uPA Cancer Research Results

uPA, Urokinase plasminogen activator: Click to Expand ⟱
Source:
Type:
uPA (urokinase plasminogen activator) is a serine protease that plays a crucial role in the conversion of plasminogen to plasmin, an enzyme responsible for degrading various components of the extracellular matrix (ECM). This activity is central to processes such as tissue remodeling, cell migration, and angiogenesis. In the context of cancer, uPA facilitates tumor invasion and metastasis by promoting ECM degradation, while its interaction with its receptor (uPAR) and inhibitors (such as PAI-1) forms a regulatory axis that is frequently dysregulated in malignancies.

Patients with higher pretreatment serum uPA (≥1 ng/ml) had significantly shorter OS.

Elevated uPA expression has been observed in a broad range of cancers, including breast, colorectal, lung, and prostate cancers. These high levels are often indicative of increased proteolytic activity within the tumor microenvironment.
Tumors with aggressive behavior often exhibit upregulation of uPA, along with its receptor uPAR. This upregulation enhances plasmin generation and leads to an environment conducive to invasion and metastasis.

Elevated uPA levels in tumor tissues have been strongly associated with poor clinical outcomes. High uPA expression is correlated with increased risk of metastasis, higher likelihood of recurrence, and reduced overall survival in several cancer types.


Scientific Papers found: Click to Expand⟱
2639- Api,    Plant flavone apigenin: An emerging anticancer agent
- Review, Var, NA
*antiOx↑, Apigenin (4′, 5, 7-trihydroxyflavone), a major plant flavone, possessing antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and anticancer properties
*Inflam↓,
AntiCan↑,
ChemoSen↑, Studies demonstrate that apigenin retain potent therapeutic properties alone and/or increases the efficacy of several chemotherapeutic drugs in combination on a variety of human cancers.
BioEnh↑, Apigenin’s anticancer effects could also be due to its differential effects in causing minimal toxicity to normal cells with delayed plasma clearance and slow decomposition in liver increasing the systemic bioavailability in pharmacokinetic studies.
chemoPv↑, apigenin highlighting its potential activity as a chemopreventive and therapeutic agent.
IL6↓, In taxol-resistant ovarian cancer cells, apigenin caused down regulation of TAM family of tyrosine kinase receptors and also caused inhibition of IL-6/STAT3 axis, thereby attenuating proliferation.
STAT3↓,
NF-kB↓, apigenin treatment effectively inhibited NF-κB activation, scavenged free radicals, and stimulated MUC-2 secretion
IL8↓, interleukin (IL)-6, and IL-8
eff↝, The anti-proliferative effects of apigenin was significantly higher in breast cancer cells over-expressing HER2/neu but was much less efficacious in restricting the growth of cell lines expressing HER2/neu at basal levels
Akt↓, Apigenin interferes in the cell survival pathway by inhibiting Akt function by directly blocking PI3K activity
PI3K↓,
HER2/EBBR2↓, apigenin administration led to the depletion of HER2/neu protein in vivo
cycD1/CCND1↓, Apigenin treatment in breast cancer cells also results in decreased expression of cyclin D1, D3, and cdk4 and increased quantities of p27 protein
CycD3↓,
p27↑,
FOXO3↑, In triple-negative breast cancer cells, apigenin induces apoptosis by inhibiting the PI3K/Akt pathway thereby increasing FOXO3a expression
STAT3↓, In addition, apigenin also down-regulated STAT3 target genes MMP-2, MMP-9, VEGF and Twist1, which are involved in cell migration and invasion of breast cancer cells [
MMP2↓,
MMP9↓,
VEGF↓, Apigenin acts on the HIF-1 binding site, which decreases HIF-1α, but not the HIF-1β subunit, thereby inhibiting VEGF.
Twist↓,
MMP↓, Apigenin treatment of HGC-27 and SGC-7901 gastric cancer cells resulted in the inhibition of proliferation followed by mitochondrial depolarization resulting in apoptosis
ROS↑, Further studies revealed apigenin-induced apoptosis in hepatoma tumor cells by utilizing ROS generated through the activation of the NADPH oxidase
NADPH↑,
NRF2↓, Apigenin significantly sensitized doxorubicin-resistant BEL-7402 (BEL-7402/ADM) cells to doxorubicin (ADM) and increased the intracellular concentration of ADM by reducing Nrf2-
SOD↓, In human cervical epithelial carcinoma HeLa cells combination of apigenin and paclitaxel significantly increased inhibition of cell proliferation, suppressing the activity of SOD, inducing ROS accumulation leading to apoptosis by activation of caspas
COX2↓, melanoma skin cancer model where apigenin inhibited COX-2 that promotes proliferation and tumorigenesis
p38↑, Additionally, it was shown that apigenin treatment in a late phase involves the activation of p38 and PKCδ to modulate Hsp27, thus leading to apoptosis
Telomerase↓, apigenin inhibits cell growth and diminishes telomerase activity in human-derived leukemia cells
HDAC↓, demonstrated the role of apigenin as a histone deacetylase inhibitor. As such, apigenin acts on HDAC1 and HDAC3
HDAC1↓,
HDAC3↓,
Hif1a↓, Apigenin acts on the HIF-1 binding site, which decreases HIF-1α, but not the HIF-1β subunit, thereby inhibiting VEGF.
angioG↓, Moreover, apigenin was found to inhibit angiogenesis, as suggested by decreased HIF-1α and VEGF expression in cancer cells
uPA↓, Furthermore, apigenin intake resulted in marked inhibition of p-Akt, p-ERK1/2, VEGF, uPA, MMP-2 and MMP-9, corresponding with tumor growth and metastasis inhibition in TRAMP mice
Ca+2↑, Neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells treated with apigenin led to induction of apoptosis, accompanied by higher levels of intracellular free [Ca(2+)] and shift in Bax:Bcl-2 ratio in favor of apoptosis, cytochrome c release, followed by activation casp-9, 12
Bax:Bcl2↑,
Cyt‑c↑,
Casp9↑,
Casp12↑,
Casp3↑, Apigenin also augmented caspase-3 activity and PARP cleavage
cl‑PARP↑,
E-cadherin↑, Apigenin treatment resulted in higher levels of E-cadherin and reduced levels of nuclear β-catenin, c-Myc, and cyclin D1 in the prostates of TRAMP mice.
β-catenin/ZEB1↓,
cMyc↓,
CDK4↓, apigenin exposure led to decreased levels of cell cycle regulatory proteins including cyclin D1, D2 and E and their regulatory partners CDK2, 4, and 6
CDK2↓,
CDK6↓,
IGF-1↓, A reduction in the IGF-1 and increase in IGFBP-3 levels in the serum and the dorsolateral prostate was observed in apigenin-treated mice.
CK2↓, benefits of apigenin as a CK2 inhibitor in the treatment of human cervical cancer by targeting cancer stem cells
CSCs↓,
FAK↓, Apigenin inhibited the tobacco-derived carcinogen-mediated cell proliferation and migration involving the β-AR and its downstream signals FAK and ERK activation
Gli↓, Apigenin inhibited the self-renewal capacity of SKOV3 sphere-forming cells (SFC) by downregulating Gli1 regulated by CK2α
GLUT1↓, Apigenin induces apoptosis and slows cell growth through metabolic and oxidative stress as a consequence of the down-regulation of glucose transporter 1 (GLUT1).

3382- ART/DHA,    Repurposing Artemisinin and its Derivatives as Anticancer Drugs: A Chance or Challenge?
- Review, Var, NA
AntiCan↑, antimalarial drug, artemisinin that has shown anticancer activities in vitro and in vivo.
toxicity↑, safety of artemisinins in long-term cancer therapy requires further investigation.
Ferroptosis↑, Artemisinins acts against cancer cells via various pathways such as inducing apoptosis (Zhu et al., 2014; Zuo et al., 2014) and ferroptosis via the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) (Zhu et al., 2021) and causing cell cycle arrest
ROS↑,
TumCCA↑,
BioAv↝, absolute bioavailability was estimated to be 21.6%. ART has good solubility and is not lipophilic
eff↝, ART would not distribute well to the tissues and might be more effective in treating cancers such as leukemia, hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), or renal cell carcinoma because the liver and kidney are highly perfused organs.
Half-Life↓, Pharmacokinetic studies showed a relatively short t1/2 of artemisinins. For ART, t1/2 was 0.41 h
Ferritin↓, Figure 3
GPx4↓,
NADPH↓,
GSH↓,
BAX↑,
Cyt‑c↑,
cl‑Casp3↑,
VEGF↓, angiogenesis
IL8↓,
COX2↓,
MMP9↓,
E-cadherin↑,
MMP2↓,
NF-kB↓,
p16↑, cell cycle arrest
CDK4↓,
cycD1/CCND1↓,
p62↓, autophagy
LC3II↑,
EMT↓, suppressing EMT and CSCs
CSCs↓,
Wnt↓, Depress Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway
β-catenin/ZEB1↓,
uPA↓, Inhibit u-PA activity, protein and mRNA expression
TumAuto↑, Emerging evidence suggests that autophagy induction is one of the molecular mechanisms underlying anticancer activity of artemisinins
angioG↓, Inhibition of Angiogenesis
ChemoSen↑, Many studies also reported that the use of artemisinins sensitized cancer cells to conventional chemotherapy and exerted a synergistic effect on apoptosis, inhibition of cell growth, and a reduction of cell viability, leading to a lower IC50 value

3383- ART/DHA,    Dihydroartemisinin: A Potential Natural Anticancer Drug
- Review, Var, NA
TumCP↓, DHA exerts anticancer effects through various molecular mechanisms, such as inhibiting proliferation, inducing apoptosis, inhibiting tumor metastasis and angiogenesis, promoting immune function, inducing autophagy and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stres
Apoptosis↑,
TumMeta↓,
angioG↓,
TumAuto↑,
ER Stress↑,
ROS↑, DHA could increase the level of ROS in cells, thereby exerting a cytotoxic effect in cancer cells
Ca+2↑, activation of Ca2+ and p38 was also observed in DHA-induced apoptosis of PC14 lung cancer cells
p38↑,
HSP70/HSPA5↓, down-regulation of heat-shock protein 70 (HSP70) might participate in the apoptosis of PC3 prostate cancer cells induced by DHA
PPARγ↑, DHA inhibited the growth of colon tumor by inducing apoptosis and increasing the expression of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPARγ)
GLUT1↓, DHA was shown to inhibit the activity of glucose transporter-1 (GLUT1) and glycolytic pathway by inhibiting phosphatidyl-inositol-3-kinase (PI3K)/AKT pathway and downregulating the expression of hypoxia inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α)
Glycolysis↓, Inhibited glycolysis
PI3K↓,
Akt↓,
Hif1a↓,
PKM2↓, DHA could inhibit the expression of PKM2 as well as inhibit lactic acid production and glucose uptake, thereby promoting the apoptosis of esophageal cancer cells
lactateProd↓,
GlucoseCon↓,
EMT↓, regulating the EMT-related genes (Slug, ZEB1, ZEB2 and Twist)
Slug↓, Downregulated Slug, ZEB1, ZEB2 and Twist in mRNA level
Zeb1↓,
ZEB2↓,
Twist↓,
Snail?, downregulated the expression of Snail and PI3K/AKT signaling pathway, thereby inhibiting metastasis
CAFs/TAFs↓, DHA suppressed the activation of cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) and mouse cancer-associated fibroblasts (L-929-CAFs) by inhibiting transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β signaling
TGF-β↓,
p‑STAT3↓, blocking the phosphorylation of STAT3 and polarization of M2 macrophages
M2 MC↓,
uPA↓, DHA could inhibit the growth and migration of breast cancer cells by inhibiting the expression of uPA
HH↓, via inhibiting the hedgehog signaling pathway
AXL↓, DHA acted as an Axl inhibitor in prostate cancer, blocking the expression of Axl through the miR-34a/miR-7/JARID2 pathway, thereby inhibiting the proliferation, migration and invasion of prostate cancer cells.
VEGFR2↓, inhibition of VEGFR2-mediated angiogenesis
JNK↑, JNK pathway activated and Beclin 1 expression upregulated.
Beclin-1↑,
GRP78/BiP↑, Glucose regulatory protein 78 (GRP78, an ER stress-related molecule) was upregulated after DHA treatment.
eff↑, results demonstrated that DHA-induced ER stress required iron
eff↑, DHA was used in combination with PDGFRα inhibitors (sunitinib and sorafenib), it could sensitize ovarian cancer cells to PDGFR inhibitors and achieved effective therapeutic efficacy
eff↑, DHA combined with 2DG (a glycolysis inhibitor) synergistically induced apoptosis through both exogenous and endogenous apoptotic pathways
eff↑, histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDACis) enhanced the anti-tumor effect of DHA by inducing apoptosis.
eff↑, DHA enhanced PDT-induced cell growth inhibition and apoptosis, increased the sensitivity of esophageal cancer cells to PDT by inhibiting the NF-κB/HIF-1α/VEGF pathway
eff↑, DHA was added to magnetic nanoparticles (MNP), and the MNP-DHA has shown an effect in the treatment of intractable breast cancer
IL4↓, downregulated IL-4;
DR5↑, Upregulated DR5 in protein, Increased DR5 promoter activity
Cyt‑c↑, Released cytochrome c from the mitochondria to the cytosol
Fas↑, Upregulated fas, FADD, Bax, cleaved-PARP
FADD↑,
cl‑PARP↑,
cycE/CCNE↓, Downregulated Bcl-2, Bcl-xL, procaspase-3, Cyclin E, CDK2 and CDK4
CDK2↓,
CDK4↓,
Mcl-1↓, Downregulated Mcl-1
Ki-67↓, Downregulated Ki-67 and Bcl-2
Bcl-2↓,
CDK6↓, Downregulated of Cyclin E, CDK2, CDK4 and CDK6
VEGF↓, Downregulated VEGF, COX-2 and MMP-9
COX2↓,
MMP9↓,

3391- ART/DHA,    Antitumor Activity of Artemisinin and Its Derivatives: From a Well-Known Antimalarial Agent to a Potential Anticancer Drug
- Review, Var, NA
TumCP↓, inhibiting cancer proliferation, metastasis, and angiogenesis.
TumMeta↓,
angioG↓,
TumVol↓, reduces tumor volume and progression
BioAv↓, artemisinin has low solubility in water or oil, poor bioavailability, and a short half-life in vivo (~2.5 h)
Half-Life↓,
BioAv↑, semisynthetic derivatives of artemisinin such as artesunate, arteeter, artemether, and artemisone have been effectively used as antimalarials with good clinical efficacy and tolerability
eff↑, preloading of cancer cells with iron or iron-saturated holotransferrin (diferric transferrin) triggers artemisinin cytotoxicity
eff↓, Similarly, treatment with desferroxamine (DFO), an iron chelator, renders compounds inactive
ROS↑, ROS generation may contribute with the selective action of artemisinin on cancer cells.
selectivity↑, Tumor cells have enhanced vulnerability to ROS damage as they exhibit lower expression of antioxidant enzymes such as superoxide dismutase, catalase, and gluthatione peroxidase compared to that of normal cells
TumCCA↑, G2/M, decreased survivin
survivin↓,
BAX↑, Increased Bax, activation of caspase 3,8,9 Decreased Bc12, Cdc25B, cyclin B1, NF-κB
Casp3↓,
Casp8↑,
Casp9↑,
CDC25↓,
CycB/CCNB1↓,
NF-kB↓,
cycD1/CCND1↓, decreased cyclin D, E, CDK2-4, E2F1 Increased Cip 1/p21, Kip 1/p27
cycE/CCNE↓,
E2Fs↓,
P21↑,
p27↑,
ADP:ATP↑, Increased poly ADP-ribose polymerase Decreased MDM2
MDM2↓,
VEGF↓, Decreased VEGF
IL8↓, Decreased NF-κB DNA binding [74, 76] IL-8, COX2, MMP9
COX2↓,
MMP9↓,
ER Stress↓, ER stress, degradation of c-MYC
cMyc↓,
GRP78/BiP↑, Increased GRP78
DNAdam↑, DNA damage
AP-1↓, Decreased NF-κB, AP-1, Decreased activation of MMP2, MMP9, Decreased PKC α/Raf/ERK and JNK
MMP2↓,
PKCδ↓,
Raf↓,
ERK↓,
JNK↓,
PCNA↓, G2, decreased PCNA, cyclin B1, D1, E1 [82] CDK2-4, E2F1, DNA-PK, DNA-topo1, JNK VEGF
CDK2↓,
CDK4↓,
TOP2↓, Inhibition of topoisomerase II a
uPA↓, Decreased MMP2, transactivation of AP-1 [56, 88] NF-κB uPA promoter [88] MMP7
MMP7↓,
TIMP2↑, Increased TIMP2, Cdc42, E cadherin
Cdc42↑,
E-cadherin↑,

3174- Ash,    Withaferin A Acts as a Novel Regulator of Liver X Receptor-α in HCC
- in-vitro, HCC, HepG2 - in-vitro, HCC, Hep3B - in-vitro, HCC, HUH7
NF-kB↓, We found that many of Nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB), angiogenesis and inflammation associated proteins secretion is downregulated upon Withaferin A treatment.
angioG↓,
Inflam↓,
TumCP↓, uppressed the proliferation, migration, invasion, and anchorage-independent growth of these HCC cells.
TumCMig↓,
TumCI↓,
Sp1/3/4↓, Withaferin A inhibits NF-κB, Specificity protein 1 (Sp1) transcription factors, and downregulates Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF) gene expression
VEGF↓,
angioG↓, Withaferin A (2.5 µM) treatment decreased the secretion of various angiogenesis-related markers, growth factors, and cytokines (Serpin F1(PEDF), uPA, PDGF-AA, Angiogenin, Endothelin-1, Macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF), PAI-1, MCP1, ICAM-1
uPA↓,
PDGF↓,
MCP1↓,
ICAM-1↓,
*NRF2↑, It also upregulates the Nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (Nrf2) transcription factor and protects from Acetaminophen-induced hepatotoxicity and liver injury
*hepatoP↑,

3156- Ash,    Withaferin A: From ayurvedic folk medicine to preclinical anti-cancer drug
- Review, Var, NA
MAPK↑, Figure 3
p38↑,
BAX↑,
BIM↑,
CHOP↑,
ROS↑,
DR5↑,
Apoptosis↑,
Ferroptosis↑,
GPx4↓,
BioAv↝, WA has a rapid oral absorption and reaches to peak plasma concentration of around 16.69 ± 4.02 ng/ml within 10 min after oral administration of Withania somnifera aqueous extract at dose of 1000 mg/kg, which is equivalent to 0.458 mg/kg of WA
HSP90↓, table 1 10uM) were found to inhibit the chaperone activity of HSP90
RET↓,
E6↓,
E7↓,
Akt↓,
cMET↓,
Glycolysis↓, by suppressing the glycolysis and tricarboxylic (TCA) cycle
TCA↓,
NOTCH1↓,
STAT3↓,
AP-1↓,
PI3K↓,
eIF2α↓,
HO-1↑,
TumCCA↑, WA (1--3 uM) have been reported to inhibit cell proliferation by inducing G2 and M phase cycle arrest inovarian, breast, prostate, gastric and myelodysplastic/leukemic cancer cells and osteosarcoma
CDK1↓, WA is able to decrease the cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (Cdk1) activity and prevent Cdk1/cyclin B1 complex formation, which are key steps in cell cycle progression
*hepatoP↑, A treatment (40 mg/kg) reduces acetaminophen-induced liver injury (AILI) in mouse models and decreases H 2O 2-induced glutathione (GSH) depletion and necrosis in hepatocyte
*GSH↑,
*NRF2↑, WA triggers an anti-oxidant response after acetaminophen overdose by enhancing hepatic transcription of the nuclear factor erythroid 2–related factor 2 (NRF2)-responsive gene
Wnt↓, indirectly inhibit Wnt
EMT↓, WA can also block tumor metastasis through reduced expression of epithelial mesenchymal transition (EMT) markers.
uPA↓, WA (700 nM) exert anti-meta-static activities in breast cancer cells through inhibition of the urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) protease
CSCs↓, s WA (125-500 nM) suppress tumor sphere formation indicating that the self-renewal of CSC is abolished
Nanog↓, loss of these CSC-specific characteristics is reflected in the loss of typical stem cell markers such as ALDH1A, Nanog, Sox2, CD44 and CD24
SOX2↓,
CD44↓,
lactateProd↓, drop in lactate levels compared to control mice.
Iron↑, Furthermore, we found that WA elevates the levels of intracellular labile ferrous iron (Fe +2 ) through excessive activation of heme oxygenase-1 (HMOX1), which independently causes accumulation of toxic lipid radicals and ensuing ferroptosis
NF-kB↓, nhibition of NF-kB kinase signaling pathway

3160- Ash,    Withaferin A: A Pleiotropic Anticancer Agent from the Indian Medicinal Plant Withania somnifera (L.) Dunal
- Review, Var, NA
TumCCA↑, withaferin A suppressed cell proliferation in prostate, ovarian, breast, gastric, leukemic, and melanoma cancer cells and osteosarcomas by stimulating the inhibition of the cell cycle at several stages, including G0/G1 [86], G2, and M phase
H3↑, via the upregulation of phosphorylated Aurora B, H3, p21, and Wee-1, and the downregulation of A2, B1, and E2 cyclins, Cdc2 (Tyr15), phosphorylated Chk1, and Chk2 in DU-145 and PC-3 prostate cancer cells.
P21↑,
cycA1/CCNA1↓,
CycB/CCNB1↓,
cycE/CCNE↓,
CDC2↓,
CHK1↓,
Chk2↓,
p38↑, nitiated cell death in the leukemia cells by increasing the expression of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK)
MAPK↑,
E6↓, educed the expression of human papillomavirus E6/E7 oncogenes in cervical cancer cells
E7↓,
P53↑, restored the p53 pathway causing the apoptosis of cervical cancer cells.
Akt↓, oral dose of 3–5 mg/kg withaferin A attenuated the activation of Akt and stimulated Forkhead Box-O3a (FOXO3a)-mediated prostate apoptotic response-4 (Par-4) activation,
FOXO3↑,
ROS↑, the generation of reactive oxygen species, histone H2AX phosphorylation, and mitochondrial membrane depolarization, indicating that withaferin A can cause the oxidative stress-mediated killing of oral cancer cells [
γH2AX↑,
MMP↓,
mitResp↓, withaferin A inhibited the expansion of MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 human breast cancer cells by ROS production, owing to mitochondrial respiration inhibition
eff↑, combination treatment of withaferin A and hyperthermia induced the death of HeLa cells via a decrease in the mitochondrial transmembrane potential and the downregulation of the antiapoptotic protein myeloid-cell leukemia 1 (MCL-1)
TumCD↑,
Mcl-1↓,
ER Stress↑, . Withaferin A also attenuated the development of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), both in vitro and in vivo, by inducing endoplasmic reticulum stress via activating the transcription factor 4-ATF3-C/EBP homologous protein (ATF4-ATF3-CHOP)
ATF4↑,
ATF3↑,
CHOP↑,
NOTCH↓, modulating the Notch-1 signaling pathway and the downregulation of Akt/NF-κB/Bcl-2 . withaferin A inhibited the Notch signaling pathway
NF-kB↓,
Bcl-2↓,
STAT3↓, Withaferin A also constitutively inhibited interleukin-6-induced phosphorylation of STAT3,
CDK1↓, lowering the levels of cyclin-dependent Cdk1, Cdc25C, and Cdc25B proteins,
β-catenin/ZEB1↓, downregulation of p-Akt expression, β-catenin, N-cadherin and epithelial to the mesenchymal transition (EMT) markers
N-cadherin↓,
EMT↓,
Cyt‑c↑, depolarization and production of ROS, which led to the release of cytochrome c into the cytosol,
eff↑, combinatorial effect of withaferin A and sulforaphane was also observed in MDA-MB-231 and MCF-7 breast cancer cells, with a dramatic reduction of the expression of the antiapoptotic protein Bcl-2 and an increase in the pro-apoptotic Bax level, thus p
CDK4↓, downregulates the levels of cyclin D1, CDK4, and pRB, and upregulates the levels of E2F mRNA and tumor suppressor p21, independently of p53
p‑RB1↓,
PARP↑, upregulation of Bax and cytochrome c, downregulation of Bcl-2, and activation of PARP, caspase-3, and caspase-9 cleavage
cl‑Casp3↑,
cl‑Casp9↑,
NRF2↑, withaferin A binding with Keap1 causes an increase in the nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (Nrf2) protein levels, which in turn, regulates the expression of antioxidant proteins that can protect the cells from oxidative stress.
ER-α36↓, Decreased ER-α
LDHA↓, inhibited growth, LDHA activity, and apoptotic induction
lipid-P↑, induction of oxidative stress, increased lipid peroxidation,
AP-1↓, anti-inflammatory qualities of withaferin A are specifically attributed to its inhibition of pro-inflammatory molecules, α-2 macroglobulin, NF-κB, activator protein 1 (AP-1), and cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibition,
COX2↓,
RenoP↑, showing strong evidence of the renoprotective potential of withaferin A due to its anti-inflammatory activity
PDGFR-BB↓, attenuating the BB-(PDGF-BB) platelet growth factor
SIRT3↑, by increasing the sirtuin3 (SIRT3) expression
MMP2↓, withaferin A inhibits matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) and MMP-9,
MMP9↓,
NADPH↑, but also provokes mRNA stimulation for a set of antioxidant genes, such as NADPH quinone dehydrogenase 1 (NQO1), glutathione-disulfide reductase (GSR), Nrf2, heme oxygenase 1 (HMOX1),
NQO1↑,
GSR↑,
HO-1↑,
*SOD2↑, cardiac ischemia-reperfusion injury model. Withaferin A triggered the upregulation of superoxide dismutase SOD2, SOD3, and peroxiredoxin 1(Prdx-1).
*Prx↑,
*Casp3?, and ameliorated cardiomyocyte caspase-3 activity
eff↑, combination with doxorubicin (DOX), is also responsible for the excessive generation of ROS
Snail↓, inhibition of EMT markers, such as Snail, Slug, β-catenin, and vimentin.
Slug↓,
Vim↓,
CSCs↓, highly effective in eliminating cancer stem cells (CSC) that expressed cell surface markers, such as CD24, CD34, CD44, CD117, and Oct4 while downregulating Notch1, Hes1, and Hey1 genes;
HEY1↓,
MMPs↓, downregulate the expression of MMPs and VEGF, as well as reduce vimentin, N-cadherin cytoskeleton proteins,
VEGF↓,
uPA↓, and protease u-PA involved in the cancer cell metastasis
*toxicity↓, A was orally administered to Wistar rats at a dose of 2000 mg/kg/day and had no adverse effects on the animals
CDK2↓, downregulated the activation of Bcl-2, CDK2, and cyclin D1
CDK4↓, Another study also demonstrated the inhibition of Hsp90 by withaferin A in a pancreatic cancer cell line through the degradation of Akt, cyclin-dependent kinase 4 Cdk4,
HSP90↓,

2606- Ba,    Baicalein: A review of its anti-cancer effects and mechanisms in Hepatocellular Carcinoma
- Review, HCC, NA
ChemoSen↑, In addition, the combination of baicalein and silymarin eradicates HepG2 cells efficiently superior to baicalein or silymarin alone
TumCP↓, Cell viability assays have demonstrated that baicalein is significantly cytotoxic against several HCC cell lines and can inhibit the proliferation of HCC cells through arresting the cell cycle.
TumCCA↑,
TumCMig↓, Baicalein has been proved to inhibit migration and invasion of human HCC cells by reducing the expression and their proteinase activity of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs),
TumCI↓,
MMPs↓,
MAPK↓, A large number of studies found that baicalein could inhibit migration and invasion of cancer cells by targeting the MAPK, TGF-b/Smad4, GPR30 pathway and molecules such as, ezrin, zinc-finger protein X-linked (ZFX),
TGF-β↓,
ZFX↓,
p‑MEK↓, Baicalein could inhibited the phosphorylation of MEK1 and ERK1/2, leading to decreased expression and proteinase activity of MMP-2/9 and urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA),
ERK↓,
MMP2↓,
MMP9↓,
uPA↓,
TIMP1↓, as well as increased expression of TIMP-1 and TIMP-2
TIMP2↓,
NF-kB↓, Additionally, the nuclear translocation of NF-kB/p50 and p65/RelA and the phosphorylation of I-kappa-B (IKB)-b could be down-regulated by baicalein
p65↓,
p‑IKKα↓,
Fas↑, Hep3 B cells via activating Fas, Caspase -2, -3, -8, -9, down-regulating Bcl-xL, and upregulating Bax [
Casp2↑,
Casp3↑,
Casp8↑,
Casp9↑,
Bcl-xL↓,
BAX↑,
ER Stress↑, baicalein could induced apoptosis via endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress in SMMC-7721 and Bel-7402
Ca+2↑, increasing intracellular calcium(Ca2+ ), and activating JNK pathwa
JNK↑,
P53↑, selectively induce apoptosis in HCC J5 cells via upregulation of p53
ROS↑, baicalein could induced cell apoptosis through regulating ROS via increasing intracellular H2O 2 level [
H2O2↑,
cMyc↓, baicalein could promote apoptosis in HepG2 and Bel-7402 cells through inhibiting c-Myc and CD24 expression
CD24↓,
12LOX↓, baicalein could induced cell apoptosis in SMMC-7721 and HepG2 cells by specifically inhibiting expression of 12-lipoxygenase(12-LOX), a critical anti-apoptotic genes

2617- Ba,    Potential of baicalein in the prevention and treatment of cancer: A scientometric analyses based review
- Review, Var, NA
Ca+2↑, MDA-MB-231 ↑Ca2+
MMP2↓, MDA-MB-231 ↓MMP-2/9
MMP9↓,
Vim↓, ↓Vimentin, ↓SNAIL, ↑E-cadherin, ↓Wnt1, ↓β-catenin
Snail↓,
E-cadherin↑,
Wnt↓,
β-catenin/ZEB1↓,
p‑Akt↓, MCF-7 ↓p-Akt, ↓p-mTOR, ↓NF-κB
p‑mTOR↓,
NF-kB↓,
i-ROS↑, MCF-7 ↑Intracellular ROS, ↓Bcl-2, ↑Bax, ↑cytochrome c, ↑caspase-3/9
Bcl-2↓,
BAX↑,
Cyt‑c↑,
Casp3↑,
Casp9↑,
STAT3↓, 4T1, MDA-MB-231 ↓STAT3, ↓ IL-6
IL6↓,
MMP2↓, HeLa ↓MMP-2, ↓MMP-9
MMP9↓,
NOTCH↓, ↓Notch 1
PPARγ↓, ↓PPARγ
p‑NRF2↓, HCT-116 ↓p-Nrf2
HK2↓, ↓HK2, ↓LDH-A, ↓PDK1, ↓glycolysis, PTEN/Akt/HIF-1α regulation
LDHA↓,
PDK1↓,
Glycolysis↓,
PTEN↑, Furthermore, baicalein inhibited hypoxia-induced Akt phosphorylation by promoting PTEN accumulation, thereby attenuating hypoxia-inducible factor-alpha ( HIF-1a) expression in AGS cells.
Akt↓,
Hif1a↓,
MMP↓, SGC-7901 ↓ΔΨm
VEGF↓, ↓VEGF, ↓VEGFR2
VEGFR2↓,
TOP2↓, ↓Topoisomerase II
uPA↓, ↓u-PA, ↓TIMP1, ↓TIMP2
TIMP1↓,
TIMP2↓,
cMyc↓, ↓β-catenin, ↓c-Myc, ↓cyclin D1, ↓Axin-2
TrxR↓, EL4 ↓Thioredoxin reductase, ↑ASK1,
ASK1↑,
Vim↓, ↓vimentin
ZO-1↑, ↑ZO-1
E-cadherin↑, ↑E-cadherin
SOX2↓, PANC-1, BxPC-3, SW1990 ↓Sox-2, ↓Oct-4, ↓SHH, ↓SMO, ↓Gli-2
OCT4↓,
Shh↓,
Smo↓,
Gli1↓,
N-cadherin↓, ↓N-cadherin
XIAP↓, ↓XIAP

2674- BBR,    Berberine: A novel therapeutic strategy for cancer
- Review, Var, NA - Review, IBD, NA
Inflam↓, anti-inflammatory, antidiabetic, antibacterial, antiparasitic, antidiarrheal, antihypertensive, hypolipidemic, and fungicide.
AntiCan↑, elaborated on the anticancer effects of BBR through the regulation of different molecular pathways such as: inducing apoptosis, autophagy, arresting cell cycle, and inhibiting metastasis and invasion.
Apoptosis↑,
TumAuto↑,
TumCCA↑,
TumMeta↓,
TumCI↓,
eff↑, BBR is shown to have beneficial effects on cancer immunotherapy.
eff↑, BBR inhibited the release of Interleukin 1 beta (IL-1β), Interferon gamma (IFN-γ), Interleukin 6 (IL-6), and Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha (TNF-α) from LPS stimulated lymphocytes by acting as a dopamine receptor antagonist
CD4+↓, BBR inhibited the proliferation of CD4+ T cells and down-regulated TNF-α and IL-1 and thus, improved autoimmune neuropathy.
TNF-α↓,
IL1↓,
BioAv↓, On the other hand, P-Glycoprotein (P-gp), a secretive pump located in the epithelial cell membrane, restricts the oral bioavailability of a variety of medications, such as BBR. The use of P-gp inhibitors is a common and effective way to prevent this
BioAv↓, Regardless of its low bioavailability, BBR has shown great therapeutic efficacy in the treatment of a number of diseases.
other↓, BBR has been also used as an effective therapeutic agent for Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) for several years
AMPK↑, inhibitory effects on inflammation by regulating different mechanisms such as 5′ Adenosine Monophosphate-Activated Protein Kinase (AMPK. Increase of AMPK
MAPK↓, Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase (MAPK), and NF-κB signaling pathways
NF-kB↓,
IL6↓, inhibiting the expression of proinflammatory genes such as IL-1, IL-6, Monocyte Chemoattractant Protein 1 (MCP1), TNF-α, Prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), and Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2)
MCP1↓,
PGE2↓,
COX2↓,
*ROS↓, BBR protected PC-12 cells (normal) from oxidative damage by suppressing ROS through PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling pathways
*antiOx↑, BBR therapy improved the antioxidant function of mice intestinal tissue by enhancing the levels of glutathione peroxidase and catalase enzymes.
*GPx↑,
*Catalase↑,
AntiTum↑, Besides, BBR leaves great antitumor effects on multiple types of cancer such as breast cancer,69 bladder cancer,70 hepatocarcinoma,71 and colon cancer.72
TumCP↓, BBR exerts its antitumor activity by inhibiting proliferation, inducing apoptosis and autophagy, and suppressing angiogenesis and metastasis
angioG↓,
Fas↑, by increasing the amounts of Fas receptor (death receptor)/FasL (Fas ligand), ROS, ATM, p53, Retinoblastoma protein (Rb), caspase-9,8,3, TNF-α, Bcl2-associated X protein (Bax), BID
FasL↑,
ROS↑,
ATM↑,
P53↑,
RB1↑,
Casp9↑,
Casp8↑,
Casp3↓,
BAX↑,
Bcl-2↓, and declining Bcl2, Bcl-X, c-IAP1 (inhibitor of apoptosis protein), X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis protein (XIAP), and Survivin levels
Bcl-xL↓,
IAP1↓,
XIAP↓,
survivin↓,
MMP2↓, Furthermore, BBR suppressed Matrix Metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2), and MMP-9 expression.
MMP9↓,
CycB/CCNB1↓, Inhibition of cyclin B1, cdc2, cdc25c
CDC25↓,
CDC25↓,
Cyt‑c↑, BBR inhibited tumor cell proliferation and migration and induced mitochondria-mediated apoptosis pathway in Triple Negative Breast Cancer (TNBC) by: stimulating cytochrome c release from mitochondria to cytosol
MMP↓, decreased the mitochondrial membrane potential, and enabled cytochrome c release from mitochondria to cytosol
RenoP↑, BBR significantly reduced the destructive effects of cisplatin on the kidney by inhibiting autophagy, and exerted nephroprotective effects.
mTOR↓, U87 cell, Inhibition of m-TOR signaling
MDM2↓, Downregulation of MDM2
LC3II↑, Increase of LC3-II and beclin-1
ERK↓, BBR stimulated AMPK signaling, resulting in reduced extracellular signal–regulated kinase (ERK) activity and COX-2 expression in B16F-10 lung melanoma cells
COX2↓,
MMP3↓, reducing MMP-3 in SGC7901 GC and AGS cells
TGF-β↓, BBR suppressed the invasion and migration of prostate cancer PC-3 cells by inhibiting TGF-β-related signaling molecules which induced Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition (EMT) such as Bone morphogenetic protein 7 (BMP7),
EMT↑,
ROCK1↓, inhibiting metastasis-associated proteins such as ROCK1, FAK, Ras Homolog Family Member A (RhoA), NF-κB and u-PA, leading to in vitro inhibition of MMP-1 and MMP-13.
FAK↓,
RAS↓,
Rho↓,
NF-kB↓,
uPA↓,
MMP1↓,
MMP13↓,
ChemoSen↑, recent studies have indicated that it can be used in combination with chemotherapy agents

2686- BBR,    Effects of resveratrol, curcumin, berberine and other nutraceuticals on aging, cancer development, cancer stem cells and microRNAs
- Review, Nor, NA
Inflam↓, BBR has documented to have anti-diabetic, anti-inflammatory and anti-microbial (both anti-bacterial and anti-fungal) properties.
IL6↓, BBRs can inhibit IL-6, TNF-alpha, monocyte chemo-attractant protein 1 (MCP1) and COX-2 production and expression.
MCP1↓,
COX2↓,
PGE2↓, BBRs can also effect prostaglandin E2 (PGE2)
MMP2↓, and decrease the expression of key genes involved in metastasis including: MMP2 and MMP9.
MMP9↓,
DNAdam↑, BBR induces double strand DNA breaks and has similar effects as ionizing radiation
eff↝, In some cell types, this response has been reported to be TP53-dependent
Telomerase↓, This positively-charged nitrogen may result in the strong complex formations between BBR and nucleic acids and induce telomerase inhibition and topoisomerase poisoning
Bcl-2↓, BBR have been shown to suppress BCL-2 and expression of other genes by interacting with the TATA-binding protein and the TATA-box in certain gene promoter regions
AMPK↑, BBR has been shown in some studies to localize to the mitochondria and inhibit the electron transport chain and activate AMPK.
ROS↑, targeting the activity of mTOR/S6 and the generation of ROS
MMP↓, BBR has been shown to decrease mitochondrial membrane potential and intracellular ATP levels.
ATP↓,
p‑mTORC1↓, BBR induces AMPK activation and inhibits mTORC1 phosphorylation by suppressing phosphorylation of S6K at Thr 389 and S6 at Ser 240/244
p‑S6K↓,
ERK↓, BBR also suppresses ERK activation in MIA-PaCa-2 cells in response to fetal bovine serum, insulin or neurotensin stimulation
PI3K↓, Activation of AMPK is associated with inhibition of the PI3K/PTEN/Akt/mTORC1 and Raf/MEK/ERK pathways which are associated with cellular proliferation.
PTEN↑, RES was determined to upregulate phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) expression and decrease the expression of activated Akt. In HCT116 cells, PTEN inhibits Akt signaling and proliferation.
Akt↓,
Raf↓,
MEK↓,
Dose↓, The effects of low doses of BBR (300 nM) on MIA-PaCa-2 cells were determined to be dependent on AMPK as knockdown of the alpha1 and alpha2 catalytic subunits of AMPK prevented the inhibitory effects of BBR on mTORC1 and ERK activities and DNA synthes
Dose↑, In contrast, higher doses of BBR inhibited mTORC1 and ERK activities and DNA synthesis by AMPK-independent mechanisms [223,224].
selectivity↑, BBR has been shown to have minimal effects on “normal cells” but has anti-proliferative effects on cancer cells (e.g., breast, liver, CRC cells) [225–227].
TumCCA↑, BBR induces G1 phase arrest in pancreatic cancer cells, while other drugs such as gemcitabine induce S-phase arrest
eff↑, BBR was determined to enhance the effects of epirubicin (EPI) on T24 bladder cancer cells
EGFR↓, In some glioblastoma cells, BBR has been shown to inhibit EGFR signaling by suppression of the Raf/MEK/ERK pathway but not AKT signaling
Glycolysis↓, accompanied by impaired glycolytic capacity.
Dose?, The IC50 for BBR was determined to be 134 micrograms/ml.
p27↑, Increased p27Kip1 and decreased CDK2, CDK4, Cyclin D and Cyclin E were observed.
CDK2↓,
CDK4↓,
cycD1/CCND1↓,
cycE/CCNE↓,
Bax:Bcl2↑, Increased BAX/BCL2 ratio was observed.
Casp3↑, The mitochondrial membrane potential was disrupted and activated caspase 3 and caspases 9 were observed
Casp9↑,
VEGFR2↓, BBR treatment decreased VEGFR, Akt and ERK1,2 activation and the expression of MMP2 and MMP9 [235].
ChemoSen↑, BBR has been shown to increase the anti-tumor effects of tamoxifen (TAM) in both drug-sensitive MCF-7 and drug-resistant MCF-7/TAM cells.
eff↑, The combination of BBR and CUR has been shown to be effective in suppressing the growth of certain breast cancer cell lines.
eff↑, BBR has been shown to synergize with the HSP-90 inhibitor NVP-AUY922 in inducing death of human CRC.
PGE2↓, BBR inhibits COX2 and PEG2 in CRC.
JAK2↓, BBR prevented the invasion and metastasis of CRC cells via inhibiting the COX2/PGE2 and JAK2/STAT3 signaling pathways.
STAT3↓,
CXCR4↓, BBR has been observed to inhibit the expression of the chemokine receptors (CXCR4 and CCR7) at the mRNA level in esophageal cancer cells.
CCR7↓,
uPA↓, BBR has also been shown to induce plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) and suppress uPA in HCC cells which suppressed their invasiveness and motility.
CSCs↓, BBR has been shown to inhibit stemness, EMT and induce neuronal differentiation in neuroblastoma cells. BBR inhibited the expression of many genes associated with neuronal differentiation
EMT↓,
Diff↓,
CD133↓, BBR also suppressed the expression of many genes associated with cancer stemness such as beta-catenin, CD133, NESTIN, N-MYC, NOTCH and SOX2
Nestin↓,
n-MYC↓,
NOTCH↓,
SOX2↓,
Hif1a↓, BBR inhibited HIF-1alpha and VEGF expression in prostate cancer cells and increased their radio-sensitivity in in vitro as well as in animal studies [290].
VEGF↓,
RadioS↑,

5868- CA,    Carnosic acid inhibits the proliferation and migration capacity of human colorectal cancer cells
- in-vitro, Colon, Caco-2 - in-vitro, Colon, HT29 - in-vitro, CRC, LoVo
Apoptosis↑, CA induced cell death by apoptosis in Caco-2 line after 24 h of treatment and inhibited cell adhesion and migration,
TumCMig↓, Inhibition of cell migration by CA
uPA↓, possibly by reducing the activity of secreted proteases such as urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) and metalloproteinases (MMPs).
MMPs↓,
COX2↓, we have determined that CA downregulates the expression of COX-2 in Caco-2 cells at both the mRNA and protein levels.
TumCA↓, Inhibition of cell adhesion by CA
MMP9↓, CA treatment after 24 h decreased Caco-2 conditioned media uPA activity and MMP-9 and MMP-2.
MMP2↓,
chemoPv↑, CA may serve as chemopreventive and/or chemotherapeutic agent against colorectal cancer progress.

2781- CHr,  PBG,    Chrysin a promising anticancer agent: recent perspectives
- Review, Var, NA
PI3K↓, It can block Phosphoinositide 3-kinase/protein kinase B/mammalian target of rapamycin (PI3K/AKT/mTOR) and Mitogen-activated protein kinase/extracellular signal-regulated kinase (MAPK/ERK) signaling in different animals against various cancers
Akt↓,
mTOR↓,
MMP9↑, Chrysin strongly suppresses Matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9), Urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) and Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), i.e. factors that can cause cancer
uPA↓,
VEGF↓,
AR↓, Chrysin has the ability to suppress the androgen receptor (AR), a protein necessary for prostate cancer development and metastasis
Casp↑, starts the caspase cascade and blocks protein synthesis to kill lung cancer cells
TumMeta↓, Chrysin significantly decreased lung cancer metastasis i
TumCCA↑, Chrysin induces apoptosis and stops colon cancer cells in the G2/M cell cycle phase
angioG↓, Chrysin prevents tumor growth and cancer spread by blocking blood vessel expansion
BioAv↓, Chrysin’s solubility, accessibility and bioavailability may limit its medical use.
*hepatoP↑, As chrysin reduced oxidative stress and lipid peroxidation in rat liver cells exposed to a toxic chemical agent.
*neuroP↑, Protecting the brain against oxidative stress (GPx) may be aided by increasing levels of antioxidant enzymes such as superoxide dismutase (SOD) and glutathione peroxidase (GPx).
*SOD↑,
*GPx↑,
*ROS↓, A decrease in oxidative stress and an increase in antioxidant capacity may result from chrysin’s anti-inflammatory properties
*Inflam↓,
*Catalase↑, Supplementation with chrysin increased the activity of antioxidant enzymes like SOD and catalase and reduced the levels of oxidative stress markers like malondialdehyde (MDA) in the colon tissue of the rats.
*MDA↓, Antioxidant enzyme activity (SOD, CAT) and oxidative stress marker (MDA) levels were both enhanced by chrysin supplementation in mouse liver tissue
ROS↓, reduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and oxidative stress markers in the cancer cells further indicated the antioxidant activity of chrysin
BBB↑, After crossing the blood-brain barrier, it has been shown to accumulate there
Half-Life↓, The half-life of chrysin in rats is predicted to be close to 2 hours.
BioAv↑, Taking chrysin with food may increase the effectiveness of the supplement: increased by a factor of 1.8 when taken with a high-fat meal
ROS↑, In contrast to 5-FU/oxaliplatin, chrysin increases the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which in turn causes autophagy by stopping Akt and mTOR from doing their jobs
eff↑, mixture of chrysin and cisplatin caused the SCC-25 and CAL-27 cell lines to make more oxygen free radicals. After treatment with chrysin, cisplatin, or both, the amount of reactive oxygen species (ROS) was found to have gone up.
ROS↑, When reactive oxygen species (ROS) and calcium levels in the cytoplasm rise because of chrysin, OC cells die.
ROS↑, chrysin is the cause of death in both types of prostate cancer cells. It does this by depolarizing mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP), making reactive oxygen species (ROS), and starting lipid peroxidation.
lipid-P↑,
ER Stress↑, when chrysin is present in DU145 and PC-3 cells, the expression of a group of proteins that control ER stress goes up
NOTCH1↑, Chrysin increased the production of Notch 1 and hairy/enhancer of split 1 at the protein and mRNA levels, which stopped cells from dividing
NRF2↓, Not only did chrysin stop Nrf2 and the genes it controls from working, but it also caused MCF-7 breast cancer cells to die via apoptosis.
p‑FAK↓, After 48 hours of treatment with chrysin at amounts between 5 and 15 millimoles, p-FAK and RhoA were greatly lowered
Rho↓,
PCNA↓, Lung histology and immunoblotting studies of PCNA, COX-2, and NF-B showed that adding chrysin stopped the production of these proteins and maintained the balance of cells
COX2↓,
NF-kB↓,
PDK1↓, After the chrysin was injected, the genes PDK1, PDK3, and GLUT1 that are involved in glycolysis had less expression
PDK3↑,
GLUT1↓,
Glycolysis↓, chrysin stops glycolysis
mt-ATP↓, chrysin inhibits complex II and ATPases in the mitochondria of cancer cells
Ki-67↓, the amounts of Ki-67, which is a sign of growth, and c-Myc in the tumor tissues went down
cMyc↓,
ROCK1↓, (ROCK1), transgelin 2 (TAGLN2), and FCH and Mu domain containing endocytic adaptor 2 (FCHO2) were much lower.
TOP1↓, DNA topoisomerases and histone deacetylase were inhibited, along with the synthesis of the pro-inflammatory cytokines tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) and (IL-1 beta), while the activity of protective signaling pathways was increased
TNF-α↓,
IL1β↓,
CycB/CCNB1↓, Chrysin suppressed cyclin B1 and CDK2 production in order to stop cancerous growth.
CDK2↓,
EMT↓, chrysin treatment can also stop EMT
STAT3↓, chrysin block the STAT3 and NF-B pathways, but it also greatly reduced PD-L1 production both in vivo and in vitro.
PD-L1↓,
IL2↑, chrysin increases both the rate of T cell growth and the amount of IL-2

170- CUR,    Curcumin sensitizes TRAIL-resistant xenografts: molecular mechanisms of apoptosis, metastasis and angiogenesis
- vitro+vivo, Pca, PC3
TRAILR↑,
BAX↑,
P21↑,
p27↑,
NF-kB↓,
cycD1/CCND1↓,
VEGF↓,
uPA↓,
MMP2↓,
MMP9↓,
Bcl-2↓,
Bcl-xL↓,

3238- EGCG,    Green tea catechin, epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG): mechanisms, perspectives and clinical applications
- Review, Var, NA
Telomerase↓, EGCG stimulates telomere fragmentation through inhibiting telomerase activity.
DNMTs↓, EGCG reduced DNMTs,
cycD1/CCND1↓, EGCG also reduced the protein expression of cyclin D1, cyclin E, CDK2, CDK4, and CDK6. EGCG also inhibited the activity of CDK2 and CDK4, and caused Rb hypophosphorylation
cycE/CCNE↓,
CDK2↓,
CDK4↓,
CDK6↓,
HATs↓, EGCG can inhibit certain biomedically important molecular targets such as DNMTs, HATs, and HDACs
HDAC↓,
selectivity↑, EGCG has shown higher cytotoxicity in cancer cells than in their normal counterparts.
uPA↓, EGCG blocks urokinase, an enzyme which is essential for cancer growth and metastasis
NF-kB↓, EGCG inhibits NFκB and expression of TNF-α, reduces cancer promotion
TNF-α↓,
*ROS↓, It acts as strong ROS scavenger and antioxidant,
*antiOx↑,
Hif1a↓, ↓ HIF-1α; ↓ VEGF; ↓ VEGFR1;
VEGF↓,
MMP2↓, ↓ MMP-2; ↓ MMP-9; ↓ FAK;
MMP9↓,
FAK↓,
TIMP2↑, TIMP-2; ↑
Mcl-1↓, ↓ Mcl-1; ↓ survivin; ↓ XIAP
survivin↓,
XIAP↓,
PCNA↓, ↓ PCNA; ↑ 16; ↑ p18; ↑ p21; ↑ p27; ↑ pRb; ↑ p53; ↑ mdm2
p16↑,
P21↑,
p27↑,
pRB↑,
P53↑,
MDM2↑,
ROS↑, ↑ ROS; ↑ caspase-3; ↑ caspase-8; ↑ caspase-9; ↑ cytochrome c; ↑ Smac/DIABLO; ↓↑ Bax; Z Bak; ↓ cleaved PPAR;
Casp3↑,
Casp8↑,
Casp9↑,
Cyt‑c↑,
Diablo↑,
BAX⇅,
cl‑PPARα↓,
PDGF↓, ↓ PDGF; ↓ PDGFRb; ↓ EGFR;
EGFR↓,
FOXO↑, activated FOXO transcription factors
AP-1↓, The inhibition of AP-1 activity by EGCG was associated with inhibition of JNK activation but not ERK activation.
JNK↓,
COX2↓, EGCG reduces the activity of COX-2 following interleukin-1A stimulation of human chondrocytes
angioG↓, EGCG inhibits angiogenesis by enhancing FOXO transcriptional activity

3201- EGCG,    Epigallocatechin Gallate (EGCG): Pharmacological Properties, Biological Activities and Therapeutic Potential
- Review, NA, NA
*AntiCan↑, EGCG’s therapeutic potential in preventing and managing a range of chronic conditions, including cancer, cardiovascular diseases, neurodegenerative disorders, and metabolic syndromes
*cardioP↑,
*neuroP↑,
*BioAv↝, Factors such as fasting, storage conditions, albumin levels, vitamin C, fish oil, and piperine have been shown to affect plasma concentrations and the overall bioavailability of EGCG
*BioAv↓, Conversely, bioavailability is reduced by processes such as air oxidation, sulfation, glucuronidation, gastrointestinal degradation, and interactions with Ca2+, Mg2+, and trace metals,
*BioAv↓, EGCG’s oral bioavailability is generally low, with marked differences observed across species, for example, bioavailability rates of 26.5% in CF-1 mice and just 1.6% in Sprague Dawley rats
*Dose↝, plasma concentrations exceeded 1 μM only when doses of 1 g or higher were administered.
*Half-Life↝, Specifically, a dose of 1600 mg yielded a Cmax of 3392 ng/mL (range: 130–3392 ng/mL), with peak levels observed between 1.3 and 2.2 h, AUC (0–∞) values ranging from 442 to 10,368 ng·h/mL, and a half-life (t1/2z) of 1.9 to 4.6 h.
*BioAv↑, Studies on the distribution of EGCG have revealed that, despite its limited absorption, it is rapidly disseminated throughout the body or quickly converted into metabolites
*BBB↑, Additionally, EGCG can cross the blood–brain barrier, allowing it to reach the brain
*hepatoP↓, Several studies have documented liver damage linked to green tea consumption [48,49,50,51,52,53].
*other↓, EGCG has also been shown to inhibit the intestinal absorption of non-heme iron in a dose-dependent manner in a controlled clinical trial
*Inflam↓, EGCG has been widely recognized for its anti-inflammatory effects
*NF-kB↓, EGCG has been shown to suppress NF-κB activation, inhibit its nuclear translocation, and block AP-1 activity
*AP-1↓,
*iNOS↓, downregulation of pro-inflammatory enzymes like iNOS and COX-2 and scavenging of ROS/RNS, including nitric oxide and peroxynitrite
*COX2↓,
*ROS↓,
*RNS↓,
*IL8↓, EGCG has been shown to suppress airway inflammation by reducing IL-8 release, a cytokine involved in neutrophil aggregation and ROS production.
*JAK↓, EGCG blocks the JAK1/2 signaling pathway
*PDGFR-BB↓, downregulate PDGFR and IGF-1R gene expression
*IGF-1R↓,
*MMP2↓, reduce MMP-2 mRNA expression
*P53↓, downregulation of the p53-p21 signaling pathway and the enhanced expression of Nrf2
*NRF2↑,
*TNF-α↓, 25 to 100 μM reduced the levels of TNF-α, IL-6, and ROS while enhancing the expression of E2F2 and superoxide dismutases (SOD1 and SOD2), enzymes vital for cellular antioxidant defense.
*IL6↓,
*E2Fs↑,
*SOD1↑,
*SOD2↑,
Casp3↑, EGCG has been shown to activate key apoptotic pathways, such as caspase-3 activation, cytochrome c release, and PARP cleavage, in various cell models, including PC12 cells exposed to oxidative stress
Cyt‑c↑,
PARP↑,
DNMTs↓, (1) the inhibition of DNA hypermethylation by blocking DNA methyltransferase (DNMT)
Telomerase↓, (2) the repression of telomerase activity;
Hif1a↓, (3) the suppression of angiogenesis via the inhibition of HIF-1α and NF-κB;
MMPs↓, (4) the prevention of cellular metastasis by inhibiting matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs);
BAX↑, (5) the promotion of apoptosis through the activation of pro-apoptotic proteins like BAX and BAK
Bak↑,
Bcl-2↓, while downregulating anti-apoptotic proteins like BCL-2 and BCL-XL;
Bcl-xL↓,
P53↑, (6) the upregulation of tumor suppressor genes such as p53 and PTEN;
PTEN↑,
TumCP↓, (7) the inhibition of inflammation and proliferation via NF-κB suppression;
MAPK↓, (8) anti-proliferative activity through the modulation of MAPK and IGF1R pathways
HGF/c-Met↓, EGCG inhibits hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), which is involved in tumor migration and invasion
TIMP1↑, EGCG has also been shown to influence the expression of tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (TIMPs) and MMPs, which are involved in tumorigenesis
HDAC↓, nhibition of UVB-induced DNA hypomethylation and modulation of DNMT and histone deacetylase (HDAC) activities
MMP9↓, inhibiting MMPs such as MMP-2 and MMP-9
uPA↓, EGCG may block urokinase-like plasminogen activator (uPA), a protease involved in cancer progression
GlutMet↓, EGCG can exert antitumor effects by inhibiting glycolytic enzymes, reducing glucose metabolism, and further suppressing cancer-cell growth
ChemoSen↑, EGCG’s combination with standard chemotherapy drugs may enhance their efficacy through additive or synergistic effects, while also mitigating chemotherapy-related side effects
chemoP↑,

2857- FIS,    A review on the chemotherapeutic potential of fisetin: In vitro evidences
- Review, Var, NA
COX2↓, fisetin altered the expression of cyclooxygenase 2 (COX2) thereby suppressed the secretion of prostaglandin E2 ultimately resulting in the inhibition of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and NF-κB in human colon cancer cells HT29
PGE2↓,
EGFR↓,
Wnt↓, fisetin treatment inhibited the stimulation of Wnt signaling pathway via downregulating the expression of β-catenin and Tcell factor (TCF) 4
β-catenin/ZEB1↓,
TCF↑,
Apoptosis↑, fisetin triggers apoptosis in U266 cells through multiple pathways: enhancing the activation of caspase-3 and PARP cleavage, decreasing the expression of anti-apoptotic proteins (Bcl-2 and Mcl-1 L ),
Casp3↑,
cl‑PARP↑,
Bcl-2↓,
Mcl-1↓,
BAX↑, ncreasing the expression of pro-apoptotic proteins (Bax, Bim, and Bad)
BIM↑,
BAD↑,
Akt↓, decreasing the phosphorylation of AKT and mTOR and elevating the expression of acetyl CoA carboxylase (ACC
mTOR↓,
ACC↑,
Cyt‑c↑, release the cytochrome c and Smac/Diablo into the cytosol
Diablo↑,
cl‑Casp8↑, fisetin exhibited an increased level of cleaved caspase-8, Fas/Fas ligand, death receptor 5/TRAIL, and p53 levels in HCT-116 cells
Fas↑,
DR5↑,
TRAIL↑,
Securin↓, Securin gets degraded on exposure to fisetin in colon cancer cells.
CDC2↓, fisetin decreased the expression of cell division cycle proteins (CDC2 and CDC25C)
CDC25↓,
HSP70/HSPA5↓, Fisetin induced apoptosis as a result of the downregulation of HSP70 and BAG3 and the inhibition of Bcl-2, Bcl-x L and Mcl-1. T
CDK2↓, AGS 0, 25, 50, 75 μM – 24 and 48 h ↓CDK2, ↓CDK4, ↓cyclin D1, ↑casapse-3 cleavage
CDK4↓,
cycD1/CCND1↓,
MMP2↓, A549 0, 1, 5, 10 μM- 24 and 48 hr: ↓MMP-2, ↓u-PA, ↓NF- κB, ↓c-Fos, ↓c-Jun
uPA↓,
NF-kB↓,
cFos↓,
cJun↓,
MEK↓, ↓ MEK1/2 and ERK1/2 phosphorylation, ↓N-cadherin, ↓vimentin, ↓snail, ↓fibronectin, ↑E-cadherin, ↑desmoglein
p‑ERK↓,
N-cadherin↓,
Vim↓,
Snail↓,
Fibronectin↓,
E-cadherin↓,
NF-kB↑, increased expression of NF-κB p65 leading to apoptosis was due to ROS generation on exposure to fisetin
ROS↑,
DNAdam↑, increased ROS triggered cell death through PARP cleavage, DNA damage and mitochondrial membrane depolarization.
MMP↓,
CHOP↑, Though fisetin upregulated CHOP expression and increased the production of ROS, these events fail to induce apoptosis in Caki cells.
eff↑, 50 μM fisetin + 1 mM melatonin Sk-mel-28 Enhances anti-tumour activity [54] 20 μM fisetin + 1 mM melatonin MeWo Enhances anti-tumour activity [54] 10 μM fisetin + 0.1 μM melatonin A549 Induces autophagic cell death
ChemoSen↑, 20 μM fisetin + 5 μM sorafenib A375, SK-MEL-28 Suppresses invasion and metastasis [44] 40 μM fisetin + 10 μM cisplatin A549, A549-CR Enhances apoptosis

2845- FIS,    Fisetin: A bioactive phytochemical with potential for cancer prevention and pharmacotherapy
- Review, Var, NA
PI3K↓, block multiple signaling pathways such as the phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase/protein kinase B/mammalian target of rapamycin (PI3K/Akt/mTOR) and p38
Akt↓,
mTOR↓,
p38↓,
*antiOx↑, antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, antiangiogenic, hypolipidemic, neuroprotective, and antitumor effect
*neuroP↑,
Casp3↑, U266 cancer cell line through activation of caspase-3, downregulation of Bcl-2 and Mcl-1L, upregulation of Bax, Bim and Bad
Bcl-2↓,
Mcl-1↓,
BAX↑,
BIM↑,
BAD↑,
AMPK↑, activation of 5'adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK), acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC) and decreased phosphorylation of AKT and mTOR were also observed
ACC↑,
DNAdam↑, DNA fragmentation, mitochondrial membrane depolarizatio
MMP↓,
eff↑, fisetin in combination with a citrus flavanone, hesperetin mediated apoptosis by mitochondrial membrane depolarization and caspase-3 act
ROS↑, NCI-H460 human non-small cell lung cancer line, fisetin generated reactive oxygen species (ROS), endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress
cl‑PARP↑, fisetin treatment resulted in PARP cleavage
Cyt‑c↑, release of cyt. c
Diablo↑, release of cyt. c and Smac/DIABLO from mitochondria,
P53↑, increased p53 protein levels
p65↓, reduced phospho-p65 and Myc oncogene expression
Myc↓,
HSP70/HSPA5↓, fisetin causes inhibition of proliferation by the modulation of heat shock protein 70 (HSP70), HSP27
HSP27↓,
COX2↓, anti-proliferative effects of fisetin through the activation of apoptosis via inhibition of cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) and Wnt/EGFR/NF-κB signaling pathways
Wnt↓,
EGFR↓,
NF-kB↓,
TumCCA↑, The anti-proliferative effects of fisetin and hesperetin were shown to be occurred through S, G2/M, and G0/G1 phase arrest in K562 cell progression
CDK2↓, decrease in levels of cyclin D1, cyclin A, Cdk-4 and Cdk-2
CDK4↓,
cycD1/CCND1↓,
cycA1/CCNA1↓,
P21↑, increase in p21 CIP1/WAF1 levels in HT-29 human colon cancer cell
MMP2↓, fisetin has exhibited tumor inhibitory effects by blocking matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP- 2) and MMP-9 at mRNA and protein levels,
MMP9↓,
TumMeta↓, Antimetastasis
MMP1↓, fisetin also inhibited the MMP-14, MMP-1, MMP-3, MMP-7, and MMP-9
MMP3↓,
MMP7↓,
MET↓, promotion of mesenchymal to epithelial transition associated with a decrease in mesenchymal markers i.e. N-cadherin, vimentin, snail and fibronectin and an increase in epithelial markers i.e. E-cadherin
N-cadherin↓,
Vim↓,
Snail↓,
Fibronectin↓,
E-cadherin↑,
uPA↓, fisetin suppressed the expression and activity of urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA)
ChemoSen↑, combination treatment of fisetin and sorafenib reduced the migration and invasion of BRAF-mutated melanoma cells both in in-vitro
EMT↓, inhibited epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) as observed by a decrease in N-cadherin, vimentin and fibronectin and an increase in E-cadherin
Twist↓, inhibited expression of Snail1, Twist1, Slug, ZEB1 and MMP-2 and MMP-9
Zeb1↓,
cFos↓, significant decrease in NF-κB, c-Fos, and c-Jun levels
cJun↓,
EGF↓, Fisetin inhibited epidermal growth factor (EGF)
angioG↓, Antiangiogenesis
VEGF↓, decreased expression of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) and VEGF, EGFR, COX-2
eNOS↓,
*NRF2↑, significantly increased nuclear translocation of Nrf2 and antioxidant response element (ARE) luciferase activity, leading to upregulation of HO-1 expression
HO-1↑,
NRF2↓, Fisetin also triggered the suppression of Nrf2
GSTs↓, declined placental type glutathione S-transferase (GST-p) level in the liver of the fisetin- treated rats with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)
ATF4↓, Fisetin also rapidly increased the levels of both Nrf2 and ATF4

2824- FIS,    Fisetin in Cancer: Attributes, Developmental Aspects, and Nanotherapeutics
- Review, Var, NA
*antiOx↑, Fisetin is one such naturally derived flavone that offers numerous pharmacological benefits, i.e., antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, antiangiogenic, and anticancer properties.
*Inflam↓,
angioG↓,
BioAv↓, poor bioavailability associated with its extreme hydrophobicity hampers its clinical utility
BioAv↑, The issues related to fisetin delivery can be addressed by adapting to the developmental aspects of nanomedicines, such as formulating it into lipid or polymer-based systems, including nanocochleates and liposomes
TumCP↓, fisetin also inhibits tumor proliferation by repressing tumor mass multiplication, invasion, migration, and autophagy.
TumCI↓,
TumCMig↓,
*neuroP↑, figure 2
EMT↓, It affects the cell cycle and thereby cell proliferation, microtubule assembly, cell migration and invasion, epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT), and cell death
ROS↑, cell death caused by fisetin is possibly due to the induction of apoptosis by fisetin or other signaling molecules and reactive oxygen species (ROS)
selectivity↑, Without influencing the growth of normal cells, fisetin has the capability to hinder the formation of colonies and inhibit the multiplication of cancer cells.
EGFR↓, fisetin restricts the multiplication of EGFR 2-overexpressing SK-BR-3 breast tumor masses
NF-kB↓, fisetin inhibits cancer metastasis by reducing the expressions of nuclear factor-kB (NF-kB)-modulated metastatic proteins in a variety of tumor cell types, including vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP)
VEGF↓,
MMP9↓,
MMP↓, rupturing the plasma membrane, depolarizing mitochondria, cleaving PARP, and activating caspase-7, -8, and -9.
cl‑PARP↑,
Casp7↑,
Casp8↑,
Casp9↑,
*ROS↓, Fisetin is a bioactive flavonol molecule that can easily penetrate the cell membrane due to its hydrophobic nature [51,52], reducing the generation of inflammatory cytokines and reactive oxygen species (ROS) in microglial cells, (normal cells)
uPA↓, Perhaps fisetin lowers angiogenesis, consequently suppressing tumor multiplication by urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) inhibition
MMP1↓, powerful matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-1 inhibitor
Wnt↓, Fisetin works on several cellular pathways, such as Wnt, Akt-PI3K, and ERK, as an inhibitor
Akt↓,
PI3K↓,
ERK↓,
Half-Life↝, Fisetin exhibits a very short terminal half-life of approximately 3 hrs in its free form. This half-life is found to be less than that of its metabolites

2825- FIS,    Exploring the molecular targets of dietary flavonoid fisetin in cancer
- Review, Var, NA
*Inflam↓, present in fruits and vegetables such as strawberries, apple, cucumber, persimmon, grape and onion, was shown to possess anti-microbial, anti-inflammatory, anti-oxidant
*antiOx↓, fisetin possesses stronger oxidant inhibitory activity than well-known potent antioxidants like morin and myricetin.
*ERK↑, inducing extracellular signal-regulated kinase1/2 (ERK)/c-myc phosphorylation, nuclear NF-E2-related factor-2 (Nrf2), glutamate cystine ligase and glutathione (GSH) levels
*p‑cMyc↑,
*NRF2↑,
*GSH↑,
*HO-1↑, activate Nrf2 mediated induction of hemeoxygenase-1 (HO-1) important for cell survival
mTOR↓, in our studies on fisetin in non-small lung cancer cells, we found that fisetin acts as a dual inhibitor PI3K/Akt and mTOR pathways
PI3K↓,
Akt↓,
TumCCA↑, fisetin treatment to LNCaP cells resulted in G1-phase arrest accompanied with decrease in cyclins D1, D2 and E and their activating partner CDKs 2, 4 and 6 with induction ofWAF1/p21 and KIP1/p27
cycD1/CCND1↓,
cycE/CCNE↓,
CDK2↓,
CDK4↓,
CDK6↓,
P21↑,
p27↑,
JNK↑, fisetin could inhibit the metastatic ability of PC-3 cells by suppressing of PI3 K/Akt and JNK signaling pathways with subsequent repression of matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) and MMP-9
MMP2↓,
MMP9↓,
uPA↓, fisetin suppressed protein and mRNA levels of MMP-2 and urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) in an ERK-dependent fashion.
NF-kB↓, decrease in the nuclear levels of NF-B, c-Fos, and c-Jun was noted in fisetin treated cells
cFos↓,
cJun↓,
E-cadherin↑, upregulation of E-cadherin and down-regulation of vimentin and N-cadherin.
Vim↓,
N-cadherin↓,
EMT↓, EMT inhibiting potential of fisetin has been reported in melanoma cells
MMP↓, The shift in mitochondrial membrane potential was accompanied by release of cytochrome c and Smac/DIABLO resulting in activation of the caspase cascade and cleavage of PARP
Cyt‑c↑,
Diablo↑,
Casp↑,
cl‑PARP↑,
P53↑, fisetin with induction of p53 protein
COX2↓, Fisetin down-regulated COX-2 and reduced the secretion of prostaglandin E2 without affecting COX-1 protein expression.
PGE2↓,
HSP70/HSPA5↓, It was shown that the induction of HSF1 target proteins, such as HSP70, HSP27 and BAG3 were inhibited in HCT-116 cells exposed to heat shock at 43 C for 1 h in the presence of fisetin
HSP27↓,
DNAdam↑, DNA fragmentation, an increase in the number of sub-G1 phase cells, mitochondrial membrane depolarization and activation of caspase-9 and caspase-3.
Casp3↑,
Casp9↑,
ROS↑, This was associated with production of intracellular ROS
AMPK↑, Fisetin induced AMPK signaling
NO↑, fisetin induced cytotoxicity and showed that fisetin induced apoptosis of leukemia cells through generation of NO and elevated Ca2+ activating the caspase
Ca+2↑,
mTORC1↓, Fisetin was shown to inhibit the mTORC1 pathway and its downstream components including p70S6 K, eIF4B and eEF2 K.
p70S6↓,
ROS↓, Others have also noted a similar decrease in ROS with fisetin treatment.
ER Stress↑, Induction of ER stress upon fisetin treatment, evident as early as 6 h, and associated with up-regulation of IRE1, XBP1s, ATF4 and GRP78, was followed by autophagy which was not sustained
IRE1↑,
ATF4↑,
GRP78/BiP↑,
eff↑, Combination of fisetin and the BRAF inhibitor sorafenib was found to be extremely effective in inhibiting the growth of BRAF-mutated human melanoma cells
eff↑, synergistic effect of fisetin and sorafenib was observed in human cervical cancer HeLa cells,
eff↑, Similarly, fisetin in combination with hesperetin induced apoptosis
RadioS↑, pretreatment with fisetin enhanced the radio-sensitivity of p53 mutant HT-29 cancer cells,
ChemoSen↑, potential of fisetin in enhancing cisplatin-induced cytotoxicity in various cancer models
Half-Life↝, intraperitoneal (ip) dose of 223 mg/kg body weight the maximum plasma concentration (2.53 ug/ml) of fisetin was reached at 15 min which started to decline with a first rapid alpha half-life of 0.09 h and a longer half-life of 3.12 h.

2827- FIS,    The Potential Role of Fisetin, a Flavonoid in Cancer Prevention and Treatment
- Review, Var, NA
*antiOx↑, effective antioxidant, anti-inflammatory
*Inflam↓,
neuroP↑, neuro-protective, anti-diabetic, hepato-protective and reno-protective potential.
hepatoP↑,
RenoP↑,
cycD1/CCND1↓, Figure 3
TumCCA↑,
MMPs↓,
VEGF↓,
MAPK↓,
NF-kB↓,
angioG↓,
Beclin-1↑,
LC3s↑,
ATG5↑,
Bcl-2↓,
BAX↑,
Casp↑,
TNF-α↓,
Half-Life↓, Fisetin was given at an effective dosage of 223 mg/kilogram intraperitoneally in mice. The plasma concentration declined biophysically, with a rapid half-life of 0.09 h and a terminal half-life of 3.1 h,
MMP↓, Fisetin powerfully improved apoptotic cells and caused the depolarization of the mitochondrial membrane.
mt-ROS↑, Fisetin played a role in the induction of apoptosis, independently of p53, and increased mitochondrial ROS generation.
cl‑PARP↑, fisetin-induced sub-G1 population as well as PARP cleavage.
CDK2↓, Moreover, the activities of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDK) 2 as well as CDK4 were decreased by fisetin and also inhibited CDK4 activity in a cell-free system, demonstrating that it might directly inhibit the activity of CDK4
CDK4↓,
Cyt‑c↑, Moreover, release of cytochrome c and Smac/Diablo was induced by fisetin
Diablo↑,
DR5↑, Fisetin caused an increase in the protein levels of cleaved caspase-8, DR5, Fas ligand, and TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand
Fas↑,
PCNA↓, Fisetin decreased proliferation-related proteins such as PCNA, Ki67 and phosphorylated histone H3 (p-H3) and decreased the expression of cell growth
Ki-67↓,
p‑H3↓,
chemoP↑, Paclitaxel treatment only showed more toxicity to normal cells than the combination of flavonoids with paclitaxel, suggesting that fisetin might bring some safety against paclitaxel-facilitated cytotoxicity.
Ca+2↑, Fisetin encouraged apoptotic cell death via increased ROS and Ca2+, while it increased caspase-8, -9 and -3 activities and reduced the mitochondrial membrane potential in HSC3 cells.
Dose↝, After fisetin treatment at 40 µM, invasion was reduced by 87.2% and 92.4%, whereas after fisetin treatment at 20 µM, invasion was decreased by 52.4% and 59.4% in SiHa and CaSki cells, respectively
CDC25↓, This study proposes that fisetin caused the arrest of the G2/M cell cycle via deactivating Cdc25c as well Cdc2 via the activation of Chk1, 2 and ATM
CDC2↓,
CHK1↑,
Chk2↑,
ATM↑,
PCK1↓, fisetin decreases the levels of SOS-1, pEGFR, GRB2, PKC, Ras, p-p-38, p-ERK1/2, p-JNK, VEGF, FAK, PI3K, RhoA, p-AKT, uPA, NF-ĸB, MMP-7,-9 and -13, whereas it increases GSK3β as well as E-cadherin in U-2 OS
RAS↓,
p‑p38↓,
Rho↓,
uPA↓,
MMP7↓,
MMP13↓,
GSK‐3β↑,
E-cadherin↑,
survivin↓, whereas those of survivin and BCL-2 were reduced in T98G cells
VEGFR2↓, Fisetin inhibited the VEGFR expression in Y79 cells as well as the angiogenesis of a tumor.
IAP2↓, The downregulation of cIAP-2 by fisetin
STAT3↓, fisetin induced apoptosis in TPC-1 cells via the initiation of oxidative damage and enhanced caspases expression by downregulating STAT3 and JAK 1 signaling
JAK1↓,
mTORC1↓, Fisetin acts as a dual inhibitor of mTORC1/2 signaling,
mTORC2↓,
NRF2↑, Moreover, In JC cells, the Nrf2 expression was gradually increased by fisetin from 8 h to 24 h

2828- FIS,    Fisetin, a Potent Anticancer Flavonol Exhibiting Cytotoxic Activity against Neoplastic Malignant Cells and Cancerous Conditions: A Scoping, Comprehensive Review
- Review, Var, NA
*neuroP↑, As a hydrophobic agent, FIS readily penetrates cell membranes and accumulates in cells to exert neuroprotective, neurotrophic and antioxidant effects
*antiOx↑,
*Inflam↓, FIS treatment may include alleviating inflammation, cell apoptosis and oxidative stress
RenoP↑, alleviates cell apoptosis and inflammation in acute kidney injury
COX2↓, FIS induces apoptosis in various tumor cells by, for example, inhibiting cyclooxygenase-2, inhibiting the Wnt/EGFR/NF-κB pathway, activating the caspase-3 cascade
Wnt↓,
EGFR↓,
NF-kB↓,
Casp3↑,
Ca+2↑, activating the caspase-3 and Ca2+ dependent endonuclease, and activating the caspase-8/caspase-3 dependent pathway via ERK1/2.
Casp8↑,
TumCCA↑, FIS controls the cell cycle and inhibits cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) in human cancer cell lines,
CDK1↓,
PI3K↓, by inhibition of PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling [20], mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK) [21], and nuclear transcription factor (NF-κB)
Akt↓,
mTOR↓,
MAPK↓,
*P53↓, FIS inhibits aging by reducing p53, p21 and p16 expression in mouse and human tissues
*P21↓,
*p16↓,
mTORC1↓, FIS induces autophagic cell death by inhibiting both the mTORC1 and mTORC2 pathways
mTORC2↓,
P53↑, FIS significantly increases the expression of p53 and p21 proteins and lowers the levels of cyclin D1 [27,28], cyclin A, CDK4 and CDK2, thus contributing to cell-cycle arrest.
P21↑,
cycD1/CCND1↓,
cycA1/CCNA1↓,
CDK2↓,
CDK4↓,
BAX↑, FIS also increases Bax [27,28] and Bak [27] protein expression, but reduces the levels of Bcl-2 [27,28], Bcl-xL [27] and PCNA [28], and then starts the mitochondrial apoptotic pathway.
Bcl-2↓,
PCNA↓,
HER2/EBBR2↓, FIS reduces HER2 tyrosine phosphorylation in a dose-dependent manner and aids in proteasomal degradation of HER2 rather than lysosomal degradation
Cyt‑c↑, FIS cells causes destabilization of the mitochondrial membrane and an increase in cytochrome c levels, which is consistent with the loss of mitochondrial membrane integrity.
MMP↓,
cl‑Casp9↑,
MMP2↓, FIS reduces the enzymatic activity of both MMP-2 and MMP-9.
MMP9↓,
cl‑PARP↑, cell membrane, mitochondrial depolarization, activation of caspase-7, -8 and -9, and cleavage of PARP
uPA↓, interestingly, the promoter activity of the uPA gene is suppressed by FIS
DR4↑, induces upregulation of DR4 and DR5 death receptor expression in a dose-dependent manner
DR5↑,
ROS↓, FIS induces an increase in intracellular Ca2+ but reduces the production of ROS in WEHI-3 cells (myelomonocytic leukemia)
AIF↑, It also increases the levels of caspase-3 and AIF mRNA, but also increases necrosis markers including RIP3 and PARP1
CDC25↓, FIS reduces the expression of cdc25a, but increases the expression of p-p53, Chk1, p21 and p27, which may lead to a G0/G1 arrest.
Dose↑, FIS in concentrations from 0 to 10 μM does not affect cell viability; however, its use at concentrations of 20–40 μM significantly reduces the viability of lung cancer cells
CHOP↑, CaKi : FIS induces upregulation of CHOP expression and ROS production
ROS↑, NCI-H460 :FIS increases the ER stress signaling FIS increases the level of mitochondrial ROS FIS induces mitochondrial Ca2+ overloading and ER stress FIS induced ER stress-mediated cell death via activation of the MAPK pathway
cMyc↓, FIS influences proliferation related genes such as cyclin D1, c-myc and cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 by downregulating them.
cardioP↑, cardioprotective activity

2829- FIS,    Fisetin: An anticancer perspective
- Review, Var, NA
TumCP↓, Being a potent anticancer agent, fisetin has been used to inhibit stages in the cancer cells (proliferation, invasion), prevent cell cycle progression, inhibit cell growth, induce apoptosis, cause polymerase (PARP) cleavage
TumCI↓,
TumCCA↑,
TumCG↓,
Apoptosis↑,
cl‑PARP↑,
PKCδ↓, fisetin also suppresses the activation of the PKCα/ROS/ERK1/2 and p38 MAPK signaling pathways, reduces the NF‐κB activation, and down‐regulates the level of the oncoprotein securin
ROS↓,
ERK↓,
NF-kB↓,
survivin↓,
ROS↑, In human multiple myeloma U266 cells, fisetin stimulated the production of free radical species that led to apoptosis
PI3K↓, Multiple studies also authenticated the anticancer role of fisetin through various signaling pathways such as blocking of mammalian target of rapamycin (PI3K/Akt/mTOR)
Akt↓,
mTOR↓,
MAPK↓, phosphatidylinositol‐3‐kinase/protein kinase B, mitogen‐activated protein kinases (MAPK)‐dependent nuclear factor kappa‐light‐chain‐enhancer of activated B cells (NF‐κB), and p38, respectively,
p38↓,
HER2/EBBR2↓, (HER2)/neu‐overexpressing breast cancer cell lines. Fisetin caused induction through inactivating the receptor, inducing the degradation of the proteasomes, reducing its half‐life
EMT↓, In addition, mutation of epithelial‐to‐mesenchymal transition (EMT)
PTEN↑, up‐regulation of expression of PTEN mRNA and protein were reported after fisetin treatment
HO-1↑, In breast cancer cells (4T1 and JC cells), fisetin increased HO‐1 mRNA and protein expressions, elevated Nrf2 expression
NRF2↑,
MMP2↓, fisetin reduced MMP‐2 and MMP‐9 enzyme activity and gene expression for both mRNA levels and protein
MMP9↓,
MMP↓, fisetin treatment further led to permeabilization of mitochondrial membrane, activation of caspase‐8 and caspase‐9, as well as the cleavage of poly(ADP‐ribose) polymerase 1
Casp8↑,
Casp9↑,
TRAILR↑, enhanced the levels of TRAIL‐R1
Cyt‑c↑, mitochondrial releasing of cytochrome c into cytosol, up‐regulation and down‐regulation of X‐linked inhibitor of apoptosis protein
XIAP↓,
P53↑, fisetin also enhanced the protein p53 levels
CDK2↓, lowered cell number, the activities of CDK‐2,4)
CDK4↓,
CDC25↓, it also decreased cell division cycle protein levels (CDC)2 and CDC25C, and CDC2 activity (Lu et al., 2005)
CDC2↓,
VEGF↓, down‐regulating the expressions of p‐ERK1/2, vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 1(VEGFR1), p38, and pJNK, respectively
DNAdam↑, Fisetin (80 microM) showed dose‐dependently caused DNA fragmentation, induced cellular swelling and apoptotic death, and showed characteristics of apoptosis.
TET1↓, lowered the TET1 expression levels
CHOP↑, caused up‐regulation of (C/EBP) homologous protein (CHOP) expression and reactive oxygen species production,
CD44↓, down‐regulation of CD44 and CD133 markers
CD133↓,
uPA↓, down‐regulation of levels of matrix metalloproteinase‐2 (MMP‐2), urokinase‐type plasminogen activator (uPA),
CSCs↓, Being a potent anticancer agent, fisetin administration in in vitro and in vivo studies in kidney renal stem cells (HuRCSCs) effectively inhibited cancer cell stages such as proliferation,

2830- FIS,    Biological effects and mechanisms of fisetin in cancer: a promising anti-cancer agent
- Review, Var, NA
TumCG↓, suppressing cell growth, triggering programmed cell death, reducing the formation of new blood vessels, protecting against oxidative stress, and inhibiting cell migration.
angioG↓,
*ROS↓,
TumCMig↓,
VEGF↓, including vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-κB), PI3K/Akt/mTOR, and Nrf2/HO-1.
MAPK↑, including the activation of MAPK. activation of MAPK is crucial for mediating cancer cell proliferation, apoptosis, and invasion
NF-kB↓, ability of fisetin to suppress NF-κB activity has been demonstrated in various diseases
PI3K↓, fisetin has been shown to inhibit the metastasis of PC3 prostate cancer cells by reducing the activity of the PI3K/AKT
Akt↓,
mTOR↓, Fisetin has been shown to be effective against PI3K expression, AKT phosphorylation, and mTOR activation in various cancer cells,
NRF2↑, effects of fisetin on the activation of Nrf2 and upregulation of HO-1 have been demonstrated in various diseases
HO-1↑,
ROS↓, Liver cancer Resist proliferation, migration and invasion, induce apoptosis, attenuate ROS and inflammation
Inflam↓,
ER Stress↑, Oral cancer Induce apoptosis and autophagy, promote ER stress and ROS, suppress proliferation
ROS↑, Multiple studies have demonstrated that fisetin has the ability to induce apoptosis in cancer cells, and various mechanisms are involved, including the activation of MAPK, NF-κB, p53, and the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS)
TumCP↓,
ChemoSen↑, Breast cancer Promote apoptosis and invasion and metastasis, enhance chemotherapeutic effects
PTEN↑,
P53↑, activation of MAPK, NF-κB, p53,
Casp3↑,
Casp8↑,
Casp9↑,
COX2↓, fisetin inhibits COX2 expression
Wnt↓, regulating a number of important angiogenesis-related factors in cancer cells, such as VEGF, MMP2/9, eNOS, wingless and Wnt-signaling.
EGFR↓,
Mcl-1↓,
survivin↓, fisetin interferes with NF-κB signaling, resulting in the reduction of survivin, TRAF1, Bcl-xl, Bcl-2, and IAP1/2 levels, ultimately inhibiting apoptosis
IAP1↓,
IAP2↓,
PGE2↓, fisetin inhibits COX2 expression, leading to the down-regulation of PGE2 secretion and inactivation of β-catenin, thereby inducing apoptosis
β-catenin/ZEB1↓,
DR5↑, fisetin markedly induces apoptosis in renal carcinoma through increased expression of DR5, which is regulated by p53.
MMP2↓, fisetin has been shown to inhibit the metastasis of PC3 prostate cancer cells by reducing the activity of the PI3K/AKT and JNK pathways, resulting in the suppression of MMP-2 and MMP-9 expression
MMP9↓,
FAK↓, fisetin can inhibit cell migration and reduce focal adhesion kinase (FAK) phosphorylation levels
uPA↓, fisetin significantly suppresses the invasion of U-2 cells by decreasing the expression of NF-κB, urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA), FAK, and MMP-2/9
EMT↓, Fisetin has been shown to have the ability to reverse EMT, thereby inhibiting the invasion and migration of cancer cells
ERK↓, fisetin has the ability to suppress ERK1/2 activation and activate JNK/p38 pathways
JNK↑,
p38↑,
PKCδ↓, fisetin reduces the expression of MMP-9 by inhibiting PKCα/ROS/ERK1/2 and p38 MAPK activation
BioAv↓, low water solubility of fisetin poses a significant challenge for its administration, which can limit its biological effects
BioAv↑, Compared to free fisetin, fisetin nanoemulsion has demonstrated a 3.9-fold increase in the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and induction of apoptosis, highlighting its enhanced efficacy
BioAv↑, Liposomal encapsulation has shown potential in enhancing the anticancer therapeutic effects of fisetin

2839- FIS,    Dietary flavonoid fisetin for cancer prevention and treatment
- Review, Var, NA
DNAdam↑, Fisetin induced DNA fragmentation, ROS generation, and apoptosis in NCI-H460 cells via a reduction in Bcl-2 and increase in Bax expression
ROS↑,
Apoptosis↑,
Bcl-2↓,
BAX↑,
cl‑Casp9↑, Fisetin treatment increased cleavage of caspase-9 and caspase-3 thereby increasing caspase-3 activation
cl‑Casp3↑,
Cyt‑c↑, leading to cytochrome-c release
lipid-P↓, Fisetin (25 mg/kg body weight) decreased histological lesions and levels of lipid peroxidation and modulated the enzymatic and nonenzymatic anti-oxidants in B(a)P-treated Swiss Albino mice
TumCG↓, We observed that fisetin treatment (5–20 μM) inhibits cell growth and colony formation in A549 NSC lung cancer cells.
TumCA↓, Another study showed that fisetin inhibits adhesion, migration, and invasion in A549 lung cancer cells by downregulating uPA, ERK1/2, and MMP-2
TumCMig↓,
TumCI↓,
uPA↓,
ERK↓,
MMP9↓,
NF-kB↓, Treatment with fisetin also decreased the nuclear levels of NF-kB, c-Fos, c-Jun, and AP-1 and inhibited NF-kB binding.
cFos↓,
cJun↓,
AP-1↓,
TumCCA↑, Our laboratory has previously shown that treatment of LNCaP cells with fisetin caused inhibition of PCa by G1-phase cell cycle arrest
AR↓, inhibited androgen signaling and tumor growth in athymic nude mice
mTORC1↓, induced autophagic cell death in PCa cells through suppression of mTORC1 and mTORC2
mTORC2↓,
TSC2↑, activated the mTOR repressor TSC2, commonly associated with inhibition of Akt and activation of AMPK
EGF↓, Fisetin also inhibits EGF and TGF-β induced YB-1 phosphorylation and EMT in PCa cells
TGF-β↓,
EMT↓, Fisetin also inhibits EGF and TGF-β induced YB-1 phosphorylation and EMT in PCa cells
P-gp↓, decrease the P-gp protein in multidrug resistant NCI/ADR-RES cells.
PI3K↓, Fisetin also inhibited the PI3K/AKT/NFkB signaling
Akt↓,
mTOR↓, Fisetin inhibited melanoma progression in a 3D melanoma skin model with downregulation of mTOR, Akt, and upregulation of TSC
eff↑, combinational treatment study of melatonin and fisetin demonstrated enhanced antitumor activity of fisetin
ROS↓, Fisetin inhibited ROS and augmented NO generation in A375 melanoma cells
ER Stress↑, induction of ER stress evidenced by increased IRE1α, XBP1s, ATF4, and GRP78 levels in A375 and 451Lu cells.
IRE1↑,
ATF4↑,
GRP78/BiP↑,
ChemoSen↑, combination of fisetin with sorafenib effectively inhibited EMT and augmented the anti-metastatic potential of sorafenib by reducing MMP-2 and MMP-9 proteins in melanoma cell xenografts
CDK2↓, Fisetin (0–60 μM) was shown to inhibit activity of CDKs dose-dependently leading to cell cycle arrest in HT-29 human colon cancer cells
CDK4↓, Fisetin treatment decreased activities of CDK2 and CDK4 via decreased levels of cyclin-E, cyclin-D1 and increase in p21 (CIP1/WAF1) levels.
cycE/CCNE↓,
cycD1/CCND1↓,
P21↑,
COX2↓, fisetin (30–120 μM) induces apoptosis in colon cancer cells by inhibiting COX-2 and Wnt/EGFR/NF-kB -signaling pathways
Wnt↓,
EGFR↓,
β-catenin/ZEB1↓, Fisetin treatment inhibited Wnt/EGFR/NF-kB signaling via downregulation of β-catenin, TCF-4, cyclin D1, and MMP-7
TCF-4↓,
MMP7↓,
RadioS↑, fisetin treatment was found to radiosensitize human colorectal cancer cells which are resistant to radiotherapy
eff↑, Combined treatment of fisetin with NAC increased cleaved caspase-3, PARP, reduced mitochondrial membrane potential with induction of caspase-9 in COLO25 cells

2832- FIS,    Fisetin's Promising Antitumor Effects: Uncovering Mechanisms and Targeting for Future Therapies
- Review, Var, NA
MMP↓, fraction of cells with reduced mitochondrial membrane potential also increased, indicating that fisetin-induced apoptosis also destroys mitochondria.
mtDam↑,
Cyt‑c↑, Cytochrome c and Smac/DIABLO levels are also released when the mitochondrial membrane potential changes, and this results in the activation of the caspase cascade and the cleavage of poly [ADP-ribose] polymerase (PARP)
Diablo↑,
Casp↑,
cl‑PARP↑,
Bak↑, Fisetin induced apoptosis in HCT-116 human colon cancer cells by upregulating proapoptotic proteins Bak and BIM and downregulating antiapoptotic proteins B cell lymphoma (BCL)-XL and -2.
BIM↑,
Bcl-xL↓,
Bcl-2↓,
P53↑, fisetin through the activation of p53
ROS↑, over generation of ROS, which is also directly initiated by fisetin, the stimulation of AMPK
AMPK↑,
Casp9↑, activating caspase-9 collectively, then activating caspase-3, leading to apopotosis
Casp3↑,
BID↑, Bid, AIF and the increase of the ratio of Bax to Bcl-2, causing the activation of caspase 3–9
AIF↑,
Akt↓, The inhibition of the Akt/mTOR/MAPK/
mTOR↓,
MAPK↓,
Wnt↓, Fisetin has been shown to degrade the Wnt/β/β-catenin signal
β-catenin/ZEB1↓,
TumCCA↑, fisetin triggered G1 phase arrest in LNCaP cells by activating WAF1/p21 and kip1/p27, followed by a reduction in cyclin D1, D2, and E as well as CDKs 2, 4, and 6
P21↑,
p27↑,
cycD1/CCND1↓,
cycE/CCNE↓,
CDK2↓,
CDK4↓,
CDK6↓,
TumMeta↓, reduces PC-3 cells' capacity for metastasis
uPA↓, fisetin decreased MMP-2 protein, messenger RNA (mRNA), and uPA levels through an ERK-dependent route
E-cadherin↑, Fisetin can upregulate the epithelial marker E-cadherin, downregulate the mesenchymal marker vimentin, and drastically lower the EMT regulator twist protein level at noncytotoxic dosages, studies have revealed.
Vim↓,
EMT↓,
Twist↓,
DNAdam↑, Fisetin induces apoptosis in the human nonsmall lung cancer cell line NCI-H460, which causes DNA breakage, the growth of sub-G1 cells, depolarization of the mitochondrial membrane, and activation of caspases 9, 3, which are involved in prod of iROS
ROS↓, fisetin therapy has been linked to a reduction in ROS, according to other research.
COX2↓, Fisetin lowered the expression of COX-1 protein, downregulated COX-2, and decreased PGE2 production
PGE2↓,
HSF1↓, Fisetin is a strong HSF1 inhibitor that blocks HSF1 from binding to the hsp70 gene promoter.
cFos↓, NF-κB, c-Fos, c-Jun, and AP-1 nuclear levels were also lowered by fisetin treatment
cJun↓,
AP-1↓,
Mcl-1↓, inhibition of Bcl-2 and Mcl-1 all contribute to an increase in apoptosis
NF-kB↓, Fisetin's ability to prevent NF-κB activation in LNCaP cells
IRE1↑, fisetin (20–80 µM) was accompanied by brief autophagy and the production of ER stress, which was shown by elevated levels of IRE1 α, XBP1s, ATF4, and GRP78 in A375 and 451Lu cells
ER Stress↑,
ATF4↑,
GRP78/BiP↑,
MMP2↓, lowering MMP-2 and MMP-9 proteins in melanoma cell xenografts
MMP9↓,
TCF-4↓, fisetin therapy reduced levels of β-catenin, TCF-4, cyclin D1, and MMP-7,
MMP7↓,
RadioS↑, fisetin treatment could radiosensitize human colorectal cancer cells that are resistant to radiotherapy.
TOP1↓, fisetin blocks DNA topoisomerases I and II in leukemia cells.
TOP2↓,

4023- FulvicA,    Shilajit (Mumio) Elicits Apoptosis and Suppresses Cell Migration in Oral Cancer Cells through Targeting Urokinase-type Plasminogen Activator and Its Receptor and Chemokine Signaling Pathways
- in-vitro, Oral, NA
tumCV↓, The viability of OCC exhibited a concentration and time-dependent response to Shilajit.
selectivity↑, Notably, Shilajit demonstrated selectivity against cancer cells.
Apoptosis↑, Shilajit induces apoptosis by upregulating the proapoptotic gene expression (p ≤ 0.05) and downregulating antiapoptotic proteins
uPA↓, hilajit inhibits the migratory potential of OCCs by inhibiting the urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) and its receptor (uPAR) and the chemokine signaling pathway.
TumCMig↓,
Dose↝, Treatment with Shilajit at a concentration of 1 mg/mL significantly inhibited the migration of OCCs compared to the control group
CXCc↓, Shilajit treatment markedly decreased CXCL8 and CXCR2 mRNA expression in OCCs.

2998- GEN,    Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms Modulated by Genistein in Cancer
- Review, Var, NA
Hif1a↓, genistein can bind to hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α)
VEGF↓, the compound repressed the expression/secretion of different angiogenic factors (including VEGF and PDGF) and matrix-degrading enzymes (such as urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA), MMP-2, and MMP-9) in human bladder cancer cells,
PDGF↓,
uPA↓,
MMP2↓,
MMP9↓,
chemoPv↑, genistein’s inhibitory effect on tumor angiogenesis as part of its chemopreventive efficacy
TumCI↓, Genistein Inhibits Cancer Invasion and Metastases
TumMeta↓,
NF-kB↓, suppression of nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) and activating protein-1 (AP-1) transcription factors and inhibition of MAPK, IκB, and PI3K/Akt signaling pathways in an HCC model
AP-1↓,
IKKα↓,
PI3K↓,
Akt↓,
EMT↓, in human HCC, genistein dose-dependently reversed EMT
CSCs↓, Genistein Eradicates Cancer Stem Cells

3267- Lyco,    Lycopene inhibits angiogenesis both in vitro and in vivo by inhibiting MMP-2/uPA system through VEGFR2-mediated PI3K-Akt and ERK/p38 signaling pathways
- in-vitro, Nor, HUVECs
*VEGF↓, highest dose used (400 μg/plug) completely inhibited the formation of vascular endothelial cells induced by vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF).
*MMP2↓, lycopene inhibited tube formation, invasion, and migration in HUVECs, and such actions were accompanied by reduced activities of matrix metalloproteinase-2, urokinase-type plasminogen activator, and protein expression of Rac1
*uPA↓,
*Rac1↑,
*TIMP2↑, and by enhancing protein expression of tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinase-2 and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1.
*p38↓, lycopene attenuated VEGF receptor-2 (VEGFR2)-mediated phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK), p38, and Akt as well as protein expression of PI3K.
*Akt↓,
*angioG↓, anti-angiogenic effect of lycopene both in vitro and in vivo.

4519- MAG,    Magnolol: A Neolignan from the Magnolia Family for the Prevention and Treatment of Cancer
- Review, Var, NA
*antiOx↑, anti-oxidant [70], anti-inflammatory [71], anti-bacterial [10], anti-thrombotic or anti-platelet
*Inflam↓,
*Bacteria↓,
*AntiAg↑,
*BBB↑, MAG can easily cross the blood brain barrier
*BioAv↓, bioavailability is in the region of 10%
BAD↑, MAG increased the expression of Bad, Bcl-XS, caspases-3, -6, and -9 and c-Jun N-terminal kinases (JNK) and suppressed the expression of Bcl-xL
Casp3↑,
Casp6↑,
Casp9↑,
JNK↑,
Bcl-xL↓,
PTEN↑, MAG also induced apoptosis by enhancing the expression of PTEN and down-regulation of AKT
Akt↓,
NF-kB↓, MAG induces cell death and reduces cell proliferation by inhibition of NF-κB activity
MMP7↓, MAG inhibits cancer metastasis by reducing the expression of matrix metalloproteinase-7, -9 (MMP-7, -9) and urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA)
MMP9↓,
uPA↓,
Hif1a↓, MAG attenuated angiogenesis in vitro and in vivo which is mediated by inhibition of the expression of hypoxia-inducible factors-1α (HIF-1α) and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) secretion in human bladder cancer cells
VEGF↓,
FOXO3↓, MAG downregulated the expression of transcriptional factor Forkhead box O3 (FoxO3), ubiquitin ligase, MuRF-1 and MAFbx/atrogin-1.
Ca+2↑, ↑Cytosolic free Ca (2+);
TumCCA↑, ↑Cell cycle arrest at G2/M phase, ROS, release of cyt-c,
ROS↑,
Cyt‑c↑,

1129- NarG,    Naringenin Attenuated Prostate Cancer Invasion via Reversal of Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition and Inhibited uPA Activity
- in-vitro, Pca, PC3
E-cadherin↓,
Vim↓,
Snail↓, SNAIL family zinc finger 1 (SNAI1), SNAIL family zinc finger 2 (SNAI2)
Twist↓, TWIST family bHLH transcription factor 1 (TWIST1).
EMT↓,
uPA↓,

5187- PEITC,    Phenethyl Isothiocyanate Inhibits Migration and Invasion of Human Gastric Cancer AGS Cells through Suppressing MAPK and NF-κB Signal Pathways
- in-vitro, GC, AGS
TumMeta↓, PEITC can inhibit migration and invasion through the extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1/2 (ERK1/2), protein kinase C (PKC) and nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-κB) signaling pathways in human gastric cells.
ERK↓, PEITC exerted an inhibitory effect on the ERK1/2, mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase 7 (MKK7)
MKK7↓,
PKCδ↓, PKC, Ras homolog gene family, member A (Rho A) and urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA), causing the inhibition of matrix metallopeptidase-2 (MMP-2) and -9
Rho↓,
uPA↓,
MMP2↓,
MMP9↓,
RAS↓, PEITC also inhibited Ras, growth factor receptor-bound protein 2 (GRB2), vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), focal adhesion kinase (FAK), inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) and cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2), causing inhibition of cell prolifera
VEGF↓,
FAK↓,
iNOS↓,
COX2↓,
TumCP↓,

85- QC,    Quercetin inhibits invasion, migration and signalling molecules involved in cell survival and proliferation of prostate cancer cell line (PC-3)
- in-vitro, Pca, PC3
uPA↓, Quercetin downregulates uPA, uPAR and EGF, EGF-R mRNA expressions.
uPAR↓,
EGFR↓,
NRAS↓,
Jun↓,
NF-kB↓, Quercetin inhibits cell survival factor β-catenin, NF-κB and also proliferative signalling molecules such as p-EGF-R, N-Ras, Raf-1, c.Fos c.Jun and p-c.Jun protein expressions
β-catenin/ZEB1↓,
p38↑,
MAPK↑,
cJun↓,
cFos↓,
Raf↓, Raf-1
TumCI↓, PC-3 cells are treated with quercetin, which inhibits invasion and migration of PC-3 cells.
TumCMig↓,

3368- QC,    The potential anti-cancer effects of quercetin on blood, prostate and lung cancers: An update
- Review, Var, NA
*Inflam↓, quercetin is known for its anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and anticancer properties.
*antiOx↑,
*AntiCan↑,
Casp3↓, Quercetin increases apoptosis and autophagy in cancer by activating caspase-3, inhibiting the phosphorylation of Akt, mTOR, and ERK, lessening β-catenin, and stabilizing the stabilization of HIF-1α.
p‑Akt↓,
p‑mTOR↓,
p‑ERK↓,
β-catenin/ZEB1↓,
Hif1a↓,
AntiAg↓, Quercetin have revealed an anti-tumor effect by reducing development of blood vessels. I
VEGFR2↓, decrease tumor growth through targeting VEGFR-2-mediated angiogenesis pathway and suppressing the downstream regulatory component AKT in prostate and breast malignancies.
EMT↓, effects of quercetin on inhibition of EMT, angiogenesis, and invasiveness through the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)/VEGFR-2-mediated pathway in breast cancer
EGFR↓,
MMP2↓, MMP2 and MMP9 are two remarkable compounds in metastatic breast cancer (28–30). quercetin on breast cancer cell lines (MDA-MB-231) and showed that after treatment with this flavonoid, the expression of these two proteinases decreased
MMP↓,
TumMeta↓, head and neck (HNSCC), the inhibitory effect of quercetin on the migration of tumor cells has been shown by regulating the expression of MMPs
MMPs↓,
Akt↓, quercetin by inhibiting the Akt activation pathway dependent on Snail, diminishing the expression of N-cadherin, vimentin, and ADAM9 and raising the expression of E-cadherin and proteins
Snail↓,
N-cadherin↓,
Vim↓,
E-cadherin↑,
STAT3↓, inhibiting STAT3 signaling
TGF-β↓, reducing the expression of TGF-β caused by vimentin and N-cadherin, Twist, Snail, and Slug and increasing the expression of E-cadherin in PC-3 cells.
ROS↓, quercetin exerted an anti-proliferative role on HCC cells by lessening intracellular ROS independently of p53 expression
P53↑, increasing the expression of p53 and BAX in hepatocellular carcinoma (HepG2) cell lines through the reduction of PKC, PI3K, and cyclooxygenase (COX-2)
BAX↑,
PKCδ↓,
PI3K↓,
COX2↓,
cFLIP↓, quercetin by inhibiting PI3K/AKT/mTOR and STAT3 pathways, decreasing the expression of cellular proteins such as c-FLIP, cyclin D1, and c-Myc, as well as reducing the production of IL-6 and IL-10 cytokines, leads to the death of PEL cells
cycD1/CCND1↓,
cMyc↓,
IL6↓,
IL10↓,
Cyt‑c↑, In addition, quercetin induced c-cytochrome-dependent apoptosis and caspase-3 almost exclusively in the HSB2 cell line
TumCCA↑, Exposure of K562 cells to quercetin also significantly raised the cells in the G2/M phase, which reached a maximum peak in 24 hours
DNMTs↓, pathway through DNA demethylation activity, histone deacetylase (HDAC) repression, and H3ac and H4ac enrichment
HDAC↓,
ac‑H3↑,
ac‑H4↑,
Diablo↑, SMAC/DIABLO exhibited activation
Casp3↑, enhanced levels of activated caspase 3, cleaved caspase 9, and PARP1
Casp9↑,
PARP1↑,
eff↑, green tea and quercetin as monotherapy caused the reduction of levels of anti-apoptotic proteins, CDK6, CDK2, CYCLIN D/E/A, BCL-2, BCL-XL, and MCL-1 and an increase in expression of BAX.
PTEN↑, Quercetin upregulates the level of PTEN as a tumor suppressor, which inhibits AKT signaling
VEGF↓, Quercetin had anti-inflammatory and anti-angiogenesis effects, decreasing VGEF-A, NO, iNOS, and COX-2 levels
NO↓,
iNOS↓,
ChemoSen↑, quercetin and chemotherapy can potentiate their effect on the malignant cell
eff↑, combination with hyperthermia, Shen et al. Quercetin is a method used in cancer treatment by heating, and it was found to reduce Doxorubicin hydrochloride resistance in leukemia cell line K562
eff↑, treatment with ellagic acid, luteolin, and curcumin alone showed excellent anticancer effects.
eff↑, co-treatment with quercetin and curcumin led to a reduction of mitochondrial membrane integrity, promotion of cytochrome C release, and apoptosis induction in CML cells
uPA↓, A-549 cells were shown to have reduced mRNA expressions of urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA), Upar, protein expression of CXCR-4, CXCL-12, SDF-1 when quercetin was applied at 20 and 40 mM/ml by real-time PCR.
CXCR4↓,
CXCL12↓,
CLDN2↓, A-549 cells, indicated that quercetin could reduce mRNA and protein expression of Claudin-2 in A-549 cell lines without involving Akt and ERK1/2,
CDK6↓, CDK6, which supports the growth and viability of various cancer cells, was hampered by the dose-dependent manner of quercetin (IC50 dose of QR for A-549 cells is 52.35 ± 2.44 μM).
MMP9↓, quercetin up-regulated the rates of G1 phase cell cycle and cellular apoptotic in both examined cell lines compared with the control group, while it declined the expressions of the PI3K, AKT, MMP-2, and MMP-9 proteins
TSP-1↑, quercetin increased TSP-1 mRNA and protein expression to inhibit angiogenesis,
Ki-67↓, significant reductions in Ki67 and PCNA proliferation markers and cell survival markers in response to quercetin and/or resveratrol.
PCNA↓,
ROS↑, Also, quercetin effectively causes intracellular ROS production and ER stress
ER Stress↑,

3369- QC,    Pharmacological basis and new insights of quercetin action in respect to its anti-cancer effects
- Review, Pca, NA
FAK↓, Quercetin can inhibit HGF-induced melanoma cell migration by inhibiting the activation of c-Met and its downstream Gabl, FAK and PAK [84]
TumCCA↑, stimulation of cell cycle arrest at the G1 stage
p‑pRB↓, mediated through regulation of p21 CDK inhibitor and suppression of pRb phosphorylation resulting in E2F1 sequestering.
CDK2↑, low dose of quercetin has brought minor DNA injury and Chk2 induction
CycB/CCNB1↓, quercetin has a role in the reduction of cyclin B1 and CDK1 levels,
CDK1↓,
EMT↓, quercetin suppresses epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) and cell proliferation through modulation of Sonic Hedgehog signaling pathway
PI3K↓, quercetin on other pathways such as PI3K, MAPK and WNT pathways have also been validated in cervical cancer
MAPK↓,
Wnt↓,
ROS↑, colorectal cancer, quercetin has been shown to suppress carcinogenesis through various mechanisms including affecting cell proliferation, production of reactive oxygen species and expression of miR-21
miR-21↑,
Akt↓, Figure 1 anti-cancer mechanisms
NF-kB↓,
FasL↑,
Bak↑,
BAX↑,
Bcl-2↓,
Casp3↓,
Casp9↑,
P53↑,
p38↑,
MAPK↑,
Cyt‑c↑,
PARP↓,
CHOP↑,
ROS↓,
LDH↑,
GRP78/BiP↑,
ERK↑,
MDA↓,
SOD↑,
GSH↑,
NRF2↑,
VEGF↓,
PDGF↓,
EGF↓,
FGF↓,
TNF-α↓,
TGF-β↓,
VEGFR2↓,
EGFR↓,
FGFR1↓,
mTOR↓,
cMyc↓,
MMPs↓,
LC3B-II↑,
Beclin-1↑,
IL1β↓,
CRP↓,
IL10↓,
COX2↓,
IL6↓,
TLR4↓,
Shh↓,
HER2/EBBR2↓,
NOTCH↓,
DR5↑, quercetin has enhanced DR5 expression in prostate cancer cells
HSP70/HSPA5↓, Quercetin has also suppressed the upsurge of hsp70 expression in prostate cancer cells following heat treatment and enhanced the quantity of subG1 cells
CSCs↓, Quercetin could also suppress cancer stem cell attributes and metastatic aptitude of isolated prostate cancer cells through modulating JNK signaling pathway
angioG↓, Quercetin inhibits angiogenesis-mediated of human prostate cancer cells through negatively modulating angiogenic factors (TGF-β, VEGF, PDGF, EGF, bFGF, Ang-1, Ang-2, MMP-2, and MMP-9)
MMP2↓,
MMP9↓,
IGFBP3↑, Quercetin via increasing the level of IGFBP-3 could induce apoptosis in PC-3 cells
uPA↓, Quercetin through decreasing uPA and uPAR expression and suppressing cell survival protein and Ras/Raf signaling molecules could decrease prostate cancer progression
uPAR↓,
RAS↓,
Raf↓,
TSP-1↑, Quercetin through TSP-1 enhancement could effectively inhibit angiogenesis

3372- QC,  FIS,  KaempF,    Anticancer Potential of Selected Flavonols: Fisetin, Kaempferol, and Quercetin on Head and Neck Cancers
- Review, HNSCC, NA
ROCK1↑, quercetin affects the level of RhoA and NF-κB proteins in SAS cells, and stimulates the expression of RhoA, ROCK1, and NF-κB in SAS cells [53].
TumCCA↓, inhibition of the cell cycle;
HSPs↓, inhibition of heat shock proteins;
RAS↓, inhibition of Ras protein expression.
ROS↑, fisetin induces production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), increases Ca2+ release, and decreases the mitochondrial membrane potential (Ψm) in head and neck neoplastic cells.
Ca+2↑,
MMP↓,
Cyt‑c↑, quercetin increases the expression level of cytochrome c, apoptosis inducing factor and endonuclease G
Endon↑,
MMP9↓, quercetin inhibits MMP-9 and MMP-2 expression and reduces levels of the following proteins: MMP-2, -7, -9 [49,53] and -10
MMP2↓,
MMP7↓,
MMP-10↓,
VEGF↓, as well as VEGF, NF-κB p65, iNOS, COX-2, and uPA, PI3K, IKB-α, IKB-α/β, p-IKKα/β, FAK, SOS1, GRB2, MEKK3 and MEKK7, ERK1/2, p-ERK1/2, JNK1/2, p38, p-p38, c-JUN, and pc-JUN
NF-kB↓,
p65↓,
iNOS↓,
COX2↓,
uPA↓,
PI3K↓,
FAK↓,
MEK↓,
ERK↓,
JNK↓,
p38↓,
cJun↓,
FOXO3↑, Quercetin causes an increase in the level of FOXO1 protein both in a dose- and time-dependent way; however, it does not affect changes in expression of FOXO3a

2988- RES,    The Antimetastatic Effects of Resveratrol on Hepatocellular Carcinoma through the Downregulation of a Metastasis-Associated Protease by SP-1 Modulation
- in-vitro, HCC, HUH7
TumCMig↓, resveratrol treatment significantly inhibited cell migration and invasion capacities of Huh7 cell lines that have low cytotoxicity in vitro, even at a high concentration of 100 µM.
TumCI↓,
uPA↓, activities and protein levels of the urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) were inhibited by resveratrol.
Sp1/3/4↓, reactive in transcription protein of nuclear factor SP-1 was inhibited by resveratrol.

3332- SIL,    Silibinin inhibits the invasion of human lung cancer cells via decreased productions of urokinase-plasminogen activator and matrix metalloproteinase-2
- in-vitro, Lung, A549
*antiOx↑, Silibinin is a flavonoid antioxidant and wildly used for its antihepatotoxic properties
*hepatoP↑,
MMP2↓, silibinin treatment may decrease the expressions of MMP-2 and u-PA in a concentration- and time-dependent manner and enhance the expression of TIMP-2.
uPA↓,
TIMP2↑,

3288- SIL,    Silymarin in cancer therapy: Mechanisms of action, protective roles in chemotherapy-induced toxicity, and nanoformulations
- Review, Var, NA
Inflam↓, Silymarin, a milk thistle extract, has anti-inflammatory, immunomodulatory, anti-lipid peroxidative, anti-fibrotic, anti-oxidative, and anti-proliferative properties.
lipid-P↓,
TumMeta↓, Silymarin exhibits not only anti-cancer functions through modulating various hallmarks of cancer, including cell cycle, metastasis, angiogenesis, apoptosis, and autophagy, by targeting a plethora of molecules
angioG↓,
chemoP↑, but also plays protective roles against chemotherapy-induced toxicity, such as nephrotoxicity,
EMT↓, Figure 2, Metastasis
HDAC↓,
HATs↑,
MMPs↓,
uPA↓,
PI3K↓,
Akt↓,
VEGF↓, Angiogenesis
CD31↓,
Hif1a↓,
VEGFR2↓,
Raf↓,
MEK↓,
ERK↓,
BIM↓, apoptosis
BAX↑,
Bcl-2↓,
Bcl-xL↓,
Casp↑,
MAPK↓,
P53↑,
LC3II↑, Autophagy
mTOR↓,
YAP/TEAD↓,
*BioAv↓, Additionally, the oral bioavailability of silymarin in rats is only 0.73 %
MMP↓, silymarin treatment reduced mitochondrial transmembrane potential, leading to an increase in cytosolic cytochrome c (Cyt c), downregulating proliferation-associated proteins (PCNA, c-Myc, cyclin D1, and β-catenin)
Cyt‑c↑,
PCNA↓,
cMyc↓,
cycD1/CCND1↓,
β-catenin/ZEB1↓,
survivin↓, and anti-apoptotic proteins (survivin and Bcl-2), and upregulating pro-apoptotic proteins (caspase-3, Bax, APAF-1, and p53)
APAF1↑,
Casp3↑,
MDSCs↓, ↓MDSCs, ↓IL-10, ↑IL-2 and IFN-γ
IL10↓,
IL2↑,
IFN-γ↑,
hepatoP↑, Moreover, in a randomized clinical trial, silymarin attenuated hepatoxicity in non-metastatic breast cancer patients undergoing a doxorubicin/cyclophosphamide-paclitaxel regimen
cardioP↑, For example, Rašković et al. studied the hepatoprotective and cardioprotective effects of silymarin (60 mg/kg orally) in rats following DOX
GSH↑, silymarin could protect the kidney and heart from ADR toxicity by protecting against glutathione (GSH) depletion and inhibiting lipid peroxidation
neuroP↑, silymarin attenuated the neurotoxicity of docetaxel by reducing apoptosis, inflammation, and oxidative stress

3282- SIL,    Role of Silymarin in Cancer Treatment: Facts, Hypotheses, and Questions
- Review, NA, NA
hepatoP↑, This group of flavonoids has been extensively studied and they have been used as hepato-protective substances
AntiCan↑, however, silymarin compounds have clear anticancer effects
TumCMig↓, decreasing migration through multiple targeting, decreasing hypoxia inducible factor-1α expression, i
Hif1a↓, In prostate cancer cells silibinin inhibited HIF-1α translation
selectivity↑, antitumoral activity of silymarin compounds is limited to malignant cells while the nonmalignant cells seem not to be affected
toxicity∅, long history of silymarin use in human diseases without toxicity after prolonged administration.
*antiOx↑, as an antioxidant, by scavenging prooxidant free radicals
*Inflam↓, antiinflammatory effects similar to those of indomethacin,
TumCCA↑, MDA-MB 486 breast cancer cells, G1 arrest was found due to increased p21 and decreased CDKs activity
P21↑,
CDK4↓,
NF-kB↓, human prostate carcinoma cells, silymarin decreased ligand binding to Erb1 135 and NF-kB expression was strongly inhibited by silymarin in hepatoma cell
ERK↓, human prostate carcinoma cells, silymarin decreased ligand binding to Erb1 135 and NF-kB expression was strongly inhibited by silymarin in hepatoma cell
PSA↓, Treating prostate carcinoma cells with silymarin the levels of PSA were significantly decreased and cell growth was inhibited through decreased CDK activity and induction of Cip1/p21 and Kip1/p27. 1
TumCG↓,
p27↑,
COX2↓, such as anti-COX2 and anti-IL-1α activity, 140 antiangiogenic effects through inhibition of VEGF secretion, upregulation of Insulin like Growth Factor Binding Protein 3 (IGFBP3), 141 and inhibition of androgen receptors.
IL1↓,
VEGF↓,
IGFBP3↑,
AR↓,
STAT3↓, downregulation of the STAT3 pathway which was seen in many cell models.
Telomerase↓, silymarin has the ability to decrease telomerase activity in prostate cancer cells
Cyt‑c↑, mitochondrial cytochrome C release-caspase activation.
Casp↑,
eff↝, Malignant p53 negative cells show only minimal apoptosis when treated with silymarin. Therefore, one conclusion is that silymarin may be useful in tumors with conserved p53.
HDAC↓, inhibit histone deacetylase activity;
HATs↑, increase histone acetyltransferase activity
Zeb1↓, reduce expression of the transcription factor ZEB1
E-cadherin↑, increase expression of E-cadherin;
miR-203↑, increase expression of miR-203
NHE1↓, reduce activation of sodium hydrogen isoform 1 exchanger (NHE1)
MMP2↓, target β catenin and reduce the levels of MMP2 and MMP9
MMP9↓,
PGE2↓, reduce activation of prostaglandin E2
Vim↓, suppress vimentin expression
Wnt↓, inhibit Wnt signaling
angioG↓, Silymarin inhibits angiogenesis.
VEGF↓, VEGF downregulation
*TIMP1↓, Silymarin has the capacity to decrease TIMP1 expression166–168 in mice.
EMT↓, found that silibinin had no effect on EMT. However, the opposite was found in other malignant tissues160–162 where it showed inhibitory effects.
TGF-β↓, Silibinin reduces the expression of TGF β2 in different tumors such as triple negative breast, 174 prostate, and colorectal cancers.
CD44↓, Silibinin decreased CD44 expression and the activation of EGFR (epidermal growth factor receptor)
EGFR↓,
PDGF↓, silibinin had the ability to downregulate PDFG in fibroblasts, thus decreasing proliferation.
*IL8↓, Flavonoids, in general, reduce levels of IL-8. Curcumin, 200 apigenin, 201 and silybin showed the ability to decrease IL-8 levels
SREBP1↓, Silymarin inhibited STAT3 phosphorylation and decreased the expression of intranuclear sterol regulatory element binding protein 1 (SREBP1), decreasing lipid synthesis.
MMP↓, reduced membrane potential and ATP content
ATP↓,
uPA↓, silibinin decreased MMP2, MMP9, and urokinase plasminogen activator receptor level (uPAR) in neuroblastoma cells. uPAR is also a marker of cell invasion.
PD-L1↓, Silibinin inhibits PD-L1 by impeding STAT5 binding in NSCLC.
NOTCH↓, Silybin inhibited Notch signaling in hepatocellular carcinoma cells showing antitumoral effects
*SIRT1↑, Silymarin can also increase SIRT1 expression in other tissues, such as hippocampus, 221 articular chondrocytes, 222 and heart muscle
SIRT1↓, Silymarin seems to act differently in tumors: in lung cancer cells SIRT downregulated SIRT1 and exerted multiple antitumor effects such as reduced adhesion and migration and increased apoptosis.
CA↓, Silymarin has the ability to inhibit CA isoforms CA I and CA II.
Ca+2↑, ilymarin increases mitochondrial release of Ca++ and lowers mitochondrial membrane potential in cancer cell
chemoP↑, Silymarin: Decreasing Side Effects and Toxicity of Chemotherapeutic Drugs
cardioP↑, There is also evidence that it protects the heart from doxorubicin toxicity, however, it is less potent than quercetin in this effect.
Dose↝, oral administration of 240 mg of silybin to 6 healthy volunteers the following results were obtained 377 : maximum\,plasmaconcentration0.34±0.16⁢𝜇⁢g/m⁢L
Half-Life↝, and time to maximum plasma concentration 1.32 ± 0.45 h. Absorption half life 0.17 ± 0.09 h, elimination half life 6.32 ± 3.94 h
BioAv↓, silymarin is not soluble in water and oral administration shows poor absorption in the alimentary tract (approximately 1% in rats,
BioAv↓, Our conclusion is that, from a bioavailability standpoint, it is much easier to achieve migration inhibition, than proliferative reduction.
BioAv↓, Combination with succinate: is available on the market under the trade mark Legalon® (bis hemisuccinate silybin). Combination with phosphatidylcholine:
toxicity↝, 13 g daily per os divided into 3 doses was well tolerated. The most frequent adverse event was asymptomatic liver toxicity.
Half-Life↓, It may be necessary to administer 800 mg 4 times a day because the half-life is short.
ROS↓, its ability as an antioxidant reduces ROS production
FAK↓, Silibinin decreased human osteosarcoma cell invasion through Erk inhibition of a FAK/ERK/uPA/MMP2 pathway

2197- SK,    Shikonin derivatives for cancer prevention and therapy
- Review, Var, NA
ROS↑, This compound accumulates in the mitochondria, which leads to the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), and deregulates intracellular Ca2+ levels.
Ca+2↑,
BAX↑, shikonin alone by increasing the expression of the pro-apoptotic Bax protein and decreasing the expression of the anti-apoptotic Bcl2 protein
Bcl-2↓,
MMP9↓, This treatment also inhibited metastasis by decreasing the expression of MMP-9 and NF-kB p65 without affecting MMP-2 expression.
NF-kB↓,
PKM2↓, Figure 4
Hif1a↓,
NRF2↓,
P53↑,
DNMT1↓,
MDR1↓,
COX2↓,
VEGF↓,
EMT↓,
MMP7↓,
MMP13↓,
uPA↓,
RIP1↑,
RIP3↑,
Casp3↑,
Casp7↑,
Casp9↑,
P21↓,
DFF45↓,
TRAIL↑,
PTEN↑,
mTOR↓,
AR↓,
FAK↓,
Src↓,
Myc↓,
RadioS↑, shikonin acted as a radiosensitizer because of the high ROS production it induced.


Showing Research Papers: 1 to 41 of 41

* indicates research on normal cells as opposed to diseased cells
Total Research Paper Matches: 41

Pathway results for Effect on Cancer / Diseased Cells:


Redox & Oxidative Stress

ATF3↑, 1,   Ferroptosis↑, 2,   GPx4↓, 2,   GSH↓, 1,   GSH↑, 2,   GSR↑, 1,   GSTs↓, 1,   H2O2↑, 1,   HO-1↑, 5,   Iron↑, 1,   lipid-P↓, 2,   lipid-P↑, 2,   MDA↓, 1,   NQO1↑, 1,   NRF2↓, 4,   NRF2↑, 5,   p‑NRF2↓, 1,   ROS↓, 10,   ROS↑, 27,   i-ROS↑, 1,   mt-ROS↑, 1,   SIRT3↑, 1,   SOD↓, 1,   SOD↑, 1,   TrxR↓, 1,  

Metal & Cofactor Biology

Ferritin↓, 1,  

Mitochondria & Bioenergetics

ADP:ATP↑, 1,   AIF↑, 2,   ATP↓, 2,   mt-ATP↓, 1,   CDC2↓, 4,   CDC25↓, 7,   EGF↓, 3,   FGFR1↓, 1,   MEK↓, 4,   p‑MEK↓, 1,   mitResp↓, 1,   MKK7↓, 1,   MMP↓, 17,   mtDam↑, 1,   Raf↓, 5,   XIAP↓, 4,  

Core Metabolism/Glycolysis

12LOX↓, 1,   ACC↑, 2,   AMPK↑, 5,   cMyc↓, 9,   GlucoseCon↓, 1,   GlutMet↓, 1,   Glycolysis↓, 5,   HK2↓, 1,   lactateProd↓, 2,   LDH↑, 1,   LDHA↓, 2,   NADPH↓, 1,   NADPH↑, 2,   PCK1↓, 1,   PDK1↓, 2,   PDK3↑, 1,   PKM2↓, 2,   cl‑PPARα↓, 1,   PPARγ↓, 1,   PPARγ↑, 1,   p‑S6K↓, 1,   SIRT1↓, 1,   SREBP1↓, 1,   TCA↓, 1,  

Cell Death

Akt↓, 21,   p‑Akt↓, 2,   APAF1↑, 1,   Apoptosis↑, 8,   ASK1↑, 1,   BAD↑, 3,   Bak↑, 3,   BAX↑, 17,   BAX⇅, 1,   Bax:Bcl2↑, 2,   Bcl-2↓, 16,   Bcl-xL↓, 7,   BID↑, 1,   BIM↓, 1,   BIM↑, 4,   Casp↑, 6,   Casp12↑, 1,   Casp2↑, 1,   Casp3↓, 4,   Casp3↑, 16,   cl‑Casp3↑, 3,   Casp6↑, 1,   Casp7↑, 2,   Casp8↑, 8,   cl‑Casp8↑, 1,   Casp9↑, 16,   cl‑Casp9↑, 3,   cFLIP↓, 1,   Chk2↓, 1,   Chk2↑, 1,   CK2↓, 1,   Cyt‑c↑, 22,   Diablo↑, 7,   DR4↑, 1,   DR5↑, 7,   Endon↑, 1,   FADD↑, 1,   Fas↑, 5,   FasL↑, 2,   Ferroptosis↑, 2,   HEY1↓, 1,   HGF/c-Met↓, 1,   IAP1↓, 2,   IAP2↓, 2,   iNOS↓, 3,   JNK↓, 3,   JNK↑, 5,   MAPK↓, 9,   MAPK↑, 5,   Mcl-1↓, 7,   MDM2↓, 2,   MDM2↑, 1,   Myc↓, 2,   p27↑, 8,   p38↓, 3,   p38↑, 7,   p‑p38↓, 1,   RIP1↑, 1,   survivin↓, 7,   Telomerase↓, 5,   TRAIL↑, 2,   TRAILR↑, 2,   TumCD↑, 1,   YAP/TEAD↓, 1,  

Kinase & Signal Transduction

HER2/EBBR2↓, 4,   p70S6↓, 1,   RET↓, 1,   Sp1/3/4↓, 2,   TSC2↑, 1,  

Transcription & Epigenetics

cJun↓, 7,   H3↑, 1,   p‑H3↓, 1,   ac‑H3↑, 1,   ac‑H4↑, 1,   HATs↓, 1,   HATs↑, 2,   miR-21↑, 1,   other↓, 1,   pRB↑, 1,   p‑pRB↓, 1,   tumCV↓, 1,  

Protein Folding & ER Stress

CHOP↑, 6,   eIF2α↓, 1,   ER Stress↓, 1,   ER Stress↑, 9,   GRP78/BiP↑, 6,   HSF1↓, 1,   HSP27↓, 2,   HSP70/HSPA5↓, 5,   HSP90↓, 2,   HSPs↓, 1,   IRE1↑, 3,  

Autophagy & Lysosomes

ATG5↑, 1,   Beclin-1↑, 3,   LC3B-II↑, 1,   LC3II↑, 3,   LC3s↑, 1,   p62↓, 1,   TumAuto↑, 3,  

DNA Damage & Repair

ATM↑, 2,   CHK1↓, 1,   CHK1↑, 1,   DFF45↓, 1,   DNAdam↑, 8,   DNMT1↓, 1,   DNMTs↓, 3,   p16↑, 2,   P53↑, 15,   PARP↓, 1,   PARP↑, 2,   cl‑PARP↑, 10,   PARP1↑, 1,   PCNA↓, 7,   γH2AX↑, 1,  

Cell Cycle & Senescence

CDK1↓, 4,   CDK2↓, 15,   CDK2↑, 1,   CDK4↓, 17,   cycA1/CCNA1↓, 3,   CycB/CCNB1↓, 5,   cycD1/CCND1↓, 15,   CycD3↓, 1,   cycE/CCNE↓, 8,   E2Fs↓, 1,   P21↓, 1,   P21↑, 10,   RB1↑, 1,   p‑RB1↓, 1,   Securin↓, 1,   TumCCA↓, 1,   TumCCA↑, 19,  

Proliferation, Differentiation & Cell State

CD133↓, 2,   CD24↓, 1,   CD44↓, 3,   cFos↓, 6,   cMET↓, 1,   CSCs↓, 8,   Diff↓, 1,   EMT↓, 20,   EMT↑, 1,   ERK↓, 12,   ERK↑, 1,   p‑ERK↓, 2,   FGF↓, 1,   FOXO↑, 1,   FOXO3↓, 1,   FOXO3↑, 3,   Gli↓, 1,   Gli1↓, 1,   GSK‐3β↑, 1,   HDAC↓, 6,   HDAC1↓, 1,   HDAC3↓, 1,   HH↓, 1,   IGF-1↓, 1,   IGFBP3↑, 2,   Jun↓, 1,   mTOR↓, 13,   p‑mTOR↓, 2,   mTORC1↓, 4,   p‑mTORC1↓, 1,   mTORC2↓, 3,   n-MYC↓, 1,   Nanog↓, 1,   Nestin↓, 1,   NOTCH↓, 5,   NOTCH1↓, 1,   NOTCH1↑, 1,   NRAS↓, 1,   OCT4↓, 1,   PI3K↓, 17,   PTEN↑, 8,   RAS↓, 5,   Shh↓, 2,   Smo↓, 1,   SOX2↓, 3,   Src↓, 1,   STAT3↓, 10,   p‑STAT3↓, 1,   TCF↑, 1,   TCF-4↓, 2,   TOP1↓, 2,   TOP2↓, 3,   TumCG↓, 4,   Wnt↓, 12,   ZFX↓, 1,  

Migration

AntiAg↓, 1,   AP-1↓, 7,   AXL↓, 1,   CA↓, 1,   Ca+2↑, 11,   CAFs/TAFs↓, 1,   CD31↓, 1,   Cdc42↑, 1,   CLDN2↓, 1,   CXCL12↓, 1,   E-cadherin↓, 2,   E-cadherin↑, 11,   ER-α36↓, 1,   FAK↓, 9,   p‑FAK↓, 1,   Fibronectin↓, 2,   Ki-67↓, 4,   MET↓, 1,   miR-203↑, 1,   MMP-10↓, 1,   MMP1↓, 3,   MMP13↓, 3,   MMP2↓, 26,   MMP3↓, 2,   MMP7↓, 8,   MMP9↓, 30,   MMP9↑, 1,   MMPs↓, 8,   N-cadherin↓, 6,   PDGF↓, 5,   PKCδ↓, 5,   Rho↓, 4,   RIP3↑, 1,   ROCK1↓, 2,   ROCK1↑, 1,   Slug↓, 2,   Snail?, 1,   Snail↓, 6,   TET1↓, 1,   TGF-β↓, 7,   TIMP1↓, 2,   TIMP1↑, 1,   TIMP2↓, 2,   TIMP2↑, 3,   TSP-1↑, 2,   TumCA↓, 2,   TumCI↓, 9,   TumCMig↓, 10,   TumCP↓, 10,   TumMeta↓, 10,   Twist↓, 5,   uPA↓, 40,   uPAR↓, 2,   Vim↓, 10,   Zeb1↓, 3,   ZEB2↓, 1,   ZO-1↑, 1,   β-catenin/ZEB1↓, 11,  

Angiogenesis & Vasculature

angioG↓, 16,   ATF4↓, 1,   ATF4↑, 4,   EGFR↓, 12,   eNOS↓, 1,   Hif1a↓, 12,   NO↓, 1,   NO↑, 1,   PDGFR-BB↓, 1,   VEGF↓, 26,   VEGFR2↓, 7,  

Barriers & Transport

BBB↑, 1,   GLUT1↓, 3,   NHE1↓, 1,   P-gp↓, 1,  

Immune & Inflammatory Signaling

CCR7↓, 1,   CD4+↓, 1,   COX2↓, 24,   CRP↓, 1,   CXCc↓, 1,   CXCR4↓, 2,   ICAM-1↓, 1,   IFN-γ↑, 1,   IKKα↓, 1,   p‑IKKα↓, 1,   IL1↓, 2,   IL10↓, 3,   IL1β↓, 2,   IL2↑, 2,   IL4↓, 1,   IL6↓, 6,   IL8↓, 3,   Inflam↓, 5,   JAK1↓, 1,   JAK2↓, 1,   M2 MC↓, 1,   MCP1↓, 3,   MDSCs↓, 1,   NF-kB↓, 30,   NF-kB↑, 1,   p65↓, 3,   PD-L1↓, 2,   PGE2↓, 8,   PSA↓, 1,   TLR4↓, 1,   TNF-α↓, 5,  

Hormonal & Nuclear Receptors

AR↓, 4,   CDK6↓, 6,  

Drug Metabolism & Resistance

BioAv↓, 9,   BioAv↑, 5,   BioAv↝, 2,   BioEnh↑, 1,   ChemoSen↑, 12,   Dose?, 1,   Dose↓, 1,   Dose↑, 2,   Dose↝, 3,   eff↓, 1,   eff↑, 27,   eff↝, 4,   Half-Life↓, 5,   Half-Life↝, 3,   MDR1↓, 1,   RadioS↑, 5,   selectivity↑, 6,  

Clinical Biomarkers

AR↓, 4,   CRP↓, 1,   E6↓, 2,   E7↓, 2,   EGFR↓, 12,   Ferritin↓, 1,   HER2/EBBR2↓, 4,   IL6↓, 6,   Ki-67↓, 4,   LDH↑, 1,   Myc↓, 2,   PD-L1↓, 2,   PSA↓, 1,  

Functional Outcomes

AntiCan↑, 4,   AntiTum↑, 1,   cardioP↑, 3,   chemoP↑, 4,   chemoPv↑, 3,   hepatoP↑, 3,   neuroP↑, 2,   RenoP↑, 4,   toxicity↑, 1,   toxicity↝, 1,   toxicity∅, 1,   TumVol↓, 1,  
Total Targets: 400

Pathway results for Effect on Normal Cells:


Redox & Oxidative Stress

antiOx↓, 1,   antiOx↑, 11,   Catalase↑, 2,   GPx↑, 2,   GSH↑, 2,   HO-1↑, 1,   MDA↓, 1,   NRF2↑, 5,   Prx↑, 1,   RNS↓, 1,   ROS↓, 6,   SOD↑, 1,   SOD1↑, 1,   SOD2↑, 2,  

Core Metabolism/Glycolysis

p‑cMyc↑, 1,   SIRT1↑, 1,  

Cell Death

Akt↓, 1,   Casp3?, 1,   iNOS↓, 1,   p38↓, 1,  

Transcription & Epigenetics

other↓, 1,  

DNA Damage & Repair

p16↓, 1,   P53↓, 2,  

Cell Cycle & Senescence

E2Fs↑, 1,   P21↓, 1,  

Proliferation, Differentiation & Cell State

ERK↑, 1,   IGF-1R↓, 1,  

Migration

AntiAg↑, 1,   AP-1↓, 1,   MMP2↓, 2,   Rac1↑, 1,   TIMP1↓, 1,   TIMP2↑, 1,   uPA↓, 1,  

Angiogenesis & Vasculature

angioG↓, 1,   PDGFR-BB↓, 1,   VEGF↓, 1,  

Barriers & Transport

BBB↑, 2,  

Immune & Inflammatory Signaling

COX2↓, 1,   IL6↓, 1,   IL8↓, 2,   Inflam↓, 10,   JAK↓, 1,   NF-kB↓, 1,   TNF-α↓, 1,  

Drug Metabolism & Resistance

BioAv↓, 4,   BioAv↑, 1,   BioAv↝, 1,   Dose↝, 1,   Half-Life↝, 1,  

Clinical Biomarkers

IL6↓, 1,  

Functional Outcomes

AntiCan↑, 2,   cardioP↑, 1,   hepatoP↓, 1,   hepatoP↑, 4,   neuroP↑, 5,   toxicity↓, 1,  

Infection & Microbiome

Bacteria↓, 1,  
Total Targets: 58

Scientific Paper Hit Count for: uPA, Urokinase plasminogen activator
11 Fisetin
4 Quercetin
3 Artemisinin
3 Ashwagandha(Withaferin A)
3 Silymarin (Milk Thistle) silibinin
2 Baicalein
2 Berberine
2 EGCG (Epigallocatechin Gallate)
1 Apigenin (mainly Parsley)
1 Carnosic acid
1 Chrysin
1 Propolis -bee glue
1 Curcumin
1 Shilajit/Fulvic Acid
1 Genistein (soy isoflavone)
1 Lycopene
1 Magnolol
1 Naringin
1 Phenethyl isothiocyanate
1 Kaempferol
1 Resveratrol
1 Shikonin
Query results interpretion may depend on "conditions" listed in the research papers.
Such Conditions may include : 
  -low or high Dose
  -format for product, such as nano of lipid formations
  -different cell line effects
  -synergies with other products 
  -if effect was for normal or cancerous cells
Filter Conditions: Pro/AntiFlg:%  IllCat:%  CanType:%  Cells:%  prod#:%  Target#:428  State#:%  Dir#:1
wNotes=on sortOrder:rid,rpid

 

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