<p>A drug prescribed for epilepsy, bipolar disorder, and migraines when used along with a blood pressure medicine reversed some aspects of breast cancer in mice, according to a study which may lead to new interventions against the malignant disease.</p>.<p>Researchers from Georgetown University in the US increased susceptibility for breast cancer in the offspring of mice by feeding a high fat diet to their mothers during pregnancy.</p>.<p>However, study's findings, published in the journal Scientific Reports noted that the drug combination's effect increased breast cancer development in the offspring whose mothers had not been fed a high fat diet during pregnancy.</p>.<p>The researchers said one of the key drugs in the combination, valproic acid, inhibits histone deacetylase (HDAC), an important silencer of genes.</p>.<p>They said in contrast to mutations that permanently disrupt the normal functions of genes, the kind of modifications caused by the drug are reversible.</p>.<p>When valproic acid was combined with a blood pressure medication, hydralazine, the duo inhibited another critical gene regulator, DNA methyltransferase (DNMT), the study noted.</p>.<p>According to the researchers, previous research in people revealed that these two drugs can work in tandem to disrupt tumour growth.</p>.<p>"We believe that our research is the first to show that we can reverse some aspects of increased breast cancer risk found in offspring of mouse mothers fed a high fat diet during pregnancy," said Leena A. Hilakivi-Clarke study co-author from Georgetown University.</p>.<p>"This finding may have important implications in people because exposures in the womb to certain chemicals, or a mother's high fat diet, or being obese, can subsequently increase a daughter's breast cancer risk," she added.</p>.<p>According to the scientists, the findings raise several questions about the potential impact of diet on cancer risk.</p>.<p>Many fruits and vegetables, they said, have chemicals which react in the same ways as the HDAC- and DNMT-inhibiting drugs in the current study.</p>.<p>Some dietary compounds like folic acid, have opposite effects, the study noted.</p>.<p>Exposure to a high fat diet or hormone disrupting chemicals in the womb might be reversed by the consumption of foods high in DNMT and HDAC inhibitors, the scientists explained.</p>.<p>Those who have not been exposed to such chemicals might also gain a cancer protective benefit from consuming foods high in folic acid, they said. </p>
<p>A drug prescribed for epilepsy, bipolar disorder, and migraines when used along with a blood pressure medicine reversed some aspects of breast cancer in mice, according to a study which may lead to new interventions against the malignant disease.</p>.<p>Researchers from Georgetown University in the US increased susceptibility for breast cancer in the offspring of mice by feeding a high fat diet to their mothers during pregnancy.</p>.<p>However, study's findings, published in the journal Scientific Reports noted that the drug combination's effect increased breast cancer development in the offspring whose mothers had not been fed a high fat diet during pregnancy.</p>.<p>The researchers said one of the key drugs in the combination, valproic acid, inhibits histone deacetylase (HDAC), an important silencer of genes.</p>.<p>They said in contrast to mutations that permanently disrupt the normal functions of genes, the kind of modifications caused by the drug are reversible.</p>.<p>When valproic acid was combined with a blood pressure medication, hydralazine, the duo inhibited another critical gene regulator, DNA methyltransferase (DNMT), the study noted.</p>.<p>According to the researchers, previous research in people revealed that these two drugs can work in tandem to disrupt tumour growth.</p>.<p>"We believe that our research is the first to show that we can reverse some aspects of increased breast cancer risk found in offspring of mouse mothers fed a high fat diet during pregnancy," said Leena A. Hilakivi-Clarke study co-author from Georgetown University.</p>.<p>"This finding may have important implications in people because exposures in the womb to certain chemicals, or a mother's high fat diet, or being obese, can subsequently increase a daughter's breast cancer risk," she added.</p>.<p>According to the scientists, the findings raise several questions about the potential impact of diet on cancer risk.</p>.<p>Many fruits and vegetables, they said, have chemicals which react in the same ways as the HDAC- and DNMT-inhibiting drugs in the current study.</p>.<p>Some dietary compounds like folic acid, have opposite effects, the study noted.</p>.<p>Exposure to a high fat diet or hormone disrupting chemicals in the womb might be reversed by the consumption of foods high in DNMT and HDAC inhibitors, the scientists explained.</p>.<p>Those who have not been exposed to such chemicals might also gain a cancer protective benefit from consuming foods high in folic acid, they said. </p>