| Literature DB >> 29029547 |
Meeta Gera1, Neelesh Sharma2, Mrinmoy Ghosh1, Do Luong Huynh1, Sung Jin Lee3, Taesun Min1, Taeho Kwon1,4, Dong Kee Jeong1,4.
Abstract
Curcumin is a natural polyphenol and essential curcuminoid derived from the rhizome of the medicinal plant Curcuma longa (L.) is universally acknowledged as "Wonder drug of life". It is a vital consumable and restorative herb, commonly keened for several ailments such as cancer, arthritis, pain, bruises, gastrointestinal quandaries, swelling and much more. Despite its enormous curative potential, the poor aqueous solubility and consequently, minimal systemic bioavailability with rapid degradation are some of the major factors which restrict the utilization of curcumin at medical perspective. However, to improve its clinically relevant parameters, nanoformulation of curcumin is emerging as a novel substitute for their superior therapeutic modality. It enhances its aqueous solubility and targeted delivery to the tissue of interest that prompts to enhance the bioavailability, better drug conveyance, and more expeditious treatment. Subsequent investigations are endeavored to enhance the bio-distribution of native curcumin by modifying with felicitous nano-carriers for encapsulation. In this review, we specifically focus on the recent nanotechnology based implementations applied for overcoming the innate constraints of native curcumin and additionally the associated challenges which restrict its potential therapeutic applications both in vivo and in-vitro studies, as well as their detailed mechanism of action, have additionally been discussed.Entities:
Keywords: curcumin; herb; nano; nanoformulation; nanotechnology
Year: 2017 PMID: 29029547 PMCID: PMC5630447 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.19164
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Historical background of Curcumin
Figure 2Structure of Curcumin
(A) b-diketone or keto-enol; (B) phenolic; (C) alkene linker. Curcumin contains three chemical entities in its structure: two aromatic ring systems containing o-methoxy phenolic groups, connected by a seven carbon linker consisting of an α, β-unsaturated β-diketone moiety.
Figure 3Therapeutic actions of curcumin
The Figure illustrates the different pharmacologic effects and therapeutic targets of curcumin.
Sundry clinical tribulations utilizing curcumin with expected outcomes
| Type of Cancer | Effective drug concentration in clinical trials | Route of administration | Outcome | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 500–12000 mg/day | Oral dose | Curcumin found to be safe and efficacious with no adverse side effects | Cheng et al | |
| 4 g/day (44 patients) | Oral | Significant reduction in ACF number with five-fold increase in bioavailability | Carroll et al., 2004 [ | |
| Curcumin tablets 1,000 mg | Orally chewed | Curcumin inhibited IKKß kinase activity in saliva of HNSCC patients with reduced expression of no. of cytokines | Kim et al., 2011 [ | |
| Gemcitabine+Curcumin (8 gm) | Oral | Extremely safe and feasible for pancreatic cancer patients | Epelbaum et al., 2010 [ | |
| Curcumin+docetaxel (6 gm/day) | Oral | No adverse side effects were obtained | Bayet-Robert et al., 2010 [ | |
| Curcumin + imatinib (5 g) | Oral | Showed better efficacy with decreased nitric oxide levels | Ghalaut et al., 2012 [ |
Figure 4Different nano carriers of curcumin for enhanced drug delivery system
The various nano-carriers with effective encapsulation strategies to enhance the targeted drug delivery.
Nano-technological alteration in herbal drug curcumin along with their expected benefits
| Nanotechnology tool | Size and shape | Models used | Outcome | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Curcumin encapsulated with liposomal PMSA antibodies | 100–150 nm | Human Prostate cancer cell lines (LNCaP and C4-2B | Showed better efficacy(70–80% inhibition in cell proliferation) with enhanced targeted delivery | Thangapazham et al., 2008 [ |
| Curcumin/MPEG-PCL micelles | 27.3 ± 1.3 nm | Colon carcinoma cell (C-26) | Excellent inhibition of cancer growth by inhibiting angiogensis | Gou et al., 2010 [ |
| Curcumin loaded PBCN nanoparticles | 152.0 nm | Alzheimer’s disease | Showed excellent transport of curcumin to brain | Sun et al., 2010 [ |
| Curcumin nanoemulsion | < 200 nm | human ovarian adenocarcinoma cells (SKV3) and drug resistant (SKOV-3TR ) | Showed significantly increased cytotoxic activity | Ganta et al., 2009 [ |
| Curcumin-PLGA nanoparticles | 248 ± 1.6 nm | Erythroleukemia type K562 cells | Improved clinical management of leukemia | Misra et al., 2011 [ |
| Curcumin-Chitosan nanopartilces | 100–250nm | Melanoma tumors | Increased antitumor and anti-cancer effects | Li et al., 2012 [ |
| Nanogels (cross linked polymer network) | 10–200 nm | Breast and pancreatic cancer cells | Increased stability with enhanced anticancer effects | Mangalathillam et al.2012 [ |
| Curcumin-nanocrystal solid-dispersion | 250 nm | Pharmacokinetic properties | Improved physiochemical andpharmacokinetic properties. | Onoue et al., 2010 [ |
Figure 5Comparative study of different strategies used for the preparation of nano curcumin for amended drug uptake and bio distribution
Figure 6Mechanism of action of curcumin in different biomedical applications
The Figure illustrates the detailed mode of action of curcumin mediated for different therapeutic applications by entering inside the cell through appropriate cell surface receptors with efficacious targeted distribution and enhanced response by regulating various cytokines and induces apoptosis in cancer cells.
Figure 7Multiple anti-cancer cascades of curcumin by different growth factors in cancer cells
The inhibitory effect of curcumin on the expression and/or activity of EGFR, erbB2, IGF-1R, and their downstream signaling elements, sonic hedgehog (SHH/SMO/GLIs), Wnt/β-catenin and ATP-binding cassette multidrug transporters such as ABCG2 in cancer cells are indicated. Moreover, the enhanced expression of p21WAP1 and p27KIP1 Cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors and inhibition of mitotic effects induced by curcumin resulting in a cell cycle arrest and reduced expression levels of different gene products involved in the growth, invasion and metastasis of cancer cells as well as the activation by curcumin of mitochondrial factors and caspase pathway-induced apoptosis are also indicated.