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| 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. Primary mechanisms (ranked):
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
TSF legend: P: 0–30 min R: 30 min–3 hr G: >3 hr |
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| Cancer Stem Cells Phytochemicals (natural plant-derived compounds) that may affect CSCs: Curcumin — suppresses self-renewal and pathways (Wnt/Notch/Hedgehog). Resveratrol — shown to reduce CSC populations and sphere formation in multiple models. Sulforaphane (from broccoli sprouts) — reported to inhibit CSC properties and pathways; active in vitro and in vivo. EGCG (epigallocatechin-3-gallate, green tea) — reduces CSC markers and sphere formation in several cancer types. Quercetin — reported to inhibit CSC proliferation, self-renewal and invasiveness (breast, endometrial, others). Berberine — shown to suppress CSC “stemness” and reduce tumorigenic properties in multiple models. Genistein (soy isoflavone) — decreases CSC markers, sphere formation and stemness signaling in prostate/breast/other models. Honokiol (Magnolia bark) — shown to eliminate or suppress CSC-like populations in oral, colon, glioma models. Luteolin — inhibits stemness/EMT and reduces CSC markers and self-renewal in breast, prostate and other models. Withaferin A (from Withania somnifera / ashwagandha) — multiple preclinical reports show WA targets CSCs and reduces tumor growth/metastasis in models. Circadian disruption in cancer and regulation of cancer stem cells by circadian clock genes: An updated review Potential Role of the Circadian Clock in the Regulation of Cancer Stem Cells and Cancer Therapy Can we utilise the circadian clock to target cancer stem cells? |
| 6396- | ANE, | FEO, | Anethole Inhibits the Proliferation of Human Prostate Cancer Cells via Induction of Cell Cycle Arrest and Apoptosis |
| - | in-vitro, | Pca, | PC3 |
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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