Linalool / P21 Cancer Research Results

LIN, Linalool: Click to Expand ⟱
Features:

Linalool — Linalool is a naturally occurring acyclic monoterpene tertiary alcohol and volatile terpene found in many essential oils, including lavender, coriander, basil, rosewood, and citrus-associated oils. It is formally classified as a small-molecule phytochemical / monoterpenoid fragrance and flavor compound, commonly abbreviated as LIN or Lin. It exists as enantiomers with different odor profiles and biological handling. In oncology research, linalool is best treated as a preclinical bioactive terpene with in-vitro and limited animal-model anticancer signals, not as a clinically validated anticancer therapy.

Primary mechanisms (ranked):

  1. Induction of apoptosis through intrinsic mitochondrial and extrinsic death-receptor pathways, with caspase activation and reduced proliferation markers.
  2. Cell-cycle arrest and suppression of proliferative signaling, including Ras/MAPK and PI3K/Akt/mTOR-associated axes in selected cancer models.
  3. Oxidative stress-mediated cancer-cell killing, including cancer-selective hydroxyl radical generation in colon cancer models.
  4. Autophagy modulation, usually linked to Akt/mTOR suppression, but interpretation is model-dependent and not yet clinically established.
  5. Anti-migration / anti-metastatic effects in lung cancer cell models at high in-vitro concentrations.
  6. Anti-inflammatory and neuroactive effects, relevant mainly to symptom-support or non-cancer contexts rather than direct tumor cytotoxicity.

Bioavailability / PK relevance: Linalool is volatile and lipophilic, with systemic exposure possible after oral, inhaled, and transdermal routes, but therapeutic plasma levels for anticancer effects remain uncertain. Human oral PK methods have been developed, and inhalation/transdermal studies support absorption, but most anticancer experiments use concentrations that are difficult to map directly to achievable human exposure.

In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: Many anticancer studies use high micromolar to millimolar linalool concentrations, especially in lung, liver, leukemia, prostate, and colon cancer cell models. These levels may exceed realistic systemic exposure from food, fragrance, aromatherapy, or ordinary essential-oil use. Direct anticancer interpretation should therefore be concentration-constrained.

Clinical evidence status: Preclinical. Linalool itself has no established cancer-treatment indication. Human studies involving linalool-rich essential oils or aromatherapy are mainly supportive-care studies for anxiety, sleep, pain, or procedural distress, not tumor-response trials. Regulatory status is primarily as a flavor/fragrance substance, not as an approved oncology drug.

Linalool Cancer Mechanism Table

Rank Pathway / Axis Cancer Cells Normal Cells TSF Primary Effect Notes / Interpretation
1 Intrinsic and extrinsic apoptosis ↑ caspase signaling; ↑ apoptotic fraction; ↓ Ki-67 and PCNA in prostate xenograft model Less defined; cytotoxic selectivity is model-dependent G Programmed cancer-cell death Core anticancer mechanism across several models; strongest translational signal is still preclinical.
2 Cell-cycle arrest ↑ G0/G1 or G2/M arrest depending on model; ↓ proliferation Context-dependent G Growth suppression Observed in leukemia, cervical, liver, and other cancer-cell studies; phase specificity varies by cell type.
3 PI3K Akt mTOR signaling ↓ Akt/mTOR-associated survival signaling; ↑ apoptosis/autophagy linkage Not well established R/G Survival-pathway inhibition Mechanistically plausible and reported in HepG2 and other models; one colorectal paper on Akt/mTOR and JAK2/STAT3 was later retracted and should not be used as support.
4 Ras MAPK signaling ↓ Ras/MAPK-associated proliferation signaling in HepG2 model Context-dependent R/G Reduced proliferative signaling Important in liver cancer-cell data but not yet a universal linalool mechanism.
5 Cancer-selective hydroxyl radical generation ↑ hydroxyl radicals; ↑ apoptosis in colon cancer models Proposed relative selectivity, but exposure margin uncertain R/G Oxidative cytotoxicity Useful ROS-related mechanism; should be listed as pro-oxidant cancer stress rather than antioxidant activity.
6 Mitochondrial stress ↑ mitochondrial apoptotic signaling; altered Bcl-2 family / caspase cascade in selected models Potential normal-cell toxicity at high concentration R/G Apoptosis amplification Best treated as part of apoptosis rather than a separate mitochondrial-targeted drug mechanism.
7 Autophagy modulation ↑ autophagy markers or autophagy-apoptosis interaction in some models Not well defined G Context-dependent death or stress response Autophagy may be pro-death or adaptive depending on model; avoid over-ranking unless specific cancer data support it.
8 Migration and metastasis behavior ↓ wound closure / migration in A549 cells at high concentration Not established G Reduced motility Potential anti-metastatic signal, but mainly high-concentration in-vitro evidence.
9 Inflammatory signaling ↓ inflammatory mediators in non-cancer inflammatory models; cancer relevance indirect May reduce inflammatory tone in some normal-tissue contexts R/G Supportive or microenvironmental modulation Relevant to aromatherapy/supportive-care context more than direct tumor killing.
10 Clinical Translation Constraint High in-vitro concentrations may not be clinically achievable Oxidized linalool can cause contact allergy; essential-oil exposures vary widely G Limits therapeutic extrapolation Major constraints are volatility, low water solubility, formulation dependence, variable systemic exposure, and lack of oncology efficacy trials.

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



P21, P21/CDKN1A: Click to Expand ⟱
Source:
Type: Proapototic
cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21 (also known as p21 WAF1/Cip1) promotes cell cycle arrest in response to many stimuli.
P21 is a cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor that plays a crucial role in regulating the cell cycle. It is encoded by the CDKN1A gene and is a key player in the cellular response to stress, including DNA damage.
P21 is often considered a tumor suppressor because its expression is upregulated in response to p53 activation, a well-known tumor suppressor protein. When DNA damage occurs, p53 can activate the transcription of the CDKN1A gene, leading to increased levels of P21, which helps prevent the proliferation of damaged cells.
In many cancers, the p53 pathway is disrupted, leading to decreased levels of P21. p21 is a apoptotic marker protein.
Cell cycle arrest gene p21
Field Suggested Entry
Target CDKN1A / p21 / p21Cip1/Waf1
Full Name Cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 1A
Target Class CIP/KIP-family cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor
Main Binding Partners CDK2, CDK1, CDK4/6, cyclin complexes, PCNA
Primary Biology p53-mediated cell-cycle arrest, DNA damage response, senescence, differentiation, CDK inhibition, RB/E2F pathway suppression, apoptosis regulation
Cancer Relevance High but context-dependent: p21 can suppress tumor growth through cell-cycle arrest and senescence, but can also support apoptosis resistance, senescent-cell survival, and therapy resistance in some tumors
AD Relevance Medium: indirect relevance through neuronal cell-cycle re-entry, senescence, p53 stress signaling, and aging-related cell-cycle dysregulation
Therapeutic Direction Context-dependent. Restore/activate p21 for tumor-suppressive arrest where appropriate; inhibit or bypass p21 where it promotes apoptosis resistance, senescent-cell survival, or treatment resistance.


Scientific Papers found: Click to Expand⟱
6480- LIN,    Linalool Induces Cell Cycle Arrest and Apoptosis in Leukemia Cells and Cervical Cancer Cells through CDKIs
- in-vitro, lymphoma, U937 - in-vitro, Var, HeLa
TumCD↑, TumCCA↑, P53↑, P21↑, p27↑, p16↑, CDKN2C/p18↑,

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:


NA, unassigned

CDKN2C/p18↑, 1,  

Cell Death

p27↑, 1,   TumCD↑, 1,  

DNA Damage & Repair

p16↑, 1,   P53↑, 1,  

Cell Cycle & Senescence

P21↑, 1,   TumCCA↑, 1,  
Total Targets: 7

Pathway results for Effect on Normal Cells:


Total Targets: 0

Scientific Paper Hit Count for: P21, P21/CDKN1A
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#:410  Target#:234  State#:%  Dir#:%
wNotes=0 sortOrder:rid,rpid

 

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