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Turmeric, breast and prostate cancer
Identifier
005578
Type of Spiritual Experience
Background
A description of the experience
Carcinogenesis. 2012 Dec;33(12):2507-19. doi: 10.1093/carcin/bgs312. Epub 2012 Oct 5. Curcumin inhibits prostate cancer metastasis in vivo by targeting the inflammatory cytokines CXCL1 and -2. Killian PH, Kronski E, Michalik KM, Barbieri O, Astigiano S, Sommerhoff CP, Pfeffer U, Nerlich AG, Bachmeier BE. Institute of Laboratory Medicine (former Dept. of Clin. Chemistry and Biochemistry), Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Munich, Germany.
In America and Western Europe, prostate cancer is the second leading cause of death in men. Emerging evidence suggests that chronic inflammation is a major risk factor for the development and metastatic progression of prostate cancer.
We previously reported that the chemopreventive polyphenol curcumin inhibits the expression of the proinflammatory cytokines CXCL1 and -2 leading to diminished formation of breast cancer metastases.
In this study, we analyze the effects of curcumin on prostate carcinoma growth, apoptosis and metastasis.
We show that curcumin inhibits translocation of NF?B to the nucleus through the inhibition of the I?B-kinase (IKK?, leading to stabilization of the inhibitor of NF?B, I?B?, in PC-3 prostate carcinoma cells. Inhibition of NF?B activity reduces expression of CXCL1 and -2 and abolishes the autocrine/paracrine loop that links the two chemokines to NF?B. The combination of curcumin with the synthetic IKK? inhibitor, SC-541, shows no additive or synergistic effects indicating that the two compounds share the target. Treatment of the cells with curcumin and siRNA-based knockdown of CXCL1 and -2 induce apoptosis, inhibit proliferation and downregulate several important metastasis-promoting factors like COX2, SPARC and EFEMP.
In an orthotopic mouse model of hematogenous metastasis, treatment with curcumin inhibits statistically significantly formation of lung metastases.
In conclusion, chronic inflammation can induce a metastasis prone phenotype in prostate cancer cells by maintaining a positive proinflammatory and prometastatic feedback loop between NF?B and CXCL1/-2. Curcumin disrupts this feedback loop by the inhibition of NF?B signaling leading to reduced metastasis formation in vivo.
PMID: 23042094
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PubMedConcepts, symbols and science items
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Science Items
Activities and commonsteps
Activities
Overloads
Benign prostatic hyperplasiaBreast cancer
Cancer
Prostate cancer
Reproductive system disease