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Grapefruit Compound

A compound that naturally occurs in grapefruit and other citrus fruits may be able to block the secretion of hepatitis C virus (HCV) from infected cells, a process required to maintain chronic infection. A team of researchers from the Massachusetts General Hospital Center for Engineering in Medicine (MGH-CEM) report that HCV is bound to very low-density lipoprotein (vLDL, a so-called “bad” cholesterol) when it is secreted from liver cells and that the viral secretion required to pass infection to other cells may be blocked by the common flavonoid naringenin.


If the results of this study extend to human patients, a combination of naringenin and antiviral medication might allow patient to clear the virus from their livers. The report will appear in an upcoming issue of the journal Hepatology and has been released online.


“By finding that HCV is secreted from infected cells by latching onto vLDL, we have identified a key pathway in the viral lifecycle,” says Yaakov Nahmias, PhD, of the MGH-CEM, the paper’s lead author. “These results suggest that lipid-lowering drugs, as well as supplements, such as naringenin, may be combined with traditional antiviral therapies to reduce or even eliminate HCV from infected patients”


HCV is the leading cause of chronic viral liver disease in the United States and infects about 3 percent of the world population. Current antiviral medications are effective in only half of infected patients, 70 percent of whom develop chronic infection that can lead to cirrhosis or liver cancer. Since the virus does not integrate its genetic material into the DNA of infected cells the way HIV does, totally clearing the virus could be possible if new cells were not being infected by secreted virus.


“Identifying the route by which HCV is released from cells introduces a new therapeutic target,” says Martin Yarmush, MD, PhD, director of the MGH-CEM and the paper’s senior author. “That pathway’s dependence on cholesterol metabolism could allow us to interfere with viral propagation to other cells and tissues, using tools already developed for atherosclerosis treatment.” Yarmush is the Helen Andrus Benedict Professor of Surgery and Bioengineering at Harvard Medical School (HMS).


Grapefruit’s bitter taste is caused the presence of the flavonoid naringin, which is metabolized into naringenin, an antioxidant previously reported to help lower cholesterol levels. Considerable research has suggested that HCV infects liver cells by, in essence, “hitching a ride” onto the natural lipoprotein-cholesterol metabolic pathway. Since earlier evidence has shown that naringenin can reduce secretion of vLDL from liver cells, the researchers examined whether the compound might also lower HCV secretion from infected cells. Their experiments confirmed that naringenin does reduce the secretion of HCV from infected cell lines and showed that the compound inhibits the mechanism for secreting a specific lipoprotein that binds HCV.


“This work presents the possibility that non-toxic levels of a dietary supplement, such as naringenin, could effectively block HCV secretion,” says Raymond Chung, MD, MGH director of Hepatology and one of the study authors, “This approach might eventually be used to treat patients who do not respond to or cannot take traditional interferon-based treatment or be used in combination with other agents to boost success rates.”
32 Responses
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Avatar universal
that is pretty interesting!  thanks
Helpful - 0
315996 tn?1429054229

Just phoned my stock broker. "Buy all the grapefruit you can!"

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Avatar universal
I am going to grow them! Orchard planting this week! j/k  would that not be cool though, some thing so simple for us/me non responders?

I read on here to not eat grapefruit?  I am confuzzled!

Deb
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Avatar universal
Its confuzzling!  I thought grapefruit was a no-no with meds (all meds).  Too bad, I love grapefruit juice.

jd
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315094 tn?1201390050
Yeah, I've heard that I should stay away from grapefruit while on tx too.  I know that grapefruit interferes with a lot of meds, so maybe it was a precationary warning and no one has actually studied whether grapefruit interferes with the riba.
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86075 tn?1238115091
hey, thanks for this! HR says that they are going to find something terrific soon, that will outstrip all that they have now, it's just a matter of time...they are making lots of inroads....

jdwithhcv....maybe this compound works differently then pure grapefruit, or grapefruit juice...who knows? I sure don't...
Helpful - 0
315094 tn?1201390050
This is really interesting...
I wonder what the link between cholesterol and hcv is.  Remember those studies about people with higher cholesterol at start of tx have higher chances of svr?  What the heck is going on there?
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Avatar universal
Well here is hoping!  JD, Guess we best keep the grapefruit  out the diet, till they are sure:( I love it to!  )

What about oj? they used to give you oj to take pills,  is it the acid in citrus,   or something specific in grapefruit, not found in  oranges and such?

Deb
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Avatar universal
I think something specific in grapefruit.
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Avatar universal
I don't know either, still confuzzled, bad, good?? WTH?

Think you might be right,   thought perhaps it was the acid..

Jamima, so I an die from Liver  disease OR High blood pressure and a stroke!

Wow great choices :))

Deb
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Avatar universal
""may be combined with traditional antiviral therapies""
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250084 tn?1303307435
Grapefruit can't be mixed with several drugs as it , awww h*ll...words, keep loosing my words!! IT slows the filtration process in the liver of certain drugs, one being Xanax , therefore when you do your next dose, it's building up, etc.
OJ is no problem (was going to make a poor taste joke there!). I have tangerine, grapefruit and 3 orange tree's -loaded right now. Juice @ 2-4 gallons a week of the oj. Love it.

May have to plant a lot more grapefruit tree's!

LL
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
Space, I find this quite interesting.  I have also read that grapefruit is a big no, no on treatment.  I've stated many times here that I did not find this forum or have access to much information until I was about at the end of my 73 weeks of daily infergen.  You can imagine how I felt when I read grapefruit was a no, no.  I lived on grapefruit and it's juice throughout treatment.  It was about the only food I could tolerate.  Also my cholesterol has always been low.  Think I read here that high cholesterol bodes better for svr too.  I'm svr.  Whew...
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Avatar universal
bought some grapefruit bath crystals in utah this past summer,when i got home and thourghly read the label it stated, Do not use if you have liver disease."
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Avatar universal
congrats on the svr!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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190885 tn?1333025891
i don't do drugs or drink or smoke.....and for the last 9 months i have eaten at least one grapefruit every day.(not on tx yet)..i am feeling a lot better...billy
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Avatar universal
Sometimes I really wish someone would just make a list.
Do eat grapefruit while not txing,  Or don't..

For this do this, for that do that!

Eat this, do not eat that!

Do not drink coffee, no do drink at least cups a day!

Would make life so much easier.

Once a week they could add up dates!

Deb
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144210 tn?1273088782
This is about "naringenin" and i am curious to know what HR thinks!  Wherever is he?
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Avatar universal
ok now I need to google  naringenin!   I am curious also,
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Avatar universal
Ok my google results thought I would share, in case no one else knew what that meant either!Naringenin (not to be confused with naringin) is a flavanone that is considered to have a bioactive effect on human health as antioxidant, free radical scavenger, anti-inflammatory, carbohydrate metabolism promoter, and immune system modulater. This substance has also been shown to reduce oxidative damage to DNA in vitro. Scientists exposed cells to 80 micromoles of naringenin per liter, for 24 hours, and found that the amount of hydroxyl damage to the DNA was reduced by 24% in that very short period of time. Unfortunately, this bioflavonoid is difficult to absorb on oral ingestion. In the best case scenario, only 15% of ingested naringenin will get absorbed in the human gastrointestinal tract. A full glass of orange juice will supply about enough naringenin to achieve a concentration of about 0.5 micromoles per liter. There are speculations that, given more time at a lower concentration, it could have similar effects.

Naringenin found in grapefruit juice has been shown to have an inhibitory effect on the human cytochrome P450 isoform CYP1A2
:)

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86075 tn?1238115091
just for whatever it is worth, and, of course, people may do whatever they see fit, but I just spoke to HR and he told me that he would advise against this...He said he already spoke about this at some length, on another thread maybe a year ago...i didn't see that either...anyway, this is just what he thinks...he has a new computer set up that he is trying to make work, and he's very busy with other things right now, but he'll come when he has more time...fyi....
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Avatar universal
Thanks for the update, I was getting really confused on this issue
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250084 tn?1303307435
YES. A list, all do's and don'ts totally covered!

LL
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92903 tn?1309904711
I was just reading some research where the've demonstrated conclusively that grapefruits can indeed reverse the aging process. You wear them in your bra.  
Helpful - 0
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