Study confirms the anti-cancer effects of Kencur extract

Notes Reviewers’ Notes

You may know it as an aromatic spice to add flavor to your dishes or as a soothing herbal remedy to use for upset stomachs, but researchers from Osaka Metropolitan University have uncovered promising findings that Kencur, a tropical plant in the ginger family native to Southeast Asia, possesses anti-cancer effects.

Led by Associate Professor Akiko Kojima of the Graduate School of Human Life and Ecology, the researchers demonstrated that Kencur extract and its main active component, ethyl p-methoxycinnamate (EMC), significantly suppressed cancer cell growth at the cellular and animal levels.

While previous studies on EMC indicated its anti-cancer potential by decreasing the expression of mitochondrial transcription factor A (TFAM), which is associated with cancer cell proliferation, the exact mechanism remained unclear until now.

The results of this study confirm the anti-cancer effects of Kencur extract and its main active ingredient, EMC. It is highly expected that TFAM will become a new marker for anti-cancer effects in the future as research advances in related fields."  

Akiko Kojima, Associate Professor, Graduate School of Human Life and Ecology

Their findings were published in Heliyon.

Source:

Osaka Metropolitan University

Journal reference:

Sasaki, Y., et al. (2023) Kaempferia galanga L. extract and its main component, ethyl p-methoxycinnamate, inhibit the proliferation of Ehrlich ascites tumor cells by suppressing TFAM expression. Heliyon. doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e17588.

Posted in: Medical Science News | Medical Research News | Medical Condition News

Tags: Ascites, Cancer, Cell, Cell Proliferation, Ginger, Proliferation, Research, Spice, Transcription, Tumor

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