Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.

US: Breakthrough Discovered in Medical Marijuana Cancer Treatment

Tim King

Salem News

Friday 11 Jan 2008

---
Researchers learned that cannabinoids have been associated with
anti-carcinogenic effects, which are responsible in preventing or
delaying the development of cancer.

A new study reveals that Medical Marijuana can be an effective treatment
for cancer, that is the word announced by doctors in Germany who
concluded that this clarification of the mechanism of cannabinoid action
may help investigators to further explore their therapeutic benefit.

The medical article was originally published in the Journal of the
National Cancer Institute Advance Access and online on December 25th 2007.

Cancer cells that were treated with combinations of cannabinoids,
antagonists of cannabinoid receptors, and small interfering ribo nucleic
acid or 'siRNA' to tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinases-1
(TIMP-1) were assessed for invasiveness, protein expression, and
activation of signal transduction pathways.

The biggest contribution of this breakthrough discovery, is that the
expression of TIMP-1 was shown to be stimulated by cannabinoid receptor
activation and to mediate the anti-invasive effect of cannabinoids.

In other words, they learned that treatment with cannabinoids, one of
the active ingredients of the medicinal side of marijuana, has been
shown to reduce the invasiveness of cancer cells. Prior to now the
cellular mechanisms underlying this effect were unclear and the
relevance of the findings to the behavior of tumor cells in vivo remains
to be determined.

It is already known that marijuana can stimulate the appetite of
patients, but researchers have learned that cannabinoids, in addition to
having palliative benefits in cancer therapy, have been associated with
anti-carcinogenic effects, which are responsible in preventing or
delaying the development of cancer.

"Although the anti-proliferative activities of cannabinoids have been
intensively investigated, little is known about their effects on tumor
invasion," the article stated.

Method

In this now completed round of research, Matrigel-coated and uncoated
Boyden chambers were used to quantify invasiveness and migration,
respectively, of human cervical cancer 'HeLa' cells that had been
treated with cannabinoids.

The stable anandamide analog R(+)-methanandamide 'MA' and the
phytocannabinoid 9-tetrahydrocannabinol 'THC' in the presence or absence
of antagonists of the CB1 or CB2 cannabinoid receptors or of transient
receptor potential vanilloid 1 (TRPV1) or inhibitors of p38 or p42/44
mitogen–activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathways.

A method known as 'reverse transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction' and
immunoblotting were used to assess the influence of cannabinoids on the
expression of matrix metalloproteinases and endogenous tissue
inhibitors. The role of TIMP-1 in the anti-invasive action of
cannabinoids was analyzed by transfecting HeLa, human cervical
carcinoma, or human lung carcinoma cells cells with siRNA targeting TIMP-1.

They say all statistical tests were two-sided.

Results

Without modifying migration, MA and THC caused a time and
concentration-dependent suppression of HeLa cell invasion through
Matrigel that was accompanied by increased expression of TIMP-1.

At the lowest concentrations tested, MA and THC led to a decrease in
cell invasion.

"The stimulation of TIMP-1 expression and suppression of cell invasion
were reversed by pretreatment of cells with antagonists to CB1 or CB2
receptors, with inhibitors of MAPKs, or, in the case of MA, with an
antagonist to TRPV1. Knockdown of cannabinoid-induced TIMP-1 expression
by siRNA led to a reversal of the cannabinoid-elicited decrease in tumor
cell invasiveness in HeLa, A549, and C33A cells."

The researchers concluded that increased expression of TIMP-1 mediates
an anti-invasive effect of cannabinoids. That means that in our future,
cannabinoids may offer a therapeutic option in the treatment of highly
invasive cancers.

Special thanks to the JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, and
to Burkhard Hinz, PhD, Institute of Toxicology and Pharmacology,
University of Rostock and the affiliation of authors: Institute of
Toxicology and Pharmacology, University of Rostock in Rostock, Germany.

The original report published by Oxford University Press was titled,
"Inhibition of Cancer Cell Invasion by Cannabinoids via Increased
Expression of Tissue Inhibitor of Matrix Metalloproteinases-1Robert
Ramer, Burkhard Hinz."

http://www.salem-news.com/articles/january112008/cancer_treatment_11008.php


 

 

 

After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.




This page was created by the Cannabis Campaigners' Guide.
Feel free to link to this page!