Dandelion Root / OXPHOS Cancer Research Results

DRE, Dandelion Root: Click to Expand ⟱
Features:
Dandelion root (Taraxacum officinale)
-Various phytochemicals, including flavonoids and phenolic compounds, which have antioxidant properties.
-Root extract can induce apoptosis
-Anti-inflammatory properties
-Immune System Support
Dosage: dried root 2-8g/d. Extract 250-500mg/d Tea 1-2g, 1-3x/d
aqueous Dandelion flower extracts (DFE), dandelion leaf extract (DLE), and dandelion root extract (DRE) may have different effects.
Common Names: Blowball, Puffball, Lion's tooth, Pu gong ying, Swine snout, Wild endive
Taraxacum officinale is rich in flavonoids (e.g., luteolin, quercetin glycosides), phenolic acids (chicoric, chlorogenic, and caffeic acids), terpenoids (taraxasterol, taraxerol), sesquiterpene lactones (taraxinic acid β-D-glucopyranosyl ester), and phytosterols (β-sitosterol, cycloartenol)

Dandelion Root — Dandelion root is the root material or root extract of Taraxacum officinale, a polychemical botanical preparation containing phenolic acids, flavonoids, sesquiterpene lactones, triterpenes, inulin-type carbohydrates, and other phytochemicals. It is formally classified as a botanical dietary supplement or herbal extract rather than a defined single-molecule oncology drug. Standard abbreviations include DRE for dandelion root extract and T. officinale for the plant species. Current oncology relevance is mainly preclinical, with repeated in-vitro and xenograft signals but no completed convincing human cancer efficacy trial.

Primary mechanisms (ranked):

  1. Selective programmed cell death induction in cancer cells, especially extrinsic caspase-8 signaling with downstream mitochondrial destabilization and caspase execution.
  2. Mitochondrial stress and pro-death autophagy, including loss of mitochondrial integrity and context-dependent mitochondrial ROS involvement.
  3. Multi-pathway growth suppression through cell-cycle disruption, PI3K-Akt/JAK-STAT/PPAR pathway modulation, and reduced survival signaling.
  4. Anti-invasive and anti-metastatic signaling, including reduced migration/invasion phenotypes and reduced MMP-9/IL-1β expression in some models.
  5. Chemosensitization or adjunctive enhancement in preclinical models, especially with taxol and mitoxantrone in prostate cancer models.
  6. Anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects in non-cancer contexts; these are biologically relevant but not the central cancer-killing mechanism.

Bioavailability / PK relevance: Dandelion root extract is not a standardized single active agent, so formal human PK is not well established. Oral use is plausible as a botanical preparation, but systemic exposure to the same complex extract composition used in cell culture is unknown. Inulin-rich root material may also act partly through gastrointestinal or microbiome-facing exposure rather than direct plasma-equivalent exposure.

In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: Many anticancer experiments use crude extract concentrations in the mg/mL range and exposure windows of 24–96 hours. These concentrations should not be assumed to be systemically achievable after oral use. Colorectal and gastrointestinal tumor models may have relatively better luminal-exposure plausibility than distant solid-tumor systemic exposure, but clinical translation remains unproven.

Clinical evidence status: Preclinical. Evidence includes cell-line studies, some xenograft studies, and case-report-level human observations. A phase I cancer trial effort was reported as Health Canada-approved/recruiting, but there is no clear completed trial demonstrating cancer efficacy. It should not be treated as an established anticancer therapy.

Safety / deployment status: Dandelion is widely marketed as a food/herbal dietary supplement and is generally considered likely safe at food-level intake, but concentrated medicinal doses have less safety evidence. Important constraints include possible allergy in Asteraceae-sensitive individuals, theoretical interactions with antidiabetic, anticoagulant/antiplatelet, lithium, diuretic, and other medications, and uncertainty in pregnancy or breastfeeding. Hormone-sensitive cancer caution is reasonable because some preclinical evidence suggests estrogenic activity and possible stimulation of hormone-sensitive breast cancer models.

Dandelion Root Cancer Mechanism Table

Rank Pathway / Axis Cancer Cells Normal Cells TSF Primary Effect Notes / Interpretation
1 Extrinsic apoptosis and caspase activation ↑ caspase-8, ↑ Annexin V positivity, ↑ programmed cell death ↔ or lower toxicity in tested PBMCs, fibroblasts, colon mucosa, and mammary epithelial cells G Selective cancer-cell apoptosis Most central recurring anticancer signal across melanoma, leukemia, colorectal, pancreatic, prostate, and breast models; strongest evidence remains in vitro.
2 Mitochondrial destabilization ↓ mitochondrial integrity, ↓ mitochondrial membrane potential, ↑ downstream death signaling ↔ or relatively spared in several comparator normal-cell models G Amplifies intrinsic death execution Mitochondrial injury appears downstream of extrinsic death signaling in some leukemia models and more direct in melanoma/pancreatic models.
3 Pro-death autophagy ↑ autophagy with apoptosis linkage ↔ uncertain G Contributes to programmed cell death Reported in CMML and pancreatic cancer studies; autophagy direction should be interpreted as pro-death in those models, not automatically cytoprotective.
4 Cell cycle arrest ↑ S phase and G2/M accumulation, ↓ proliferation ↔ or less affected in tested normal mammary epithelial cells G Restricts proliferation Best supported in newer breast cancer fractionation/proteomics work; extract-specific and concentration-dependent.
5 PI3K-Akt and JAK-STAT survival signaling ↓ PI3K/Akt-related survival proteins, ↓ JAK/STAT-associated signaling markers (model-dependent) ↔ uncertain G Reduces survival signaling Mechanistic support is strongest in MDA-MB-231 fraction studies; requires caution because crude extracts and fractions differ substantially.
6 Mitochondrial ROS increase secondary ↑ ROS (context-dependent), ↑ oxidative mitochondrial stress ↔ uncertain; antioxidant effects may occur in normal inflammatory injury models R/G Stress-mediated death amplification ROS is not uniformly the primary DRE mechanism; in prostate work, DRE apoptosis was described as caspase-dependent while lemongrass was more ROS-dependent.
7 Migration invasion and metastasis markers ↓ migration, ↓ invasion, ↓ MMP-9, ↓ IL-1β, ↑ KAI1 (model-dependent) ↔ uncertain G Anti-invasive phenotype Observed in breast and pediatric/neuroblastoma models; translational strength is lower than the apoptosis signal.
8 Chemosensitization ↑ taxol-induced apoptosis, ↑ mitoxantrone-induced apoptosis, ↓ xenograft tumor burden with oral extract in prostate models ↔ or reduced toxicity signal in selected comparator normal-cell assays G Adjunctive enhancement Preclinical adjunct signal only; drug interaction risk means this should not be assumed safe with chemotherapy without oncology supervision.
9 Inflammation and NF-κB linked signaling ↓ inflammatory signaling markers (context-dependent) ↓ inflammatory injury markers in non-cancer models G Anti-inflammatory modulation Relevant to tumor microenvironment hypotheses but less directly established as a dominant cancer-cell killing mechanism for root extract.
10 NRF2 antioxidant axis ↔ insufficient direct cancer-specific evidence for root extract ↑ antioxidant defense may occur in injury/metabolic models (context-dependent) G Not a core cancer axis Do not tag NRF2 as a primary DRE anticancer mechanism unless a specific study directly supports it in the target cancer model.
11 Clinical Translation Constraint High in-vitro extract concentrations; variable extract chemistry; no validated human anticancer exposure target Food-level safety generally favorable but concentrated-dose interaction and allergy concerns remain G Limits clinical inference Evidence is promising but mostly preclinical; oral dosing cannot be translated directly from mg/mL cell-culture exposure.

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



OXPHOS, Oxidative phosphorylation: Click to Expand ⟱
Source:
Type:
Oxidative phosphorylation (or phosphorylation) is the fourth and final step in cellular respiration.
Alterations in phosphorylation pathways result in serious outcomes in cancer. Many signalling pathways including Tyrosine kinase, MAP kinase, Cadherin-catenin complex, Cyclin-dependent kinase etc. are major players of the cell cycle and deregulation in their phosphorylation-dephosphorylation cascade has been shown to be manifested in the form of various types of cancers.
Many tumors exhibit a well-known metabolic shift known as the Warburg effect, where glycolysis is favored over OxPhos even in the presence of oxygen. However, this is not universal.
Many cancers, including certain subpopulations like cancer stem cells, still rely on OXPHOS for energy production, biosynthesis, and survival.

– In several cancers, especially during metastasis or in tumors with high metabolic plasticity, OxPhos can remain active or even be upregulated to meet energy demands.

In some cancers, high OxPhos activity correlates with aggressive features, resistance to standard therapies, and poor outcomes, particularly when tumor cells exploit mitochondrial metabolism for survival and metastasis.

– Conversely, low OxPhos activity can be associated with a reliance on glycolysis, which is also linked with rapid tumor growth and certain adverse prognostic features.

Inhibiting oxidative phosphorylation is not a universal strategy against all cancers. Targeting OXPHOS can potentially disrupt the metabolic flexibility of cancer cells, leading to their death or making them more susceptible to other treatments.
Since normal cells also rely on OXPHOS, inhibitors must be carefully targeted to avoid significant toxicity to healthy tissues.
Not all tumors are the same. Some may be more glycolytic, while others depend more on mitochondrial metabolism. Therefore, metabolic profiling of tumors is crucial before adopting this strategy. Inhibiting OXPHOS is being explored in combination with other treatments (such as chemo- or immunotherapies) to improve efficacy and overcome resistance.

In cancer cells, metabolic reprogramming is a hallmark where cells often rely on glycolysis (known as the Warburg effect); however, many cancer types also depend on OXPHOS for energy production and survival. Targeting OXPHOS(using inhibitor) to increase the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) can selectively induce oxidative stress and cell death in cancer cells.

-One side effect of increased OXPHOS is the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS).
-Many cancer cells therefore simultaneously upregulate antioxidant systems to mitigate the damaging effects of elevated ROS.
-Increase in oxidative phosphorylation can inhibit cancer growth.


Scientific Papers found: Click to Expand⟱
6318- DRE,    Dandelion root extract affects colorectal cancer proliferation and survival through the activation of multiple death signalling pathways
- vitro+vivo, CRC, HCT116 - NA, Nor, NCM460
TumCD↑, Apoptosis↑, Casp8↑, selectivity↑, TumCMig↓, selectivity↑, Dose↝, toxicity↓, TumCG↓, MMP↓, mt-ROS↑, *ROS↓, BID↑, Bcl-2↓, PARP↓, NF-kB↑, *NF-kB↓, Casp1↑, *Casp1↓, COX2↑, OXPHOS↓, ETC↓,

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:


Redox & Oxidative Stress

OXPHOS↓, 1,   mt-ROS↑, 1,  

Mitochondria & Bioenergetics

ETC↓, 1,   MMP↓, 1,  

Cell Death

Apoptosis↑, 1,   Bcl-2↓, 1,   BID↑, 1,   Casp1↑, 1,   Casp8↑, 1,   TumCD↑, 1,  

DNA Damage & Repair

PARP↓, 1,  

Proliferation, Differentiation & Cell State

TumCG↓, 1,  

Migration

TumCMig↓, 1,  

Immune & Inflammatory Signaling

COX2↑, 1,   NF-kB↑, 1,  

Drug Metabolism & Resistance

Dose↝, 1,   selectivity↑, 2,  

Functional Outcomes

toxicity↓, 1,  
Total Targets: 18

Pathway results for Effect on Normal Cells:


Redox & Oxidative Stress

ROS↓, 1,  

Cell Death

Casp1↓, 1,  

Immune & Inflammatory Signaling

NF-kB↓, 1,  
Total Targets: 3

Scientific Paper Hit Count for: OXPHOS, Oxidative phosphorylation
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#:222  Target#:230  State#:%  Dir#:%
wNotes=0 sortOrder:rid,rpid

 

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