D-limonene / TGF-β Cancer Research Results

DL, D-limonene: Click to Expand ⟱
Features:
Limonene, an oil extracted from the peels of citrus fruits. d-Limonene, one of the common terpenes in nature

D-limonene — D-limonene is the naturally dominant citrus-peel enantiomer of limonene, a lipophilic monocyclic monoterpene used as a flavoring/fragrance compound and investigated as an oral anticancer or chemopreventive bioactive. It is best classified as a small-molecule dietary monoterpene / terpene phytochemical rather than an approved oncology drug. Standard abbreviations include DL, d-LIM, and sometimes limonene when the D-enantiomer is implied. Its main natural source is citrus peel oil, especially orange peel oil. Its cancer relevance is supported mainly by preclinical studies plus small human pharmacokinetic and breast-tissue biomarker studies, with no established clinical oncology indication.

Primary mechanisms (ranked):

  1. Disruption of mevalonate-linked prenylation signaling, including Ras/Rho-associated growth and survival signaling.
  2. Mitochondrial apoptosis induction with MMP loss, Bax/Bcl-2 shift, caspase activation, and PARP cleavage.
  3. Cell-cycle suppression, especially reduced cyclin D1 signaling and proliferation arrest in breast-tissue translational studies.
  4. Autophagy-associated stress response that can contribute to apoptosis in some lung and other cancer models.
  5. ROS elevation and antioxidant depletion in cancer cells at active experimental concentrations, with context-dependent cytotoxic redox stress.
  6. Anti-inflammatory signaling modulation, including suppression of NF-κB-linked cytokine pathways.
  7. Anti-angiogenic and anti-metastatic effects, including VEGF-linked effects in selected models.
  8. Chemosensitization in selected models, including reported enhancement of docetaxel or tamoxifen cytotoxicity.

Bioavailability / PK relevance: D-limonene is orally bioavailable but highly lipophilic and extensively metabolized, with perillic acid and dihydroperillic acid among major human metabolites. Human oncology dosing has required gram-scale exposure; a phase I study reported an oral MTD of 8 g/m2/day with gastrointestinal dose-limiting toxicity. Peak plasma concentration (Cmax) for D-limonene ranged from 10.8+/-6.7 to 20.5+/-11.2 microM. Breast-tissue studies show distribution into human breast tissue, supporting local tissue exposure despite limited systemic biomarker effects. 2 g/day oral d-limonene for 2–6 weeks Breast tissue mean 41.3 µg/g tissue ≈ ~303 µM tissue-equivalent

In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: Many anticancer in-vitro studies use concentration ranges that may exceed typical dietary or supplement-level systemic exposure, so direct translation from cell culture is weak unless tissue accumulation or high-dose formulation exposure is demonstrated. Active clinical exposures are more relevant for lipophilic tissue compartments than for plasma-only comparisons. Mechanisms such as cyclin D1 modulation in human breast tissue are more translationally grounded than high-concentration ROS cytotoxicity assays.

Clinical evidence status: Small human / early phase. D-limonene has phase I pharmacokinetic data in advanced solid tumors and short presurgical breast cancer biomarker data, but no large RCT evidence and no regulatory approval as an anticancer therapy. Current use should be considered investigational or adjunct-research context only.

Fresh orange peel concerns: Eating fresh sweet orange peel can provide dietary D-limonene and polyphenols, but practical concerns include pesticide or wax residues and possible citrus-drug interaction caution in medication users. Risk can be minimized by using fresh organic or unwaxed sweet oranges, washing and scrubbing the peel, using mostly outer zest rather than thick pith, and storing grated peel refrigerated or frozen. Maximize D-limonene : Use fresh zest, frozen zest, or freeze-dried peel powder.

D-limonene Cancer Mechanism Matrix

Rank Pathway / Axis Cancer Cells Normal Cells TSF Primary Effect Notes / Interpretation
1 Mevalonate prenylation signaling Ras/Rho prenylation ↓; proliferation ↓ Likely lower impact at dietary exposure G Growth signaling suppression Mechanistically central for monoterpene anticancer biology; strongest relevance where tumors rely on prenylated small GTPase signaling.
2 Mitochondrial apoptosis MMP ↓; Bax ↑; Bcl-2 ↓; caspase-3 ↑; caspase-9 ↑; PARP cleavage ↑ Usually less cytotoxic at comparable non-transformed model exposure G Intrinsic apoptosis induction MMP↓, Bcl-2↓, and Casp3↑ tags; common endpoint across leukemia, colon, lung, and breast cancer models.
3 Cell-cycle and cyclin D1 signaling Cyclin D1 ↓; G1 arrest ↑; proliferation ↓ Limited direct normal-cell evidence G Proliferation arrest Human breast-tissue data make this one of the more translationally credible axes.
4 Autophagy linked apoptosis Autophagy ↑; apoptosis ↑ Context-dependent G Stress-amplified tumor cell death Autophagy appears pro-death in selected models but should be marked model-dependent because autophagy can also be adaptive.
5 Mitochondrial ROS increase ROS ↑; GSH ↓; oxidative stress ↑ Antioxidant protection ↑ in oxidative-injury models R/G Redox stress in cancer cells Useful but concentration-sensitive; cancer-cell ROS findings should not be generalized to all systemic exposures.
6 NRF2 and antioxidant response Mixed or insufficiently defined Antioxidant defense ↑ (context-dependent) G Context-dependent cytoprotection NRF2 is not the core anticancer mechanism for D-limonene; include only when specific studies show NRF2/HO-1 modulation in the model being indexed.
7 NF-κB inflammatory signaling NF-κB linked cytokine signaling ↓; inflammatory survival signaling ↓ Inflammatory injury ↓ R/G Anti-inflammatory modulation More strongly supported in inflammatory disease models than direct oncology trials, but relevant to tumor-promoting inflammation.
8 VEGF angiogenesis and metastasis VEGF signaling ↓; angiogenesis ↓; invasion/metastasis ↓ Potential wound-healing relevance uncertain G Anti-angiogenic and anti-invasive effect Supported mainly by preclinical cancer models and volatile-oil preparations enriched in D-limonene.
9 Glycolysis and HIF-1α Not a primary established axis Not established G Secondary or indirect metabolic effect
10 Chemosensitization Docetaxel effect ↑; tamoxifen effect ↑ (model-dependent) Normal-cell toxicity not consistently increased in available models G Adjunct cytotoxicity enhancement Preclinical adjunct signal only; timing, dose, formulation, and tumor context should be indexed carefully.
11 Clinical Translation Constraint Clinical antitumor efficacy unproven GI intolerance at high oral doses; skin irritation or sensitization possible with concentrated topical exposure G Exposure and evidence limitation Food-flavor GRAS status does not equal oncology-dose safety; clinical data remain small and non-definitive.

TSF legend: P: 0–30 min; R: 30 min–3 hr; G: >3 hr



TGF-β, transforming growth factor-beta: Click to Expand ⟱
Source: HalifaxProj(inhibit) CGL-CS TCGA
Type:
Human malignancies frequently exhibit mutations in the TGF-β pathway, and overactivation of this system is linked to tumor growth by promoting angiogenesis and inhibiting the innate and adaptive antitumor immune responses.
Anti-inflammatory cytokine.
In normal tissues, TGF-β plays an essential role in cell cycle regulation, immune function, and tissue remodeling.
- In early carcinogenesis, TGF-β typically acts as a tumor suppressor by inhibiting cell proliferation and inducing apoptosis.

In advanced cancers, cells frequently become resistant to the growth-inhibitory effects of TGF-β.
- TGF-β then switches roles and promotes tumor progression by stimulating epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), cell invasion, metastasis, and immune evasion.

Non-canonical (Smad-independent) pathways, such as MAPK, PI3K/Akt, and Rho signaling, also contribute to TGF-β-mediated responses.

Elevated levels of TGF-β have been detected in many advanced-stage cancers, including breast, lung, colorectal, pancreatic, and prostate cancers.
 - The switch from a tumor-suppressive to a tumor-promoting role is often associated with increased TGF-β production and activation in the tumor microenvironment.

High TGF-β expression or signaling activity is frequently correlated with aggressive disease features, resistance to therapy, increased metastasis, and poorer overall survival in many cancer types.


Scientific Papers found: Click to Expand⟱
6280- DL,    Biochemical significance of limonene and its metabolites: future prospects for designing and developing highly potent anticancer drugs
- Review, Var, NA
BAX↑, Cyt‑c↑, Casp3↑, Casp9↑, TGF-β↑, Bcl-2↓, VEGF↓, AntiTum↑, *Inflam↓, *Bacteria↓,

Showing Research Papers: 1 to 1 of 1

* indicates research on normal cells as opposed to diseased cells
Total Research Paper Matches: 1

Pathway results for Effect on Cancer / Diseased Cells:


Cell Death

BAX↑, 1,   Bcl-2↓, 1,   Casp3↑, 1,   Casp9↑, 1,   Cyt‑c↑, 1,  

Migration

TGF-β↑, 1,  

Angiogenesis & Vasculature

VEGF↓, 1,  

Functional Outcomes

AntiTum↑, 1,  
Total Targets: 8

Pathway results for Effect on Normal Cells:


Immune & Inflammatory Signaling

Inflam↓, 1,  

Infection & Microbiome

Bacteria↓, 1,  
Total Targets: 2

Scientific Paper Hit Count for: TGF-β, transforming growth factor-beta
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#:68  Target#:304  State#:%  Dir#:2
wNotes=0 sortOrder:rid,rpid

 

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