Researchers at the Institute of Toxicology and Pharmacology of Rostock University in Germany further confirm the profound benefits of Cannabis
R
esearchers
at the Institute of Toxicology and Pharmacology of Rostock University
in Germany rang in the New Year with excellent news for the world. In a
study, Prof. Burkhard Hinz and his scientists put the active ingredients
in cannabis up to the claims of holding an ability to truly kill cancer
cells, even going further into the chemistry to find out exactly how
this medical miracle takes place.
Hinz’s
repertoire with cannabis goes back a ways. In 2008 his research team
was the first to discover that active ingredients actually slowed the migration of tumor cells into
the surrounding tissues, this migration is what commonly leads
metastasis, which is when cancer moves out from one affected area and
into the rest of the body.
The research has been published in the January 2015 edition of the journal Biochemical Pharmacology with the title “New Insights into Antimetastic and Antiangiogenic Effects of Cannabinoids.” What they found was that both tetrahydrocannabinol (THC or known as Delta-9-Tetrahydrocannabinol) and cannabidiol, also an active substance and originating from cannabis, contribute to the destruction of tumor cells by stimulating the formation of a specific protein, ICAM-1. By acting on the surface of the cells attacked by cancer, the proteins link themselves to the immune system’s own defensive cells, making the cancerous cells burst. The active ingredients, thus, prevent cancerous cells from forming blood vessels which allow the cancer to take root and grow.
This is, of course, very encouraging news, but the professor gave no timeline with respect to when his studies will progress onward with the process of producing an actual medicine. Hinz emphasized that the study is still at an early stage, and said, “We are far from putting our discoveries into practice on a clinical level. However, our results are further evidence that cannabinoids mediate a series of potentially therapeutic uses.”
This is, of course, very encouraging news, but the professor gave no timeline with respect to when his studies will progress onward with the process of producing an actual medicine. Hinz emphasized that the study is still at an early stage, and said, “We are far from putting our discoveries into practice on a clinical level. However, our results are further evidence that cannabinoids mediate a series of potentially therapeutic uses.”
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1937644814000082
Chapter Two – New Insights into Antimetastatic and Antiangiogenic Effects of Cannabinoids
Abstract
Cannabinoids
exert antitumorigenic effects via multiple mechanisms. Of these,
antimetastatic and antiangiogenic actions have attracted considerable
interest in the past years. Regarding the underlying antimetastatic
mechanism, several studies revealed cannabinoids to alter the gene
expression of cancer cells toward a less-aggressive phenotype and to
modulate their secretomic profile. Cannabinoids likewise modulate the
release of factors from tumor cells that subsequently suppress the
chemoattraction of vessel cells thereby conferring antiangiogenesis.
Among the diverse mediators of cannabinoids' antitumorigenic action, the
tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinases-1, which is released from
cancer cells upon cannabinoid treatment, has been implicated as a
pivotal factor conferring both anti-invasive properties of cancer cells
as well as antiangiogenic capacities of endothelial cells. In addition,
cannabinoids have been shown to inhibit angiogenic capacities of
endothelial cells directly via suppressing their proliferation, tube
formation, and migration. This chapter reviews the cell- and
substance-specific antitumorigenic mechanisms of cannabinoids with
particular consideration of their antimetastatic/anti-invasive and
antiangiogenic actions. In addition, beneficial interactions of
cannabinoids with currently used chemotherapeutics as well as the
influence of cannabinoids on tumor-immune surveillance are addressed.
Collectively, the currently available data suggest cannabinoids as a
potential tool in modern cancer pharmacotherapy.
Keywords
- Angiogenesis;
- Cancer;
- Cannabinoids;
- Metastasis;
- Tumor cell invasion
- Corresponding author: E-mail: burkhard.hinz@med.uni-rostock.de
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