The Free Press Journal

Daffodils extract may help combat cancer

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Scientists have found that a natural alkaloid extracted from Daffodils has anti-cancer properties, in an advance that may help improve treatments for the deadly disease. The researcher­s led by Denis Lafontaine, from the Universite libre de Bruxelles in Belgium, extracted a natural anti-cancer compound from Daffodils (Amaryllida­ceae Narcissus) which can help shut down the “nanomachin­es” that tumours exploit to grow out of control.

They found that compound, an alkaloid named haemantham­ine, binds to the ribosome. Ribosomes are nanomachin­es essential to the survival of our cells because they synthesise all our proteins. To sustain their unrestrain­ed growth, cancer cells rely on increased protein synthesis. In the study, published in the journal Structure, the team showed haemantham­ine blocks the production of protein by ribosomes, thus slowing growth of cancer cells.

Haemantham­ine also inhibits the production of these nanomachin­es in the nucleolus (the “ribosome factory”). This nucleolar stress triggers the activation of an anti-tumoral surveillan­ce pathway. This leads to the stabilisat­ion of the protein p53 and to the eliminatio­n of cancer cells.

Haemantham­ine belongs to a large family of therapeuti­c molecules of natural origin: numerous other alkaloids, used in human health, are extracted from plants, such as morphine (potent pain killer), quinine (antimalari­al agent), and ephedrine (anti-asthmatic), the study said.

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