Boron Cancer Research Results

Bor, Boron: Click to Expand ⟱
Features: micronutrient
Boron is a trace mineral.
Used in treating yeast infections, improving athletic performance, or preventing osteoporosis.

Current research suggests that boric acid can modulate intercellular calcium levels—with potential implications for cancer therapy—by:
-Altering calcium channel activity and calcium influx,
-Modifying downstream calcium-dependent signaling, and
-Inducing apoptotic pathways preferentially in cancer cells due to their altered calcium handling dynamics.
Abnormal increases in [Ca²⁺]ᵢ can trigger mitochondrial dysfunction and activate calcium-dependent apoptotic pathways. Boric acid has been observed in some cell culture studies to induce apoptosis in cancer cells.
In normal cells, modest changes in [Ca²⁺]ᵢ induced by boric acid may not reach a threshold that triggers apoptosis or other stress responses. This could lead to a relative sparing of normal cells compared to cancer cells.

Pathways:
1.Calcium Signaling Pathway
In many cases, boron appears to normalize dysregulated calcium levels in cancer cells, often leading to an increase in calcium levels that can trigger calcium-dependent apoptotic pathways. 2.Apoptotic Pathways (Intrinsic and Extrinsic).
Direction of Modulation:
• Boron compounds may enhance the activation of apoptotic cascades.
• Typically, an increase in intracellular calcium (as noted above) can further lead to mitochondrial dysfunction, cytochrome c release, and subsequent caspase activation, thereby promoting apoptosis.
3.PI3K/AKT/mTOR Pathway
• Some studies indicate that boron-containing compounds can inhibit this pathway.
• Inhibition of PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling reduces survival signals and can decrease cellular proliferation and growth in tumor cell.
4.MAPK/ERK Pathway
Boron may modulate the MAPK/ERK cascade by either dampening overactive mitogenic signals or altering the stress response.
• This modulation can lead to reduced proliferation signals and may promote cell cycle arrest in cancer cells.
5.NF-κB Signaling Pathway
• Some reports indicate that boron compounds can suppress NF-κB activity.
• This suppression might be achieved indirectly through modulation of upstream signals (such as changes in calcium or the cellular redox status) leading to decreased transcription of pro-survival and pro-inflammatory genes.
6.Wnt/β-Catenin Pathway
• Inhibition of Wnt/β-catenin signaling may interfere with proliferation and the maintenance of cancer stem cell populations.

ROS:
-ROS induction may be dose related.
-Some studies report that when boron compounds are combined with other treatments (like chemotherapy or radiotherapy), there is a synergistic increase in ROS generation.
Boron’s effects in a cancer context generally lean toward:
• Normalizing dysregulated calcium signaling to push cells toward apoptotic death
• Inhibiting pro-survival pathways such as PI3K/AKT/mTOR and NF-κB

(1) is essential for the growth and maintenance of bone;
(2) greatly improves wound healing;
(3) beneficially impacts the body's use of estrogen, testosterone, and vitamin D;
(4) boosts magnesium absorption;
(5) reduces levels of inflammatory biomarkers, such as high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP) and tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α);
(6) raises levels of antioxidant enzymes, such as superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalase, and glutathione peroxidase;
(7) protects against pesticide-induced oxidative stress and heavy-metal toxicity;
(8) improves the brains electrical activity, cognitive performance, and short-term memory for elders;
(9) influences the formation and activity of key biomolecules, such as S-adenosyl methionine (SAM-e) and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD(+));
(10) has demonstrated preventive and therapeutic effects in a number of cancers, such as prostate, cervical, and lung cancers, and multiple and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma; and
(11) may help ameliorate the adverse effects of traditional chemotherapeutic agents.

-Note half-life 21 hrs average
BioAv very high, 85-100%
Pathways:
- induce ROS productionin cancer cells, while reducing ROS in normal cells.
- ROS↑ related: MMP↓(ΔΨm), ER Stress↑, UPR↑, GRP78↑, Ca+2↑,(contrary) Cyt‑c↑, Caspases↑, DNA damage↑, cl-PARP↑,(contrary) HSP↓,
- Debateable if Lowers AntiOxidant defense in Cancer Cells: NRF2↓(most contrary), SOD↓(some contrary), GSH↓, Catalase↓(some contrary), HO1↓(contrary), GPx↓(some contrary)
- Raises AntiOxidant defense in Normal Cells: ROS↓, NRF2↑, SOD↑, GSH↑, Catalase↑,
- lowers Inflammation : NF-kB↓, COX2↓, Pro-Inflammatory Cytokines : NLRP3↓, IL-1β↓, TNF-α↓, IL-6↓,
- inhibit Growth/Metastases : TumMeta↓, TumCG↓, EMT↓, IGF-1↓, VEGF↓, RhoA↓, NF-κB↓, TGF-β↓, α-SMA↓, ERK↓
- reactivate genes thereby inhibiting cancer cell growth : HDAC↓, P53↑, HSP↓,
- some indication of Cell cycle arrest : TumCCA↑, cyclin D1↓, cyclin E↓, CDK2↓, CDK4↓, CDK6↓,
- inhibits Migration/Invasion : TumCMig↓, TumCI↓, TNF-α↓, ERK↓, EMT↓,
- small indication of inhibiting glycolysis : HIF-1α↓, cMyc↓, GRP78↑, Glucose↓,
- small indication of inhibiting angiogenesis↓ : VEGF↓, HIF-1α↓, EGFR↓,
- Others: PI3K↓, AKT↓, JAK↓, STAT↓, Wnt↓, β-catenin↓, AMPK, ERK↓, - SREBP (related to cholesterol).
- Synergies: chemo-sensitization, chemoProtective, RadioSensitizer, RadioProtective, Others(review target notes), Neuroprotective, Cognitive, Renoprotection, Hepatoprotective, CardioProtective,

- Selectivity: Cancer Cells vs Normal Cells

Boron — Boron is a trace element; in human systemic biology its dominant freely circulating simple inorganic form is boric acid. In this context it is best classified as a micronutrient/exposure class rather than a single anticancer drug entity, although pharmacologic boric acid, boron-delivery agents for boron neutron capture therapy, and synthetic boron-containing drugs represent distinct therapeutic subcategories. Standard abbreviations include B and BA (boric acid). Natural dietary boron is derived mainly from plant foods, while experimental oncology literature most often studies boric acid or specialized boron carriers. The most defensible cancer relevance is preclinical for oral/systemic boric acid, whereas clinically validated boron use exists mainly in BNCT with borofalan (10B), which is a separate radiation-linked modality rather than ordinary nutritional boron supplementation.

Primary mechanisms (ranked):

  1. Calcium-signaling modulation, especially altered intracellular Ca²⁺ release/homeostasis that can impair proliferation and favor growth arrest or apoptosis in some tumor models.
  2. Concentration-dependent redox stress with mitochondrial dysfunction and apoptosis at pharmacologic boric-acid exposures.
  3. ER-stress / UPR / autophagy coupling (secondary; model-dependent), contributing to cytostasis or cell death in some recent cell-line studies.
  4. Suppression of selected pro-survival and inflammatory signaling axes such as NF-κB, ERK, and related metastatic programs (context-dependent; less consistently established than Ca²⁺ and redox effects).
  5. Weak epigenetic enzyme interaction, including HDAC-related effects, mechanistically plausible but not yet a core translational driver for simple boric acid.
  6. For boron-delivery oncology platforms, neutron-capture radiosensitization is the clinically validated mechanism, but this applies to BNCT carriers such as borofalan (10B), not to routine dietary boron supplementation.

Bioavailability / PK relevance: Oral boric acid is very well absorbed, not metabolized, distributes largely with body water, and is cleared predominantly in urine; systemic boron exposure is therefore achievable, but renal function is a key determinant of safety. Bone can retain boron longer than soft tissues. For ordinary supplements, exposure is limited by tolerability and reproductive/developmental safety ceilings rather than by poor absorption.

In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: Common mechanistic cell-culture studies often use ~0.1–1 mM for signaling effects and several mM for stronger oxidative/apoptotic effects; normal human plasma boron is usually only ~10–20 µM. Thus, many direct anticancer in-vitro effects likely require exposures above usual nutritional/systemic levels achievable with standard oral supplementation. BNCT is different because efficacy depends on selective tumor boron delivery plus neutron irradiation, not on free systemic boron concentration alone.

Clinical evidence status: Oral/systemic boron or boric acid as an anticancer agent remains preclinical, with observational nutrition data only and no established cancer-treatment trials supporting routine use. In contrast, boron neutron capture therapy is a clinically deployed adjunct/local treatment platform in Japan for selected unresectable locally advanced or locally recurrent head and neck cancers when delivered with borofalan (10B) and dedicated neutron-irradiation systems.

Mechanistic matrix: Boron Pathways for Cancer vs Normal cells

Rank Pathway / Axis Cancer Cells Normal Cells TSF Primary Effect Notes / Interpretation
1 Intracellular Ca²⁺ handling Ca²⁺ release/signaling ↓ or dysregulated; proliferation ↓ ↔ / context-dependent R Cytostatic signaling disruption Best-supported direct mechanism for simple boric acid. In prostate-cancer models, boric acid inhibited stored Ca²⁺ release rather than simply raising Ca²⁺. This makes the broad claim “Ca²⁺↑” too simplistic.
2 Mitochondrial redox stress and apoptosis ROS ↑, ΔΨm ↓, Cyt-c ↑, caspases ↑ (high concentration only) ↔ / possible ROS ↓ at low physiologic exposure R-G Apoptosis / loss of viability Frequently observed at pharmacologic boric-acid concentrations, especially in the mM range. Redox effects appear dose-dependent and may reverse relative to low-dose antioxidant physiology.
3 ER stress and UPR ER stress ↑, UPR ↑, autophagy ↑ (model-dependent) G Cytostasis or apoptosis support Supported by newer cell-line work; likely secondary to ionic/redox stress rather than a universally primary boron target.
4 NRF2 and antioxidant defense NRF2 ↓ / antioxidant reserve ↓ (high concentration only) NRF2 ↑ / antioxidant support ↑ (low exposure, context-dependent) G Redox bifurcation Boron/boric acid can look antioxidant in normal physiology yet pro-oxidant in tumor cells at higher concentrations. This is one of the most concentration-sensitive axes in the literature.
5 NF-κB inflammatory survival axis NF-κB ↓ Inflammatory tone ↓ G Reduced survival / inflammatory signaling Plausible and repeatedly reported, but usually downstream/contextual rather than the first mechanistic event.
6 MAPK ERK proliferative signaling ERK ↓ (context-dependent) G Growth restraint Seen in some models, but not yet robust enough to rank above Ca²⁺ and redox mechanisms.
7 EMT migration metastasis programs Migration ↓ / EMT ↓ (weak to moderate; model-dependent) G Anti-invasive tendency Antimetastatic claims exist, but the evidence is less mature and not fully consistent across tumor systems.
8 HDAC related epigenetic effects HDAC ↓ (weak / indirect / not tumor-selective) HDAC ↓ possible G Potential transcriptional reprogramming Mechanistically interesting, but simple boric acid is not currently an established HDAC-class anticancer agent. Stronger boron-based HDAC inhibitors are separate medicinal-chemistry entities.
9 Radiosensitization via boron neutron capture Tumor-localized lethal particle generation (requires external trigger) Relative sparing if tumor-selective boron delivery achieved R Localized cytocidal radiotherapy Clinically validated for BNCT with dedicated boron carriers such as borofalan (10B). This is translationally important, but distinct from nutritional boron or generic boric-acid supplementation.
10 Clinical Translation Constraint Many in-vitro anticancer effects require supraphysiologic exposure Safety ceiling limits systemic escalation G Narrow translational window for simple oral boron High oral absorption is not the bottleneck; the main constraints are exposure-response mismatch, renal clearance, reproductive/developmental toxicity concerns, and lack of oncology trial evidence for ordinary boron supplementation.
11 Glutathione (GSH) homeostasis ↓ GSH availability ↔ maintained Secondary Reduced antioxidant capacity GSH depletion arises from impaired synthesis and NADPH support in cancer cells

P: 0–30 min

R: 30 min–3 hr

G: >3 hr

Distinct from compounds of main Redox Driver
| Compound            | ROS ↑ mechanism             | Category            |
| ------------------- | --------------------------- | ------------------- |
| PEITC               | Direct electrophilic stress | Redox driver        |
| Selenium (selenite) | Redox cycling               | Redox driver        |
| Thymoquinone        | Quinone cycling             | Redox driver        |
| **Boron**           | Metabolic redox imbalance   | **Secondary redox** |



Scientific Papers found: Click to Expand⟱
735- Bor,    Boric Acid Alters the Expression of DNA Double Break Repair Genes in MCF-7-Derived Breast Cancer Stem Cells
- in-vitro, BC, NA
BRCA1↑, BRCA2↑, ATM↓,
734- Bor,    Boric Acid Affects the Expression of DNA Double-Strand Break Repair Factors in A549 Cells and A549 Cancer Stem Cells: An In Vitro Study
- in-vitro, Lung, A549
ATM↓, Casp3↑, E-cadherin↑,
733- Bor,    The analysis of boric acid effect on epithelial-mesenchymal transition of CD133 + CD117 + lung cancer stem cells
- in-vitro, Lung, NA
Snail↑, ITGB1↑, ITGA5↑, COL1A1↓, LAMA5↑, MMP3↓, Vim↓, E-cadherin↑, EMT↓, Zeb1↑,
732- Bor,    Boron's neurophysiological effects and tumoricidal activity on glioblastoma cells with implications for clinical treatment
eff↑, IGF-1↝, Glycolysis↝,
731- Bor,    Protective Effect of Boric Acid Against Ochratoxin A-Induced Toxic Effects in Human Embryonal Kidney Cells (HEK293): A Study on Cytotoxic, Genotoxic, Oxidative, and Apoptotic Effects
- in-vitro, Nor, HEK293
*ROS↓,
730- Bor,  Cisplatin,    The Effect of Boric Acid and Borax on Oxidative Stress, Inflammation, ER Stress and Apoptosis in Cisplatin Toxication and Nephrotoxicity Developing as a Result of Toxication
- in-vivo, NA, NA
*ROS↓, *Inflam↓, RenoP↑,
729- Bor,    Promising potential of boron compounds against Glioblastoma: In Vitro antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and anticancer studies
- in-vitro, GBM, U87MG - in-vivo, Nor, HaCaT
TOS↑, TumCG↓, MDA↑, SOD↑, Catalase↑, TAC↓, GSH↓, BRAF↑, MAPK↓, PTEN↓, Raf↓, *toxicity↓,
728- Bor,    Boric Acid and Borax Protect Human Lymphocytes from Oxidative Stress and Genotoxicity Induced by 3-Monochloropropane-1,2-diol
other↓,
727- Bor,  RSL3,  erastin,    Enhancement of ferroptosis by boric acid and its potential use as chemosensitizer in anticancer chemotherapy
- in-vitro, Liver, HepG2
ROS↑, GSH↓, TBARS↑, Ferroptosis↑, ChemoSen↑,
726- Bor,    Redox Mechanisms Underlying the Cytostatic Effects of Boric Acid on Cancer Cells—An Issue Still Open
- Review, NA, NA
NAD↝, SAM-e↝, PSA↓, IGF-1↓, Cyc↓, P21↓, p‑MEK↓, p‑ERK↓, ROS↑, SOD↓, Catalase↓, MDA↑, GSH↓, IL1↓, IL6↓, TNF-α↓, BRAF↝, MAPK↝, PTEN↝, PI3K/Akt↝, eIF2α↑, ATF4↑, ATF6↑, NRF2↑, BAX↑, BID↑, Casp3↑, Casp9↑, Bcl-2↓, Bcl-xL↓,
725- Bor,    Boric acid exert anti-cancer effect in poorly differentiated hepatocellular carcinoma cells via inhibition of AKT signaling pathway
- in-vitro, HCC, NA
tumCV↓, Apoptosis↑, TumAuto↑, p‑Akt↓,

Showing Research Papers: 101 to 111 of 111
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* indicates research on normal cells as opposed to diseased cells
Total Research Paper Matches: 111

Pathway results for Effect on Cancer / Diseased Cells:


Redox & Oxidative Stress

Catalase↓, 1,   Catalase↑, 1,   Ferroptosis↑, 1,   GSH↓, 3,   MDA↑, 2,   NRF2↑, 1,   ROS↑, 2,   SAM-e↝, 1,   SOD↓, 1,   SOD↑, 1,   TAC↓, 1,   TBARS↑, 1,   TOS↑, 1,  

Mitochondria & Bioenergetics

p‑MEK↓, 1,   Raf↓, 1,  

Core Metabolism/Glycolysis

Glycolysis↝, 1,   NAD↝, 1,   PI3K/Akt↝, 1,  

Cell Death

p‑Akt↓, 1,   Apoptosis↑, 1,   BAX↑, 1,   Bcl-2↓, 1,   Bcl-xL↓, 1,   BID↑, 1,   Casp3↑, 2,   Casp9↑, 1,   Ferroptosis↑, 1,   MAPK↓, 1,   MAPK↝, 1,  

Transcription & Epigenetics

other↓, 1,   tumCV↓, 1,  

Protein Folding & ER Stress

ATF6↑, 1,   eIF2α↑, 1,  

Autophagy & Lysosomes

TumAuto↑, 1,  

DNA Damage & Repair

ATM↓, 2,   BRCA1↑, 1,   BRCA2↑, 1,  

Cell Cycle & Senescence

Cyc↓, 1,   P21↓, 1,  

Proliferation, Differentiation & Cell State

BRAF↑, 1,   BRAF↝, 1,   EMT↓, 1,   p‑ERK↓, 1,   IGF-1↓, 1,   IGF-1↝, 1,   PTEN↓, 1,   PTEN↝, 1,   TumCG↓, 1,  

Migration

COL1A1↓, 1,   E-cadherin↑, 2,   ITGA5↑, 1,   ITGB1↑, 1,   LAMA5↑, 1,   MMP3↓, 1,   Snail↑, 1,   Vim↓, 1,   Zeb1↑, 1,  

Angiogenesis & Vasculature

ATF4↑, 1,  

Immune & Inflammatory Signaling

IL1↓, 1,   IL6↓, 1,   PSA↓, 1,   TNF-α↓, 1,  

Drug Metabolism & Resistance

ChemoSen↑, 1,   eff↑, 1,  

Clinical Biomarkers

BRAF↑, 1,   BRAF↝, 1,   BRCA1↑, 1,   IL6↓, 1,   PSA↓, 1,  

Functional Outcomes

RenoP↑, 1,  
Total Targets: 70

Pathway results for Effect on Normal Cells:


Redox & Oxidative Stress

ROS↓, 2,  

Immune & Inflammatory Signaling

Inflam↓, 1,  

Functional Outcomes

toxicity↓, 1,  
Total Targets: 3

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#:46  Target#:%  State#:%  Dir#:%
wNotes=0 sortOrder:rid,rpid

 

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