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| Crocetin is a carotenoid pigment found in saffron (Crocus sativus) and has been studied for its potential anti-cancer properties. Research has shown that crocetin may have anti-tumor and anti-proliferative effects, inhibiting the growth of various types of cancer cells. Crocetin is a carotenoid dicarboxylic acid derived from saffron (Crocus sativus) and is a metabolite of crocin. It is lipophilic and more bioavailable than crocin. In cancer research, crocetin is studied mainly in preclinical models, where it appears to influence apoptosis, inflammation, angiogenesis, and redox signaling. It is not a primary cytotoxic chemotherapeutic, but a signaling and stress-modulating compound. Mechanistic themes reported: -NF-κB suppression -PI3K/AKT pathway modulation -MAPK signaling effects -Apoptosis induction (mitochondrial pathway) -Anti-angiogenic signaling (VEGF reduction) -Redox modulation (context-dependent antioxidant / pro-oxidant behavior) Evidence level: predominantly cell culture and animal models.Reported to modulate glycolytic metabolism and lactate production (model-dependent); LDH5 inhibition has been reported preclinically, but clinical relevance and achievable tumor exposure are not established. Crocetin — Crocetin is a saffron/gardenia-derived apocarotenoid dicarboxylic acid and the aglycone bioactive metabolite of crocin. It is formally a natural-product carotenoid derivative rather than an approved anticancer drug. Standard abbreviations include Cro and, less commonly, trans-crocetin or crocetic acid. It originates primarily from Crocus sativus stigma and Gardenia jasminoides fruit, with crocin serving as a glycosylated precursor that is hydrolyzed to crocetin after oral intake. In oncology, crocetin is best classified as a preclinical signaling, redox, metabolism, and apoptosis-modulating compound with limited direct human cancer-treatment evidence. Primary mechanisms (ranked):
Bioavailability / PK relevance: Oral crocin is poorly absorbed intact and is largely converted to crocetin by intestinal and microbial glycosidase activity. Crocetin itself appears in plasma after oral crocin or crocetin exposure, often as free crocetin and glucuronide conjugates, but poor solubility, formulation dependence, intestinal metabolism, and uncertain tumor-tissue exposure constrain translation. In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: Many anticancer cell studies use crocetin in the approximate 50–800 µM range, with several key studies around 60–240 µM or higher. These concentrations likely exceed typical exposure from dietary saffron or ordinary oral supplement use, so in-vitro cytotoxic and chemosensitizing effects should be treated as high-concentration/preclinical unless supported by formulation-specific PK data. Clinical evidence status: Preclinical for oncology. There are cell-culture and animal tumor data, including pancreatic, colorectal, gastric, cervical/ovarian, prostate, and hepatocellular models, plus limited adjunct combination data. Human clinical evidence for isolated crocetin is mainly non-oncology or safety-oriented, while oncology-related human trials are more often crocin/saffron adjunctive or supportive-care contexts rather than crocetin as an anticancer therapy. Crocetin Cancer Mechanism Table
Time-Scale Flag (TSF): P / R / G
Crocetin and Alzheimer’s disease context — Crocetin is relevant to AD mainly as part of the saffron/crocin/crocetin evidence cluster rather than as a clinically established isolated AD drug. Mechanistic support includes antioxidant protection, anti-inflammatory signaling, Aβ-related effects, AChE inhibition signals from saffron constituents, ER-stress/apoptosis reduction, and possible BBB/gut-microbiome-mediated effects. Human RCT evidence is stronger for saffron extract than for purified crocetin. Crocetin AD-Relevant Mechanism Table
Time-Scale Flag (TSF): P / R / G
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| Also called CCND1 Gatekeeper of Cell-Cycle Commitment The main function of cyclin D1 is to maintain cell cycle and to promote cell proliferation. Cyclin D1 is a key regulatory protein involved in the cell cycle, particularly in the transition from the G1 phase to the S phase. It is part of the cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) complex, where it binds to CDK4 or CDK6 to promote cell cycle progression. Cyclin D1 is crucial for the regulation of the cell cycle. Overexpression or dysregulation of cyclin D1 can lead to uncontrolled cell proliferation, a hallmark of cancer. Cyclin D1 is often found to be overexpressed in various cancers. Cyclin D1 can interact with tumor suppressor proteins, such as retinoblastoma (Rb). When cyclin D1 is overexpressed, it can lead to the phosphorylation and inactivation of Rb, releasing E2F transcription factors that promote the expression of genes required for DNA synthesis and cell cycle progression. Cyclin D1 is influenced by various signaling pathways, including the PI3K/Akt and MAPK pathways, which are often activated in cancer. In some cancers, high levels of cyclin D1 expression have been associated with poor prognosis, making it a potential biomarker for cancer progression and treatment response. |
| 6294- | Cro, | Crocetin and Crocin from Saffron in Cancer Chemotherapy and Chemoprevention |
| - | 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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