4.7 Review

Curcumin, calebin A and chemosensitization: How are they linked to colorectal cancer?

Journal

LIFE SCIENCES
Volume 318, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.lfs.2023.121504

Keywords

Colorectal cancer (CRC); Calebin A; Curcumin; Anti-inflammatory therapy; Chronic diseases; Chemosensitization; Chemoresistance

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Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a major global malignant disease often resistant to chemotherapy drugs. Two polyphenolic turmeric ingredients, calebin A and curcumin, show anti-inflammatory and anticancer effects, including the ability to sensitize CRC cells to chemotherapy drugs. They modulate inflammation, proliferation, cell cycle, cancer stem cells, and apoptotic signaling to convert chemoresistant CRC cells into non-chemoresistant cells. Further studies and clinical trials are needed to test their effectiveness in overcoming cancer chemoresistance.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the leading malignant diseases worldwide with a high rate of metastasis and poor prognosis. Treatment options include surgery, which is usually followed by chemotherapy in advanced CRC. With treatment, cancer cells could become resistant to classical cytostatic drugs such as 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), oxaliplatin, cisplatin, and irinotecan, resulting in chemotherapeutic failure. For this reason, there is a high de-mand for health-preserving re-sensitization mechanisms including the complementary use of natural plant compounds. Calebin A and curcumin, two polyphenolic turmeric ingredients derived from the Asian Curcuma longa plant, demonstrate versatile anti-inflammatory and cancer-reducing abilities, including CRC-combating capacity. After an insight into their epigenetics-modifying holistic health-promoting effects, this review com-pares functional anti-CRC mechanisms of multi-targeting turmeric-derived compounds with mono-target clas-sical chemotherapeutic agents. Furthermore, the reversal of resistance to chemotherapeutic drugs was presented by focusing on calebin A's and curcumin's capabilities to chemosensitize or re-sensitize CRC cells to 5-FU, oxa-liplatin, cisplatin, and irinotecan. Both polyphenols enhance the receptiveness of CRC cells to standard cytostatic drugs converting them from chemoresistant into non-chemoresistant CRC cells by modulating inflammation, proliferation, cell cycle, cancer stem cells, and apoptotic signaling. Therefore, calebin A and curcumin can be tested for their ability to overcome cancer chemoresistance in preclinical and clinical trials. The future perspective of involving turmeric-ingredients curcumin or calebin A as an additive treatment to chemotherapy for patients with advanced metastasized CRC is explained.

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