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Dive into the research topics where Ishak Neeman is active.

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Featured researches published by Ishak Neeman.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 2002

Chemopreventive and adjuvant therapeutic potential of pomegranate (Punica granatum) for human breast cancer

Nam Deuk Kim; Rajendra G. Mehta; Weiping Yu; Ishak Neeman; Talia Livney; Akiva Amichay; Donald Poirier; P. J. Nicholls; Andrew J. Kirby; Wenguo Jiang; Robert E. Mansel; Thangaiyan Rabi; Boris Kaplan; Ephraim Lansky

Fresh organically grown pomegranates (Punica granatum L.) of the Wonderful cultivar were processed into three components: fermented juice, aqueous pericarp extract and cold-pressed or supercritical CO2-extracted seed oil. Exposure to additional solvents yielded polyphenol-rich fractions (‘polyphenols’) from each of the three components. Their actions, and of the crude whole oil and crude fermented and unfermented juice concentrate, were assessed in vitro for possible chemopreventive or adjuvant therapeutic potential in human breast cancer. The ability to effect a blockade of endogenous active estrogen biosynthesis was shown by polyphenols from fermented juice, pericarp, and oil, which inhibited aromatase activity by 60–80%. Fermented juice and pericarp polyphenols, and whole seed oil, inhibited 17-β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase Type 1 from 34 to 79%, at concentrations ranging from 100 to 1,000 μg/ml according to seed oil ≫ fermented juice polyphenols > pericarp polyphenols. In a yeast estrogen screen (YES) lyophilized fresh pomegranate juice effected a 55% inhibition of the estrogenic activity of 17-β-estradiol; whereas the lyophilized juice by itself displayed only minimal estrogenic action. Inhibition of cell lines by fermented juice and pericarp polyphenols was according to estrogen-dependent (MCF-7) ≫ estrogen- independent (MB-MDA-231) > normal human breast epithelial cells (MCF-10A). In both MCF-7 and MB-MDA-231 cells, fermented pomegranate juice polyphenols consistently showed about twice the anti-proliferative effect as fresh pomegranate juice polyphenols. Pomegranate seed oil effected 90% inhibition of proliferation of MCF-7 at 100 μg/ml medium, 75% inhibition of invasion of MCF-7 across a Matrigel membrane at 10 μg/ml, and 54% apoptosis in MDA-MB-435 estrogen receptor negative metastatic human breast cancer cells at 50 μg/ml. In a %% murine mammary gland organ culture, fermented juice polyphenols effected 47% inhibition of cancerous lesion formation induced by the carcinogen 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA). The findings suggest that clinical trials to further assess chemopreventive and adjuvant therapeutic applications of pomegranate in human breast cancer may be warranted.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 1999

Antioxidant and eicosanoid enzyme inhibition properties of pomegranate seed oil and fermented juice flavonoids.

Shay Yehoshua Schubert; Ephraim Lansky; Ishak Neeman

The antioxidant and eicosanoid enzyme inhibition properties of pomegranate (Punica granatum) fermented juice and seed oil flavonoids were studied. The pomegranate fermented juice (pfj) and cold pressed seed oil (pcpso) showed strong antioxidant activity close to that of butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA) and green tea (Thea sinensis), and significantly greater than that of red wine (Vitis vitifera). Flavonoids extracted from pcpso showed 31-44% inhibition of sheep cyclooxygenase and 69-81% inhibition of soybean lipoxygenase. Flavonoids extracted from pfj showed 21-30% inhibition of soybean lipoxygenase though no significant inhibition of sheep cyclooxygenase. The pcpso was analyzed for its polyphenol content and fatty acid composition. Total polyphenols in pcpso showed a concentration by weight of approximately 0.015%. Pcpso fatty acid composition showed punicic acid (65.3%) along with palmitic acid (4.8%), stearic acid (2.3%), oleic acid (6.3%), linoleic acid (6.6%) and three unidentified peaks from which two (14.2%) are probably isomers of punicic acid (El-Shaarawy, M.I., Nahpetian, A., 1983). Studies on pomegranate seed oil. Fette Seifen Anstrichmittel 83(3), 123-126).


Investigational New Drugs | 2005

Possible synergistic prostate cancer suppression by anatomically discrete pomegranate fractions

Ephraim Lansky; Wenguo Jiang; Huanbiao Mo; Lou Bravo; Paul Froom; Weiping Yu; Neil M. Harris; Ishak Neeman; Moray J. Campbell

We investigated whether dissimilar biochemical fractions originating in anatomically discrete sections of the pomegranate (Punica granatum) fruit might act synergistically against proliferation, metastatic potential, and phosholipase A2 (PLA2) expression of human prostate cancer cells in vitro. Proliferation of DU 145 human prostate cancer cells was measured following treatment with a range of therapeutically active doses of fermented pomegranate juice polyphenols (W) and sub-therapeutic doses of either pomegranate pericarp (peel) polyphenols (P) or pomegranate seed oil (Oil). Invasion across Matrigel by PC-3 human prostate cancer cells was measured following treatment with combinations of W, P and Oil such that the total gross weight of pomegranate extract was held constant. Expression of PLA2, associated with invasive potential, was measured in the PC-3 cells after treatment with the same dosage combinations as per invasion. Supra-additive, complementary and synergistic effects were proven in all models by the Kruskal-Wallis non-parametric H test at p < 0.001 for the proliferation tests, p < 0.01 for invasion, and p < 0.05 for PLA2 expression. Proliferation effects were additionally evaluated with CompuSyn software median effect analysis and showed a concentration index CI < 1, confirming synergy. The results suggest vertical as well as the usual horizontal strategies for discovering pharmacological actives in plants.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 1999

Cinnamon extracts’ inhibitory effect on Helicobacter pylori

Mina Tabak; Robert Armon; Ishak Neeman

Ethanol and methylene chloride extracts of cinnamon were compared for their effect on Helicobacter pylori growth and urease activity. Methylene chloride extract was found to inhibit growth of H. pylori, while ethanol extract counteracted its urease activity. Cinnamon extract (from methylene chloride) inhibited H. pylori at concentration range of common antibiotics. Complete inhibition in vitro was achieved by 50 microg/ml in solid medium (egg yolk emulsion agar) and by 15 microg/ml in liquid medium (supplemented brain heart infusion broth). The cinnamon extracts were more inhibitory on free urease than on whole cell urease.


Journal of the American Oil Chemists' Society | 1988

Separation and Concentration of Natural Antioxidants From the Rape of Olives

Fayad Z. Sheabar; Ishak Neeman

Polyphenols were extracted from the rape of Israeli olive oil using hexane, acetone and ethanol in a simple sequential procedure yielding three fractions (A,B,C). Fraction A (extracted with hexane) contained few polyphenols (0.05%), while Fraction B (extracted with acetone) and Fraction C (extracted with ethanol) contained about 5% polyphenols each. Fractions B and C were also found to contain the highest ortho-di-phenol concentration (about 3%). The addition of purified Fraction B at a level of 100 ppm to refined olive or soybean oils partially inhibited the oxidative deterioration when the oils were stored in the dark at 100 C.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2000

Effect of Inula viscosa extract on chitin synthesis in dermatophytes and Candida albicans

M Maoz; Ishak Neeman

An antimycotic effect of an extract from Inula viscosa leaves was demonstrated affecting chitin synthesis in dermatophytes and Candida albicans. The antimycotic effect was compared to the effect caused by miconazole nitrate--an antifungal drug. The inhibition effect on chitin synthesis was not correlated to the extent of growth inhibition caused by the antifungal agents: both miconazole nitrate and the I. viscosa extract inhibited the growth of dermatophytes and C. albicans. Miconazole nitrate did not affect chitin synthesis--except for M. canis--whereas I. viscosa extract caused a significant decline in chitin content.


Urological Research | 1998

Cactus flower extracts may prove beneficial in benign prostatic hyperplasia due to inhibition of 5α reductase activity, aromatase activity and lipid peroxidation

Adi Jonas; Gennady Rosenblat; Daniel Krapf; William Bitterman; Ishak Neeman

The cactus flower is deemed to be helpful in benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) therapy, although there is no published information regarding its clinical effect in patients and on the mechanism of its biological activity. The present study evaluated the ability of cactus flower extracts to exert an effect on BPH through possible inhibition of such processes as lipid peroxidation, androgen aromatization and testosterone reduction. Cactus flower extracts indeed inhibited aromatase and 5α reductase activity in cultured foreskin fibroblasts, and also in human placental and prostatic homogenates. The inhibitory activity in both instances was associated with the dichloromethane or ethanol (methanol) extracts, while a marked antioxidative activity was associated with the aqueous extract. The finding that cactus flower extracts interfere concurrently in vitro with aromatase and reductase activity as well as with free radical processes suggests that these substances may prove beneficial in BPH treatment.


Connective Tissue Research | 1998

Acylated Ascorbate Stimulates Collagen Synthesis in Cultured Human Foreskin Fibroblasts at Lower Doses than does Ascorbic Acid

Gennady Rosenblat; Natasha Perelman; Ella Katzir; Sissi Gal-Or; Adl Jonas; Marcel E. Nimni; Nino Sorgente; Ishak Neeman

Acylated derivatives of ascorbic acid were found to be active in a number of biochemical and physiological processes. In the present study we investigated the effects of 6-O-palmitoyl ascorbate on collagen synthesis by cultured foreskin human fibroblasts. Our observations indicate a marked stimulatory effect on collagen synthesis by 6-O-palmitoyl ascorbate in the concentration range of 5-20 microM, while the synthesis stimulated by ascorbic acid was maximal at concentrations of 20-100 microM. Cells treated with 10 microM palmitoyl ascorbate for 36 h exhibited a production of collagen threefold greater than those in the presence of 10 microM ascorbic acid, and it was about the same as in cells treated with 100 microM ascorbic acid. By 48 h differences were not significant. Acylated ascorbate impaired vitality of the treated fibroblasts at concentrations exceeding 20 microM in media supplemented with 0.5% FCS. However, most of the cytotoxic effect was neutralized by FCS at a concentration of 10%. The resistance of acylated ascorbate against oxidative degradation as well as the role of free radicals in the modulation of collagen synthesis by ascorbic acid and by its derivatives is discussed.


Connective Tissue Research | 1991

The effect of various avocado oils on skin collagen metabolism

Moshe J. Werman; Shoshana Mokady; Marcel E. Nimni; Ishak Neeman

The effects of various avocado oils on collagen metabolism in skin were studied in growing rats fed diets containing 10% (w/w) of the tested oils. Rats fed the unrefined avocado oil extracted with hexane from the intact fruit, its unsaponifiables or the avocado seed oil, showed significant increases in soluble collagen content in skin, though total collagen content was not affected. The increased soluble collagen content appears to be a consequence of the inhibition of lysyl oxidase activity. The active factor was found to be present in the unrefined avocado oil and probably originated from the avocado seed, since collagen metabolism was affected only by fractions which contained lipids fraction from the seed. In comparison rats fed the refined or unrefined soybean oils showed no effects.


Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology | 1997

Effect of ranitidine on the urea breath test: a controlled trial.

Edy Stermer; Mina Tabak; Israel Potasman; Nissim Levy; Ada Tamir; Ishak Neeman

Because Helicobacter pylori is an acid-sensitive organism, an elevation of the gastric pH by H2 inhibitors might improve the intragastric conditions for the development of this organism. We tested this hypothesis in a prospective and controlled trial including 43 patients positive for H. pylori using the rapid urease test. Twenty-six patients received 150 mg ranitidine twice daily and 17 patients received no treatment. The 14C-urea breath test was performed in both groups at the beginning of the study and 2 weeks later. Radioactive 14C in exhaled carbon dioxide was significantly increased (p = 0.045) in the patients treated with ranitidine, compared with the patients in the control group. Administration of this drug to patients infected with H. pylori is associated with an increase in the bacterial load after 2 weeks of treatment. This phenomenon might be attributed to increased bacterial growth due to the H2 blocker.

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Mina Tabak

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Gennady Rosenblat

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Adi Jonas

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Edy Stermer

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Nissim Levy

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Shay Yehoshua Schubert

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Eyal Shimoni

Weizmann Institute of Science

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