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| Cucurbitacin, produced by some plants, especially Cucurbitaceae, as a defense against herbivores. Toxic compound that can form in plants in the gourd family (Zucchini, Squash). Cucurbitacins have been shown to inhibit the growth of various cancer cell lines by interfering with cell cycle progression. Cucurbitacins can affect various signaling pathways involved in cancer progression, such as the NF-κB and STAT3 pathways, which are often dysregulated in cancer. Cucurbitacin — Cucurbitacins are a family of highly oxygenated tetracyclic triterpenoids produced mainly by Cucurbitaceae plants as bitter defensive metabolites. They are best treated as a compound class rather than a single molecule; common research abbreviations include CuB, CuD, CuE, CuI, CuQ, and Cuc IIa. Their formal classification is plant-derived triterpenoid natural products with experimental cytotoxic, cytostatic, anti-inflammatory, and pathway-modulating activity. In oncology, cucurbitacin B, E, I, Q, and IIa are the most commonly studied members. Mechanistic profile dominated by ACLY↓, STAT3/JAK signaling, cytoskeletal disruption, cell-cycle arrest, apoptosis, and context-dependent chemosensitization. Primary mechanisms (ranked):
Bioavailability / PK relevance: Oral systemic translation is constrained by low solubility, low oral bioavailability, tissue distribution, narrow therapeutic window, and nonspecific toxicity. Cucurbitacin B has reported absolute oral bioavailability of approximately 10% in rat PK work, so in-vitro potency should not be assumed to translate directly to safe systemic exposure. Although CuB displays potent activity against tumor cells, its non-selective toxicity has limited its clinical applications. In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: Most anticancer studies use purified cucurbitacins at nanomolar to micromolar concentrations in cell lines and xenografts. Common in-vitro exposure levels may exceed reliably achievable and tolerable human systemic exposure from oral ingestion. This is a concentration-driven small-molecule class, not a field-based or device-based modality. Clinical evidence status: Preclinical. Evidence is substantial across cell-line and animal oncology models, but there is no established FDA, EMA, or Health Canada approved cucurbitacin anticancer drug. Human use is limited by toxicity concerns, lack of standardized clinical oncology dosing, and absence of robust cancer RCT evidence. Cucurbitacin Cancer Mechanism Table
TSF legend: P: 0–30 min R: 30 min–3 hr G: >3 hr |
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| Hypoxia-Inducible-Factor 1A (HIF1A gene, HIF1α, HIF-1α protein product) -Dominantly expressed under hypoxia(low oxygen levels) in solid tumor cells -HIF1A induces the expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) -High HIF-1α expression is associated with Poor prognosis -Low HIF-1α expression is associated with Better prognosis -Functionally, HIF-1α is reported to regulate glycolysis, whilst HIF-2α regulates genes associated with lipoprotein metabolism. -Cancer cells produce HIF in response to hypoxia in order to generate more VEGF that promote angiogenesis Key mediators of aerobic glycolysis regulated by HIF-1α. -GLUT-1 → regulation of the flux of glucose into cells. -HK2 → catalysis of the first step of glucose metabolism. -PKM2 → regulation of rate-limiting step of glycolysis. -Phosphorylation of PDH complex by PDK → blockage of OXPHOS and promotion of aerobic glycolysis. -LDH (LDHA): Rapid ATP production, conversion of pyruvate to lactate; HIF-1α Inhibitors: -Curcumin: disruption of signaling pathways that stabilize HIF-1α (ie downregulate). -Resveratrol: downregulate HIF-1α protein accumulation under hypoxic conditions. -EGCG: modulation of upstream signaling pathways, leading to decreased HIF-1α activity. -Emodin: reduce HIF-1α expression. (under hypoxia). -Apigenin: inhibit HIF-1α accumulation. |
| 6202- | Cuc, | Cucurbitacins as potential anticancer agents: new insights on molecular mechanisms |
| - | Review, | Var, | 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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