MURFREESBORO, Tenn. —
Middle Tennessee State University faculty, students and funding are playing a crucial role
in breakthrough research aimed at helping treat metastatic breast cancer.
New hope for a low-toxic treatment
of this cancer has been reported in the prestigious research journals
Scientific Reports and Oncotarget.
Lead researcher Iris Gao with the Tennessee Center for Botanical Medicine Research reports the
isolation and identification of a new, patented compound, DMDD, from the root
of the tropical star fruit tree, is helping treat this form of cancer.
“Continued
research will lay a foundation for developing this as an anti-breast cancer
drug,” Gao said.
MTSU graduate students, a visiting
Chinese scholar and partner Guangxi
Medical University in Guangxi, China, are aiding in the effort.
Their findings reveal metastatic
tumors resulting from late-stage breast cancers are usually inaccessible by surgery
or radiotherapy. Consequently, there are no effective treatments. An alarming
90 percent of cases at stage IV or later result in death.
Gao said the research began in
2011 when the Tennessee Center for Botanical Medicine Research was founded at
MTSU, and the university — along with a grant from Tennessee-based Greenway Herbal Products, has made a
significant investment in the center to make the research findings possible.
The center and Guangxi Botanical
Garden of Medicinal Plants in Nanning, China, have entered into an exclusive
collaborative agreement and developed a novel approach to accelerate the
development of Western medicines from botanical extracts based on their
respective strengths and expertise.
“So far, our cancer research has
resulted in 16 research articles in scientific journals and three patents on
potential cancer therapeutics,” said Gao, the author and inventor of the
provisional international patent filed for DMDD in 2015.
The acronym DMDD comes from the
lengthy compound 2-Dodecyl-6-methoxycyclohexa-2,5-diene-1,4-dione
from the root of the tropical star fruit tree.
Working with Guangxi, the joint studies “… indicate that
DMDD (the agent) has significant potential as a safe and efficient therapeutic
agent to treat metastatic breast cancer,” Gao said.
“As metastatic breast cancer is such a devastating disease,
it is essential to develop new, less toxic therapeutic agents to prevent and
treat (this) cancer,” Gao said. “In contrast to toxic synthetic chemicals,
medicinal plants have provided us an interesting alternative to develop
efficacious and affordable anticancer drugs.”
“We are excited to observe the potent anti-cancer efficacy
as well as the low toxicity of DMDD in both human cells and mice, and we will
continue to study the anti-cancer potentials of DMDD and its underlying
mechanisms,” she added.
Researchers from both universities demonstrated DMDD
significantly extended the life span of breast tumor-bearing mice, shrinking
not only the primary breast tumor, but most importantly inhibiting the
metastasis, or spread, of the breast tumor to the lung and liver, according to
the Scientific Reports article published July 27.
Before this publication, the Gao-led team — grad students Nadin Almosnid and Hyo Sim Park — showed DMDD suppressed a variety of human cancer
cells, including breast, lung and bone cancer cells. This earlier work was
published in Oncotarget in 2015.
Grad student Gheda
Alsaif and visiting Chinese scholar Li
Chen recently joined the team. Deborah
Knott, a master’s student, and Amy
Ridings, an Honors College undergraduate, also have been involved in the
cancer research and been mentored by Gao for their dissertation research
“All of the graduate and undergraduate students have been
the co-author of my publications and/or conference proceedings,” Gao said.
“These students are fantastic and I enjoy working with them.”
Chen has been a part of the collaboration and exchange with
China, Gao added.
The researcher, who is a member of the School of
Agribusiness and Agriscience faculty, also reported the lack of toxicity of
DMDD in mice and normal human cells.
Gao said the star fruit tree is native to and widely
distributed in Southeast Asia. The root of the tree has been used in
traditional Chinese medicine to treat debilitating headaches for thousands of
years.
The consecutive discoveries of this plant-derived anticancer
agent have resulted from the collaboration between Gao and Dr. Renbin Huang at Guangxi Medical
University.
The partnership was established in 2013 when Gao first
visited Huang’s research lab at GMU. Huang’s lab has previously studied DMDD as
a robust anti-diabetic agent, Gao said.
Inspired by recent studies linking diabetes and breast
cancer and fascinated by the fact one of the world’s top anti-diabetic drugs,
metformin, can effectively treat breast cancer, Gao decided to investigate
whether DMDD could be used as an anticancer agent against breast cancer.
“The research has updated the knowledge of DMDD and provided
new insights into its potential as a cancer drug,” Gao said.
To learn more about the botanical medicine research center,
visit https://www.mtsu.edu/tcbmr/.
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