Dietary sugar may help to treat melanoma
Source: News Medical.ner, December 2015
New research from scientists at Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute (SBP) suggests that a rare sugar found in seaweed, mushrooms, seeds and other foods may be able to help treat skin cancer. The sugar, called L-fucose, has previously been linked to a number of pathological conditions including inflammation and certain cancers. The current study, published today in Science Signaling, is the first to associate L-fucose with melanoma, the most dangerous form of skin cancer.
“Our findings offer new, unprecedented detail into the sugar’s role in cancer," said Ze’ev Ronai, Ph.D., senior author and scientific director of SBP’s La Jolla campus. “We found that by tampering with L-fucose metabolism, we could inhibit melanoma tumor metastasis. Not only were the tumors affected but also their microenvironment—the cells surrounding the tumor that play a critical role in sustaining the cancer—making the discovery even more impactful."
Sugars, such as glucose and sucrose, come from many different sources and are used by the body in unique ways. Some sugars, including L-fucose, provide crucial tags on cell-surface proteins that signal inflammation and help direct cell migration. Previous research has shown that changes in the amount of L-fucose on cells are associated with breast and stomach cancers.