Published: Tuesday, 12-Jul-2005

Curcumin has potent anticancer powers

    Curcumin, a spice commonly used in curries and other south Asian cooking, blocks a key
    biological pathway needed for development of melanoma and other cancers, say researchers from
    the University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center.
    The study, to be published in the August 15, 2005 issue of the journal Cancer, demonstrates how
    curcumin stops laboratory strains of melanoma from proliferating and pushes the cancer cells to
    commit suicide.
    It does this, researchers say, by shutting down nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-kB), a powerful protein
    known to promote an abnormal inflammatory response that leads to a variety of disorders,
    including arthritis and cancer.
    The study is the latest to suggest that curcumin has potent anticancer powers, say the researchers.
    "The antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and anti-carcinogenic properties of curcumin derived from
    turmeric are undergoing intense research here and at other places worldwide," says one of the
    study's authors, Bharat B. Aggarwal, Ph.D., professor of cancer medicine in the Department of
    Experimental Therapeutics.
    At M. D. Anderson, for example, dramatic results from laboratory studies have led to two ongoing
    Phase I human clinical trials, testing the ability of daily capsules of curcumin powder to retard
    growth of pancreatic cancer and multiple myeloma. Another Phase I trial is planned for patients
    with breast cancer, and given this news of curcumin's activity in melanoma, animal studies will
    soon begin, Aggarwal says.
    Ground from the root of the Curcuma longa plant, curcumin is a member of the ginger family. It
    has long been utilized in India and other Asian nations for multiple uses: as a food-preservative, a
    coloring agent, a folk medicine to cleanse the body, and as a spice to flavor food (two to five
    percent of turmeric is curcumin, for example).
    While researchers had thought curcumin primarily has anti-inflammatory properties, the growing
    realization that cancer can result from inflammation has spurred mounting interest in the spice as an
    anti-cancer agent, Aggarwal says. He adds that another fact has generated further excitement: "The
    incidence of the top four cancers in the U.S. - colon, breast, prostate, and lung - is ten times lower
    in India," he says.
    This work is just the latest by M. D. Anderson researchers to show how curcumin can inhibit
    cancer growth. "Curcumin affects virtually every tumor biomarker that we have tried," says
    Aggarwal. "It works through a variety of mechanisms related to cancer development. We, and
    others, previously found that curcumin down regulates EGFR activity that mediates tumor cell
    proliferation, and VEGF that is involved in angiogenesis. Besides inhibiting NF-kB, curcumin was
    also found to suppress STAT3 pathway that is also involved in tumorigenesis. Both these pathways
    play a central role in cell survival and proliferation."
    He said that an ability to suppress numerous biological routes to cancer development is important if
    an agent is to be effective. "Cells look at everything in a global way, and inhibiting just one
    pathway will not be effective," says Aggarwal.
    In this study, the researchers treated three different melanoma cell lines with curcumin and assessed
    the activity of NF-kB, as well the protein, known as "IKK" that switches NF-kB "on." The spice
    kept both proteins from being activated, so worked to stop growth of the melanoma, and it also
    induced "apoptosis," or programmed death, in the cells.
    Surprisingly, it didn't matter how much curcumin was used, says the researchers. "The NF-kB
    machinery is suppressed by both short exposures to high concentrations of curcumin as well as by
    longer exposure to lower concentrations of curcumin," they say in their study. Given that other
    studies have shown curcumin is non-toxic, these results should be followed by a test of the spice in
    both animal models of melanoma and in human trials, they say.

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