阅读理解   Several classes of bitter citrus compounds have looked promising as anticancer agents in laboratory tests. A new study indicates that long-term consumption of orange juice, a source of such chemicals, cuts cancer risk in rats.
    In test-tube studies, one class of the bitter compounds—flavonoids—has inhibited the growth of breast cancer cells. Related studies showed that bitter citrus limonoids similarly ward off cancer in animals. Mulling over such data, Maurice R. Bennink of Michigan State University in East Lansing wondered whether drinking orange juice would have a beneficial effect.
    His team injected 60 young rats with a chemical that causes colon cancer and then raised half of the animals on a normal diet. The others received orange juice instead of drinking water—and less sugar in their food to compensate for sugars in the juice.
    At an American Institute for Cancer Research meeting last week in Washington, D. C., Bennink reported that after 7 months, 22 of the animals receiving a normal diet had developed colon cancers. Only 17 of the rats on the orange-juice diet showed tumors. That's 77 percent of the control group's incidence.
    Concludes Bennink, whose work was supported by orange-juice producer—Tropicana Products of Bradenton, Fla. 'These data show orange juice helps protect against cancer.' He says that the study might also apply to breast, prostate, and lung cancers.
    Bandaru S. Reddy of the American Health Foundation in Valhalla, N.Y., was not surprised by Bennink's finding of an orange juice benefit. However, he calls the reported risk reduction unimpressive. His own data show that citrus limonoids protect against chemically induced colon cancer in lab animals.
    Luke K. T. Lam of LKT Laboratories in St. Paul, Minn., finds Bennink's data 'quite interesting,' although he describes as 'borderline' the suppression of cancer incidence observed by Bennink. Lam has inhibited tumors in the lung, skin, and forestomach of mice with limonoids.
    The scientists don't know what compounds in orange juice underlie its effect. The juice is rich in one limonoid—a sugar-containing version of limonin, which suppressed tumors in Lam's experiments. It's possible, Lam speculates, that rats convert the juice's limonoid into limonin.
    Indeed, argues Gary D. Manners of the Agricultural Research Service in Albany, Calif, 'there is no doubt that these anticancer citrus compounds are bioavailable in animals to the site of a cancer.' The question remains whether they are similarly available in people. To find out, his team will soon begin measuring the human body's uptake of limonoids from orange juice.
单选题     What made Bennink hypothesize the protective effect of orange juice?
 
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】 题意:什么使本尼克假定橙汁具有保护作用?参见第五段第二句。本尼克通过对白鼠实验获得的数据得出结论说,“橙汁可以抗癌。”故选D。
单选题     Which of the following is true of the results of Bennink's study?
 
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】 题意:关于本尼克研究结果正确的是试验组的13只白鼠没有感染肿瘤。参见第四段第二句。“喝橙汁的白鼠只有17只患有癌症”,没有得癌症的是30-17=13只。故选B。
单选题     It can be inferred from the passage that Bennick ______.
 
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】 题意:从本段文字可知本尼克找到了一个合适的支持者。参见倒数第五段第一句。他的工作得到了橙汁制造商的支持。故选D。
单选题     Both Reddy and Lam ______.
 
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】 题意:莱迪和莱姆对本尼克的发现并不感到惊奇。参见第六段第一句,莱迪对本尼克的发现并不感到惊奇。第七段第一句,莱姆发现本尼克的研究很有意思。故选B。
单选题     From the passage we can learn that scientists are still in the dark about ______.
 
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】 题意:从文章中我们看到科学家对人体内柑橘混合物的生物药效率还知之甚少。参见最后一段第二句。“问题是柑橘混合物在人体内是否会得到相同的吸收率。”故选D。