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| Cinnamon is a spice from inner bark from several tree species. Cinnamon refers primarily to bark extracts from Cinnamomum verum (Ceylon cinnamon) and Cinnamomum cassia. Bioactive constituents include cinnamaldehyde, cinnamic acid derivatives, procyanidins, and polyphenols. In cancer models, cinnamon extracts and cinnamaldehyde are most frequently reported to exert anti-proliferative, pro-apoptotic, anti-inflammatory, and anti-angiogenic effects. Mechanistic themes include suppression of NF-κB and PI3K/AKT signaling, modulation of MAPK pathways, induction of mitochondrial apoptosis, and context-dependent ROS elevation in tumor cells. Some studies report inhibition of HIF-1α and glycolytic signaling, though cinnamon is not a direct enzymatic Warburg inhibitor. Effects vary substantially depending on species (Ceylon vs Cassia), preparation (aqueous vs ethanol extract), and dose. Human oncology data remain limited and largely preclinical. -Cinnamaldehyde (CA), an active compound derived from the natural plant cinnamon. CA is an aromatic aldehyde compound, constituting approximately 65% of cinnamon extract - See also HCA, a derivative of CA Biological activity, cinnamaldehyde from Ceylon cinnamon: Antimicrobial activity: 10-50 μM Antioxidant activity: 10-100 μM Anti-inflammatory activity: 20-50 μM Anticancer activity: 50-100 μM Cardiovascular health: 20-50 μM 5 g of Ceylon cinnamon might contain roughly between 30 mg and 150 mg of cinnamaldehyde, with an approximate mid-range estimate of about 70 mg. Assuming a moderate supplemental intake 50–200 mg of cinnamaldehyde, peak plasma levels might be anticipated in the vicinity of 1–10 μM. Primary mechanisms (ranked):
Bioavailability / PK relevance: Cinnamon is compositionally variable; cinnamaldehyde is lipophilic, rapidly absorbed and metabolized, and systemic exposure after oral intake is likely much lower than many in-vitro anticancer concentrations. Extract formulation, species, dose, food matrix, and first-pass metabolism materially affect exposure. In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: Many anticancer studies use extract concentrations or cinnamaldehyde levels that may exceed achievable free systemic exposure after ordinary oral intake. Local gastrointestinal exposure may be more plausible than systemic tumor exposure. Clinical evidence status: Preclinical for oncology. Cinnamon has human RCT/meta-analysis literature mainly in metabolic/inflammatory endpoints, but no established clinical anticancer indication. Translational constraints include variable extract chemistry, cassia coumarin hepatotoxicity risk, CYP/herb-drug interaction potential, and uncertain tumor-achievable exposure. Cinnamon Cancer Mechanism Table
TSF: P = 0–30 min (redox and early signaling effects), R = 30 min–3 hr (acute pathway modulation), G = >3 hr (apoptosis, angiogenesis, phenotype changes). |
| Source: TCGA |
| Type: Proapototic |
| TP53 is the most commonly mutated gene in human cancer. TP53 is a gene that encodes for the p53 tumor suppressor protein ; TP73 (Chr.1p36.33) and TP63 (Chr.3q28) genes that encode transcription factors p73 and p63, respectively, are TP53 homologous structures. p53 is a crucial tumor suppressor protein that plays a significant role in regulating the cell cycle, maintaining genomic stability, and preventing tumor formation. It is often referred to as the "guardian of the genome" due to its role in protecting cells from DNA damage and stress. TP53 gene, which encodes the p53 protein, is one of the most frequently mutated genes in human cancers. Overexpression of MDM2, an inhibitor of p53, can lead to decreased p53 activity even in the presence of wild-type p53. In some cancers, particularly those with mutant p53, there may be an overexpression of the p53 protein. Cancers with overexpression: Breast, lung, colorectal, overian, head and neck, Esophageal, bladder, pancreatic, and liver. |
| 6164- | Cin, | Advances in pharmacological effects and mechanism of action of cinnamaldehyde |
| - | Review, | Var, | NA | - | Review, | PSA, | NA |
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
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