack of acceptance - that teenagers harbour can...

    Teenagers' sense of invalidation linked to suicide risk

    Spine loss common in schizophrenia, bipolar disorder

    Spine loss common in schizophrenia, bipolar disorder
    Schizophrenia and bipolar disorder appear to be linked with dendritic spine loss in the brain, suggesting the two disorders may share common pathophysiological elements....

    Spine loss common in schizophrenia, bipolar disorder

    Pathway between brain and blood pressure identified

    Pathway between brain and blood pressure identified
    In a finding that may lead to improved treatments for hypertension and heart failure, scientists have uncovered a new pathway through which the brain...

    Pathway between brain and blood pressure identified

    Common painkiller may treat ageing lungs

    Common painkiller may treat ageing lungs
      Researchers have found that ibuprofen, a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory painkiller, could reduce lung inflammation associated with ageing....

    Common painkiller may treat ageing lungs