Medical Studies that Prove Cannabis Can Cure Brain Cancer (2)
Medical Studies that Prove Cannabis Can Cure Cancer
Cures Brain Cancer Read More: http://www.whydontyoutrythis.com/2013/09/42-medical-studies-that-prove-cannabis-can-cure-cancer.html | Follow us on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/whydontyoutrythis
Abstract
The development of
new therapeutic strategies is essential for the management of gliomas,
one of the most malignant forms of cancer. We have shown previously that
the growth of the rat glioma C6 cell line is inhibited by psychoactive
cannabinoids (I. Galve-Roperh et al., Nat. Med., 6: 313-319, 2000).
These compounds act on the brain and some other organs through the
widely expressed CB(1) receptor. By contrast, the other cannabinoid
receptor subtype, the CB(2) receptor, shows a much more restricted
distribution and is absent from normal brain. Here we show that local
administration of the selective CB(2) agonist JWH-133 at 50 microg/day
to Rag-2(-/-) mice induced a considerable regression of malignant tumors
generated by inoculation of C6 glioma cells. The selective involvement
of the CB(2) receptor in this action was evidenced by: (a) the
prevention by the CB(2) antagonist SR144528 but not the CB(1) antagonist
SR141716; (b) the down-regulation of the CB(2) receptor but not the
CB(1) receptor in the tumors; and (c) the absence of typical
CB(1)-mediated psychotropic side effects. Cannabinoid receptor
expression was subsequently examined in biopsies from human
astrocytomas. A full 70% (26 of 37) of the human astrocytomas analyzed
expressed significant levels of cannabinoid receptors. Of interest, the
extent of CB(2) receptor expression was directly related with tumor
malignancy. In addition, the growth of grade IV human astrocytoma cells
in Rag-2(-/-) mice was completely blocked by JWH-133 administration at
50 microg/day. Experiments carried out with C6 glioma cells in culture
evidenced the internalization of the CB(2) but not the CB(1) receptor
upon JWH-133 challenge and showed that selective activation of the CB(2)
receptor signaled apoptosis via enhanced ceramide synthesis de novo.
These results support a therapeutic approach for the treatment of
malignant gliomas devoid of psychotropic side effects.
Sánchez C1, de Ceballos ML, Gomez del Pulgar T, Rueda D, Corbacho C, Velasco G, Galve-Roperh I, Huffman JW, Ramón y Cajal S, Guzmán M.
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