Anethole/trans-Anethole / GSH Cancer Research Results

ANE, Anethole/trans-Anethole: Click to Expand ⟱
Features:

Anethole — Anethole is a naturally occurring aromatic phenylpropene and volatile essential-oil constituent best represented by trans-anethole, the dominant anise-like compound in anise, star anise, fennel, and related botanicals. It is formally a small-molecule natural product / flavoring-agent phytochemical rather than an approved oncology drug. Standard abbreviations include ANE, t-ANE, and tAT for trans-anethole. In cancer research it is best classified as a preclinical multi-pathway chemosensitizing phytochemical with stronger evidence for apoptosis, cell-cycle arrest, NF-κB/PI3K-AKT/STAT3 modulation, and context-dependent oxidative-stress effects than for direct clinical use.
-botanical sources can co-contain estragole, especially fennel/basil/tarragon-type materials. Estragole is a separate phenylpropene with stronger toxicology concern, so whole-herb or essential-oil entries should not be treated as pure anethole
anethole analogues eugenol and isoeugenol

Primary mechanisms (ranked):

  1. Induction of intrinsic apoptosis through mitochondrial membrane-potential disruption, Bax/Bcl-2-family shift, caspase-9/caspase-3 activation, and DNA-fragmentation phenotypes.
  2. Suppression of proliferative and survival signaling, especially PI3K/AKT, STAT3, NF-κB, AP-1, JNK, and MAPK-related inflammatory-survival axes.
  3. Cell-cycle arrest and anti-clonogenic effects in several cancer-cell models, including prostate, breast, oral, osteosarcoma, lung, and glioma models.
  4. Autophagy modulation, especially in oral-cancer models, where anethole has been reported to trigger autophagy alongside apoptosis.
  5. Oxidative-stress modulation, which is model-dependent: some cancer models show ROS increase and mitochondrial stress, while oral-cancer data report ROS decrease with increased GSH activity.
  6. Chemosensitization, most clearly preclinical synergy with cisplatin in oral-cancer cells.

Bioavailability / PK relevance: Anethole is lipophilic and orally absorbable, with human metabolic studies showing dose-dependent disposition and major urinary detoxication products such as 4-methoxyhippuric acid. Translation is constrained by rapid metabolism, flavor-level safety limits, and the fact that many anticancer experiments use concentrations unlikely to be achieved safely through dietary exposure.

In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: Most anticancer effects are concentration-driven and commonly occur in the tens to hundreds of micromolar range. These levels likely exceed normal dietary or flavoring exposure and should be treated as pharmacologic experimental exposure rather than food-use exposure.

Clinical evidence status: Preclinical. There is no established human oncology indication for anethole and no convincing registered cancer trial program for anethole as an anticancer therapy. Evidence is mainly cell-culture, limited animal xenograft, and combination/sensitization studies.

Anethole Cancer Mechanism Table

Rank Pathway / Axis Cancer Cells Normal Cells TSF Primary Effect Notes / Interpretation
1 Mitochondrial apoptosis ↑ Bax, ↑ caspase-9, ↑ caspase-3, ↓ ΔΨm, ↑ apoptosis Likely lower cytotoxicity at food-level exposure R/G Pro-apoptotic tumor-cell killing Core anticancer mechanism across multiple preclinical models; strongest translational signal is apoptosis rather than selective clinical cytotoxicity.
2 PI3K AKT survival signaling ↓ AKT pathway signaling, ↓ proliferation, ↑ apoptosis Not well defined G Survival-pathway suppression Reported in breast, lung, glioma, and other cancer models; pathway centrality is high but clinical validation is absent.
3 STAT3 survival signaling ↓ STAT3 signaling, ↓ proliferation, ↑ apoptosis Not well defined G Anti-proliferative and pro-apoptotic signaling shift Most relevant where STAT3 is constitutively active or coupled to inflammatory survival signaling.
4 NF-κB AP-1 JNK MAPK inflammatory signaling ↓ TNF-induced NF-κB, ↓ AP-1, ↓ JNK, ↓ MAPK kinase signaling ↓ inflammatory signaling may be cytoprotective or anti-inflammatory P/R Anti-inflammatory survival-axis suppression Mechanistically important for inflammation-linked carcinogenesis, but TNF-apoptosis blockade means the biological direction can be context-dependent.
5 Cell cycle and clonogenic growth ↓ proliferation, ↓ colony formation, ↑ G0/G1 arrest or model-specific arrest Not well defined G Growth suppression Observed in prostate, osteosarcoma, breast, lung, and oral-cancer models; generally requires pharmacologic exposure.
6 Autophagy modulation ↑ autophagy markers in oral-cancer models Not well defined R/G Stress-response remodeling May contribute to cell death or adaptive stress response depending on tumor context and dose.
7 Mitochondrial ROS increase ↑ ROS in osteosarcoma and some apoptosis models At low exposure may show antioxidant behavior R/G Oxidative mitochondrial stress Not uniform across studies; oral-cancer data also report ↓ ROS and ↑ GSH, so ROS should be marked model-dependent rather than universally pro-oxidant.
8 GSH antioxidant buffering GSH in oral-cancer model, with apoptosis and autophagy Potential antioxidant effect R/G Redox-state modulation May reflect compensatory antioxidant response rather than the primary cytotoxic driver.
9 Chemosensitization to cisplatin ↑ cisplatin cytotoxicity, ↑ apoptosis, ↑ anti-tumor signaling effects Normal-cell protection not established G Adjunct sensitization Promising but preclinical; no dosing or safety framework for oncology combination use.
10 Clinical Translation Constraint In-vitro activity often requires high concentration Food/flavoring exposure is safety-limited G Exposure and safety bottleneck GRAS/flavoring status does not imply anticancer-dose safety; metabolism, hepatotoxicity/genotoxic-metabolite concerns, and estragole contamination in botanicals are key constraints.

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



GSH, Glutathione: Click to Expand ⟱
Source:
Type:
Glutathione (GSH) is a thiol antioxidant that scavenges reactive oxygen species (ROS), resulting in the formation of oxidized glutathione (GSSG). Decreased amounts of GSH and a decreased GSH/GSSG ratio in tissues are biomarkers of oxidative stress.
Glutathione is a powerful antioxidant found in every cell of the body, composed of three amino acids: cysteine, glutamine, and glycine. It plays a crucial role in protecting cells from oxidative stress, detoxifying harmful substances, and supporting the immune system.
cancer cells can have elevated levels of glutathione, which may help them survive in the oxidative environment created by the immune response and chemotherapy. This can make cancer cells more resistant to treatment.
While glutathione can be obtained from certain foods (like fruits, vegetables, and meats), its absorption from supplements is debated. Some people take N-acetylcysteine (NAC) or other precursors to boost glutathione levels, but the effects on cancer prevention or treatment are still being studied.
Depleting glutathione (GSH) to raise reactive oxygen species (ROS) is a strategy that has been explored in cancer research and therapy.
Many cancer cells have altered redox states and may rely on GSH to survive. Increasing ROS levels can induce stress in these cells, potentially leading to cell death.
Certain drugs and compounds can deplete GSH levels. For example, agents like buthionine sulfoximine (BSO) inhibit the synthesis of GSH, leading to its depletion.
Cancer cells tend to exhibit higher levels of intracellular GSH, possibly as an adaptive response to a higher metabolism and thus higher steady-state levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS).

"...intracellular glutathione (GSH) exhibits an astounding antioxidant activity in scavenging reactive oxygen species (ROS)..."
"Cancer cells have a high level of GSH compared to normal cells."
"...cancer cells are affluent with high antioxidant levels, especially with GSH, whose appearance at an elevated concentration of ∼10 mM (10 times less in normal cells) detoxifies the cancer cells." "Therefore, GSH depletion can be assumed to be the key strategy to amplify the oxidative stress in cancer cells, enhancing the destruction of cancer cells by fruitful cancer therapy."

The loss of GSH is broadly known to be directly related to the apoptosis progression.


Scientific Papers found: Click to Expand⟱
6401- ANE,    Anethole and Its Role in Chronic Diseases
- Review, Var, NA - Review, PSA, NA
*BioAv↝, *other↝, eff↓, TNF-α↓, IL10↑, CXCR4↓, MMP2↓, MMP9↓, TIMP1↑, NF-kB↓, AP-1↓, STAT↓, JNK↓, ERK↓, MAPK↓, PI3K↓, Akt↓, JAK↓, *AntiDiabetic↓, *neuroP↑, *Imm↑, chemoP↑, *AntiThr↑, *AntiAg↑, *antiOx↑, *SOD↑, *GSH↑, *Wound Healing↑, chemoPv↑, *GSTs↑, *NF-kB↓,
6406- ANE,    Anethole induces anti-oral cancer activity by triggering apoptosis, autophagy and oxidative stress and by modulation of multiple signaling pathways
- in-vitro, Oral, Ca9-22
TumCP↓, Apoptosis↑, TumAuto↑, ROS↓, GSH↑, cycD1/CCND1↓, P21↑, P53↑, EMT↓, Casp3↑, PARP1↑, TumMeta↓, MMPs↓, TIMP1↑,

Showing Research Papers: 1 to 2 of 2

* indicates research on normal cells as opposed to diseased cells
Total Research Paper Matches: 2

Pathway results for Effect on Cancer / Diseased Cells:


Redox & Oxidative Stress

GSH↑, 1,   ROS↓, 1,  

Cell Death

Akt↓, 1,   Apoptosis↑, 1,   Casp3↑, 1,   JNK↓, 1,   MAPK↓, 1,  

Autophagy & Lysosomes

TumAuto↑, 1,  

DNA Damage & Repair

P53↑, 1,   PARP1↑, 1,  

Cell Cycle & Senescence

cycD1/CCND1↓, 1,   P21↑, 1,  

Proliferation, Differentiation & Cell State

EMT↓, 1,   ERK↓, 1,   PI3K↓, 1,   STAT↓, 1,  

Migration

AP-1↓, 1,   MMP2↓, 1,   MMP9↓, 1,   MMPs↓, 1,   TIMP1↑, 2,   TumCP↓, 1,   TumMeta↓, 1,  

Immune & Inflammatory Signaling

CXCR4↓, 1,   IL10↑, 1,   JAK↓, 1,   NF-kB↓, 1,   TNF-α↓, 1,  

Drug Metabolism & Resistance

eff↓, 1,  

Functional Outcomes

chemoP↑, 1,   chemoPv↑, 1,  
Total Targets: 31

Pathway results for Effect on Normal Cells:


Redox & Oxidative Stress

antiOx↑, 1,   GSH↑, 1,   GSTs↑, 1,   SOD↑, 1,  

Transcription & Epigenetics

AntiThr↑, 1,   other↝, 1,  

Migration

AntiAg↑, 1,  

Immune & Inflammatory Signaling

Imm↑, 1,   NF-kB↓, 1,  

Drug Metabolism & Resistance

BioAv↝, 1,  

Functional Outcomes

AntiDiabetic↓, 1,   neuroP↑, 1,   Wound Healing↑, 1,  
Total Targets: 13

Scientific Paper Hit Count for: GSH, Glutathione
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#:402  Target#:137  State#:%  Dir#:%
wNotes=0 sortOrder:rid,rpid

 

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