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| Cyclopamine is a natural steroidal alkaloid derived from the corn lily, Veratrum californicum, which specifically disrupts the Hh signaling pathway. Cyclopamine — Cyclopamine is a natural steroidal alkaloid Hedgehog pathway antagonist derived from the corn lily Veratrum californicum. It is formally a small-molecule phytochemical / steroidal alkaloid and experimental Smoothened inhibitor. Cyclopamine is best treated as a preclinical tool compound and pharmacologic scaffold rather than a clinically deployed anticancer drug, because systemic translation is constrained by poor solubility, acid instability, limited pharmacokinetics, and developmental toxicity risk. Primary mechanisms (ranked):
Bioavailability / PK relevance: Cyclopamine has poor aqueous solubility, acid-sensitive conversion to less active products under gastric-like conditions, and suboptimal systemic pharmacokinetics. These constraints explain why clinically used Hedgehog inhibitors are synthetic SMO inhibitors or derivatives rather than cyclopamine itself. In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: Many in-vitro studies use micromolar cyclopamine concentrations, often exceeding what is realistically attractive for systemic exposure with the parent compound. Interpretation should therefore distinguish pathway-probe activity from clinically achievable drug exposure. The compound is concentration-driven, not field-based or device-based. Clinical evidence status: Preclinical tool compound. Cyclopamine has strong mechanistic and animal-model evidence for Hedgehog pathway inhibition, but it is not an approved anticancer drug and has not become a standard clinical intervention. Clinical translation of this mechanism is represented by approved SMO inhibitors such as vismodegib, sonidegib, and glasdegib, not by cyclopamine itself. Cyclopamine cancer mechanism table
P: 0–30 min R: 30 min–3 hr G: >3 hr |
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| Normal cells grow and divide in a regulated manner through the cell cycle, which consists of phases (G1, S, G2, and M). Cancer cells often bypass these regulatory mechanisms, leading to uncontrolled proliferation. This can result from mutations in genes that control the cell cycle, such as oncogenes (which promote cell division) and tumor suppressor genes (which inhibit cell division). |
| 6244- | Cyc, | Widespread requirement for Hedgehog ligand stimulation in growth of digestive tract tumours |
| - | in-vivo, | Var, | NA |
| 6247- | Cyc, | Sonic Hedgehog Pathway Contributes to Gastric Cancer Cell Growth and Proliferation |
| - | vitro+vivo, | GC, | MKN45 |
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#:66 Target#:323 State#:% Dir#:%
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