Green tea helps kill cancer cells while promoting health of normal ones, say researchers

Green tea compound also feeds anti-oxidants into healthy cells

Lamiat Sabin
Wednesday 04 February 2015 11:13 EST
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Green tea can help kill off cancerous cells, say researchers
Green tea can help kill off cancerous cells, say researchers

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Green tea may help kick-start cycles of cancerous cell death while leaving healthy ones alone, scientists have claimed.

A compound found in the tea called epigallocatechin-3-gallate – or EGCG – could trigger a process of destroying malignant cells, researchers at Penn State’s Center for Plant and Mushroom Foods for Health have found.

While the tea has always been known to contain powerful anti-oxidants that are beneficial to all-round health, new developments have shown that the compound is partly responsible for destroying cells that are likely to lead to growth of deadly tumours.

Associate professor Joshua Lambert said: “EGCG is doing something to damage the mitochondria and that mitochondrial damage sets up a cycle causing more damage and it spirals out, until the cell undergoes programmed cell death.”

EGCG helps damage cancerous cell membranes
EGCG helps damage cancerous cell membranes (Getty Images)

As the mitochondria – the energy powerhouses of cells with inner and outer membranes – are killed, the chances of the malignant cells returning or growing is further reduced by inducing oxidative stress while feeding the benefits of anti-oxidant into normal cells.

The presence of sirtuin 3, a protein vital to the health and life-span of cells, is also found to be increased in healthy ones and reduced in cancerous ones with the help of the EGCG compound.

The findings could be vital in developing alternative medicines to chemotherapy, that do not pose harmful side effects, or for formulating effective preventative treatments, researchers believe.

The study has been published in the Molecular Nutrition and Food Research journal.

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