Using curcumin to turn the innate immune system against cancer.

Biochem Pharmacol

Department of Chemistry, CUNY College of Staten Island, NY 10314, United States; The Center for Developmental Neuroscience, CUNY College of Staten Island, NY 10314, United States. Electronic address:

Published: June 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Curcumin has gained considerable attention for its anti-inflammatory properties, leading to the development of products targeting arthritis and research into its effects on neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's.
  • Although curcumin has shown promise in lab studies to kill cancer cells, its effectiveness in humans has been limited by low bioavailability, with previous clinical studies yielding no significant results compared to placebo.
  • Recent advancements, such as lipid-complexed and antibody-targeted curcumin, reveal its potential to reshape the tumor microenvironment and enhance immune responses, presenting new avenues for cancer therapy through the reactivation of innate immune cells.

Article Abstract

Curcumin has been at the center of vigorous research and major debate during the past decade. Inspired by its anti-inflammatory properties, many curcumin-based products are being sold now to manage various forms of arthritis. Parallel preclinical studies have established its role in dissolving beta-amyloid plaques, tau-based neurofibrillary tangles, and also alpha-synuclein-linked protein aggregates typically observed in Parkinson's disease. In cancer research, most cancer cells in culture are eliminated by curcumin at an IC50 of 15-30 µM, whereas the maximum in vivo curcumin concentration achieved in humans is only about 6 µM. Additionally, a decade ago, no improvement over the placebo groups was observed in clinical studies using free curcumin as an anticancer agent. The lack of anticancer efficacy was attributed to its low bioavailability, which results from the low water-solubility and high metabolic rate in vivo. Newer lipid-complexed or antibody-targeted forms have been used and these studies have revealed an exciting property of curcumin, which involves repolarization of the tumor-promoting, tumor-associated microglia/macrophages (TAMs) into a tumoricidal form and recruitment of natural killer cells from the periphery. This review will cover some efforts to explore the effect of appropriately-delivered curcumin to dramatically alter the tumor microenvironment, thereby launching an indirect attack on the tumor cells and the tumor stem cells. Reviewing some aspects of immunotherapy, this article will argue for the use of the innate immune cells in cancer therapy.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bcp.2020.113824DOI Listing

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