A new research by scientists from the University of  Alabama at Birmingham has shown how vegetables such as broccoli and  cabbage help reverse or prevent cancers and other aging-related  diseases."Your mother always told you to eat your  vegetables, and she was right,” says co-author Trygve Tollefsbol, a  biology professor in the UAB College of Arts and Sciences. “But now we  better understand why she was right - compounds in many of these foods  suppress gene aberrations that over time cause fatal diseases.”  Epigenetics is the study of the changes in human gene expressions with  time, changes that can cause cancer and Alzheimer’s, among other  diseases. In recent years, epigenetics research worldwide, including  numerous studies conducted at UAB, have identified specific food  compounds that inhibit negative epigenetic effects.
                      Those  foods include soybeans, cauliflower, broccoli and cabbage. Green tea,  fava beans, kale, grapes and the spice turmeric round out the diet."The  epigenetics diet can be adopted easily, because the concentrations of  the compounds needed for a positive effect are readily achievable,” says  lead author Syed Meeran, Ph.D., a research assistant professor in  Tollefsbol’s UAB Department of Biology laboratory."Compounds  in the epigenetics diet foods can, at the very least, help us lead  healthier lives and help our bodies prevent potentially debilitating  diseases like breast cancer and Alzheimer’s,” Tollefsbol says.
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