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Posts Tagged ‘polyphenols’

Red Wine and Green Tea May Slow or Halt Prostate Cancer

Sunday, September 26th, 2010

Wine & Your HealthAn in vitro study published in the FASED Journal (www.fasebj.com) indicates that red wine in conjunction with green tea is capable of slowing or perhaps stopping prostate cancer growth.   The underlying mechanism seems to point to the role that polyphenols, an antioxidant, play in cellular metabolism.  Polyphenols are a group of compounds that include, amongst others, resveratrol.

Scientists first conducted in vitro experiments which demonstrated that the inhibition of a vital metabolic pathway necessary for prostate cancer growth was essential.  Next, mice genetically altered to develop human prostate cancer were either treated or untreated with green tea and wine polyphenols.  The treated mice displayed reduced tumor growth, this the result of the inhibition of the pathway.

Finally researchers, using three groups of mice, allotted drinking water only for one, drinking water with one green tea compound for the second and drinking water with another green tea compound, called polyphenon, for the third.  Human prostate cancer cells implanted in the mice demonstrated a significant decrease in tumor size in mice drinking either of the green tea mixtures.  It should be noted that the vital metabolic pathway responsible for tumor growth in prostate cancer, also plays a role in other types of cancer such as colon, stomach and breast, possibly opening the door to the development of future drug therapies using polyphenols.  As usual, this all comes with a caveat that the results of the study should not be extrapolated to humans until studies confirm the results.  Nonetheless, we continue to observe both in vitro and some in vivo studies that suggest the possible benefits of polyphenols in humans.

Tannins: A Lesson In Wine Chemistry

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

In order to understand the chemistry of wine, you must first understand that the basic building block for much of wine chemistry centers on the organic molecule called a “phenol.”  In chemistry terms, “phenols” are a circular molecule of carbon and oxygen.  That said, think of phenols as the basic building block upon which other phenol molecules (poly phenols) or other organic molecules are added to make larger molecules.  Each one of these larger molecules interacts with other (organic and inorganic) molecules to produce other molecules to include acids, esters, aldehydes, and a whole range of the chemicals that make wine what is it.  You can think of these molecules as the chemical components that make up wine.  Remember, 80% of wine is hydrogen and oxygen molecules combined:  H2O.

Tannins are astringent, bitter plant polyphenols that either break up or shrink proteins.  The key words being “bitter,” “plant,” “polyphenols” that attack proteins.  Our mouths are full of protein, so when you put a bitter, polyphenol, from a plant in your mouth, a chemical reaction takes place and the astringency from the tannins causes the dry and puckery feeling in the mouth.

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