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| β-Caryophyllene is a dietary sesquiterpene and CB2 agonist with preclinical anticancer evidence, including apoptosis induction, reduced proliferation, anti-angiogenesis, reduced invasion/migration, and chemo/radio-sensitization. Evidence is promising but remains mainly in-vitro and animal-based; clinical cancer validation is lacking. Beta-Caryophyllene — β-Caryophyllene is a plant-derived bicyclic sesquiterpene hydrocarbon and dietary cannabinoid with selective functional agonism at cannabinoid receptor type 2. It is formally classified as a natural sesquiterpene terpene, food flavoring compound, and investigational phytochemical adjunct rather than an approved anticancer drug. Standard abbreviations include BCP, β-CP, and sometimes trans-caryophyllene. It occurs in multiple essential oils, especially black pepper, clove, copaiba, oregano, hops, rosemary, and Cannabis sativa chemotypes, but its database identity should be the purified compound rather than a whole-oil product. Primary mechanisms (ranked):
Bioavailability / PK relevance: BCP is highly lipophilic and formulation-sensitive; oral exposure is limited and variable with conventional dosing, while self-emulsifying lipid formulations can substantially improve human systemic exposure. PK relevance is high because many in-vitro anticancer concentrations are unlikely to be reproduced by normal dietary intake. Delivery constraints: The key delivery constraints are volatility, hydrophobicity, oxidation/stability, low aqueous solubility, food-matrix dependence, and the likely need for lipid, nanoemulsion, SEDDS, or other formulation strategies if systemic pharmacology is the goal. In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: Most anticancer assays use micromolar-to-high-micromolar or µg/mL concentrations; these should be interpreted cautiously because common in-vitro levels likely exceed exposures achievable from culinary intake. Formulated oral BCP may improve exposure, but clinical anticancer target engagement has not been established. Clinical evidence status: Preclinical oncology evidence is moderate and spans cell, endothelial, and animal models; human evidence is small and mostly non-oncology or PK-focused. No validated clinical cancer efficacy evidence was found. Best database status is preclinical / investigational adjunct, with possible chemosensitizer and anti-angiogenic tags marked as preclinical. Beta-Caryophyllene Mechanistic Profile
TSF legend: P: 0–30 min; R: 30 min–3 hr; G: >3 hr |
| Source: |
| Type: Proapototic protein |
| BAX is a member of the Bcl-2 gene family. Pro-apoptotic protein that forms heterodimers with anti-apoptotic BCL2 proteins; involved in various cellular activities and regulated by p53; mediates the release of cytochrome c from mitochondria. |
| 6499- | BCP, | JAK1/STAT3 regulatory effect of β-caryophyllene on MG-63 osteosarcoma cells via ROS-induced apoptotic mitochondrial pathway by DNA fragmentation |
| - | in-vitro, | OS, | MG63 |
| 6501- | BCP, | β-Caryophyllene promotes oxidative stress and apoptosis in KB cells through activation of mitochondrial-mediated pathway - An in-vitro and in-silico study |
| - | in-vitro, | Oral, | KB |
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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