4.6 Article

Unraveling Curcumin Degradation AUTOXIDATION PROCEEDS THROUGH SPIROEPOXIDE AND VINYLETHER INTERMEDIATES EN ROUTE TO THE MAIN BICYCLOPENTADIONE

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 290, Issue 8, Pages 4817-4828

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M114.618785

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [CA159382, AT006896, GM076592]
  2. NIGMS [2T32GM07628]
  3. NCCAM [F31AT007287]
  4. Camille Dreyfus Foundation
  5. Vanderbilt Institute in Chemical Biology [P30DK058404]
  6. Vanderbilt Digestive Diseases Research Center
  7. NCI SPORE in GI Cancer Pilot Award [5P50CA095103]

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Curcumin is a dietary anti-inflammatory and chemopreventive agent consisting of two methoxyphenol rings connected by a conjugated heptadienedione chain. Curcumin is unstable at physiological pH and rapidly degrades in an autoxidation reaction to a major bicyclopentadione product in which the 7-carbon chain has undergone oxygenation and double cyclization. Early degradation products (but not the final bicyclopentadione) mediate topoisomerase poisoning and possibly many other activities of curcumin, but it is not known how many and what autoxidation products are formed, nor their mechanism of formation. Here, using [C-14(2)] curcumin as a tracer, seven novel autoxidation products, including two reaction intermediates, were isolated and identified using one-and two-dimensional NMR and mass spectrometry. The unusual spiroepoxide and vinylether reaction intermediates are precursors to the final bicyclopentadione product. A mechanism for the autoxidation of curcumin is proposed that accounts for the addition and exchange of oxygen that have been determined using O-18(2) and (H2O)-O-18. Several of the by-products are formed from an endoperoxide intermediate via reactions that are well precedented in lipid peroxidation. The electrophilic spiroepoxide intermediate formed a stable adduct with N-acetylcysteine, suggesting that oxidative transformation is required for biological effects mediated by covalent adduction to protein thiols. The spontaneous autoxidation distinguishes curcumin among natural polyphenolic compounds of therapeutic interest; the formation of chemically diverse reactive and electrophilic products provides a novel paradigm for understanding the polypharmacological effects of curcumin.

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