1) The University of Rochester is in Rochester, New York, USA.
2) The article in Chemical Research in Toxicology that you haved cited DOES NOT say that the researchers:
"used green tea to cure mice who had been infected with cancer and found that the green tea shut down the AhR receptor".
If you actually read this article, it says that they took cancer cells from mouse liver tumors (mouse hepatoma cells), exposed them to green tea extracts, and found that the AhR was inhibited. They did NOT cure cancer in these mice. Please do not make misleading statements like the one I quoted above.
3) The article from Chemical Research in Toxicology is from 2003, if you have used more recent research in the rest of your writing, please cite it!
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A couple comments:
1) The University of Rochester is in Rochester, New York, USA.
2) The article in Chemical Research in Toxicology that you haved cited DOES NOT say that the researchers:
"used green tea to cure mice who had been infected with cancer and found that the green tea shut down the AhR receptor".
If you actually read this article, it says that they took cancer cells from mouse liver tumors (mouse hepatoma cells), exposed them to green tea extracts, and found that the AhR was inhibited. They did NOT cure cancer in these mice. Please do not make misleading statements like the one I quoted above.
3) The article from Chemical Research in Toxicology is from 2003, if you have used more recent research in the rest of your writing, please cite it!
April 22, 2009 - 4:40pmThis Comment
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