| Literature DB >> 35600864 |
Zoufang Huang1, Mohit Sharma2, Aparna Dave2, Yuqi Yang3, Zhe-Sheng Chen3, Raghu Radhakrishnan4.
Abstract
A burning sensation on eating spicy foods purportedly supports the role of capsaicin, an active component of chili peppers, in the etiology of oral submucous fibrosis (OSF). Although the mast cell mediators and activated P2X receptors induce a constant burning sensation through an ATP-dependent mechanism, it is the activation of the transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 (TRPV-1) receptor by capsaicin that aggravates it. The molecular basis for the burning pain in OSF is thus attributable to the activation of TRPV1. There is overwhelming evidence that confirms capsaicin has more of a protective role in attenuating fibrosis and is potentially therapeutic in reversing conditions linked to collagen accumulation. The activation of TRPV-1 by capsaicin increases intracellular calcium ([Ca2+]i), upregulates AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) and Sirtuin-1 (SIRT-1), to enrich endothelium-dependent vasodilation via endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS). The induction of vasodilation induces antifibrotic effects by alleviating hypoxia. The antifibrotic effects of capsaicin are mediated through the upregulation of antioxidant enzymes, downregulation of inflammatory genes and suppression of new collagen fibril formation. Capsaicin also demonstrates an anticarcinogenic effect by upregulating the cytotoxic T cells and downregulating regulatory T cells through the inhibition of angiogenesis and promotion of apoptosis. Judicious administration of capsaicin with an appropriate delivery mechanism may have therapeutic benefits in reducing pain sensation, rendering antifibrotic effects, and preventing the malignant transformation of OSF. This paper provides an overview of the molecular basis of capsaicin and its therapeutic application as an antifibrotic and anticarcinogenic agent for the treatment of OSF.Entities:
Keywords: anticarcinogen; antifibrotic; burning pain; capsaicin; chili; oral submucous fibrosis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35600864 PMCID: PMC9114457 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2022.888280
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.988
FIGURE 1Schematic outline of the role of (A,B) mast cells in continuous burning pain and vesicles formation in OSF (Adapted and Modified from Pujari and Vidya, 2013), (C) P2X receptors in a continuous burning pain in OSF, (D) chili or spicy food in aggravation of burning pain in OSF. (E) The accumulation of eosinophils in OSF as a consequence of the process of fibrosis and as a result of irritation by areca nut byproducts.
FIGURE 2Schematic outline of the antifibrotic action of capsaicin through (A) TRPV-1 channels, (B) inhibition of fibril growth and decreased M1 macrophage polarization. (C) The restoration of miR-499 through capsaicin exposure inhibits both fibrosis and malignancy in OSF.
Potential antifibrotic mechanisms of capsaicin.
| Agent | Pathway/Mediators/Mechanism | Tissue | References |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| ↑PPAR-γ, ↑Nrf2, ↑Catalase, ↓TGF-β1, ↓TNF-α, ↓IL-6, ↓Col-I | Liver Fibrosis |
|
|
| ↑PPAR-γ, ↓TGF-β, ↓SMAD-2,3, ↑SMAD7, ↓NF-κB, ↓TNF-α, ↓α-SMA, ↓Col-I | Liver Fibrosis |
|
|
| ↑TRPV-1,↓TGF-β, ↓SMAD-2,3,↓CTGF, ↓MMP-2,4,13, ↓Fibronectin,↑Col-I&III,↓AT-II-induced-fibroblast proliferation | Cardiac Fibrosis |
|
|
| ↓Collagen Fibril Formation | Rat Tail Tendon |
|
|
| ↓IL-6, ↓IL-12, ↓TNF-α, ↓Hes-1, ↓Notch-1, ↓M-1 Macrophage Polarization | Liver Fibrosis |
|
|
| ↓Collagen,↓CS, ↓DS, ↓Elastin, ↓HA,↓KS, ↓UA | Lung Cancer |
|
|
| ↓ETS-1, ↓CTGF,↑miR-499 | OSF |
|
|
| |||
|
|
Abbreviations: CS-Chondroitin Sulphate, DS-Dermatan Sulphate, HA-Hyaluronic Acid, KS-Keratan Sulphate, OSF- oral submucous fibrosis, UA-Uronic Acid.
FIGURE 3Schematic outline of the anti-malignant action of capsaicin through various pathways.
Potential Anticancer action of capsaicin and its analogs.
| Agent | Effect | Pathway/Mediators | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| I. Capsaicin | |||
| ↑ Antioxidant defense | ↑ PI3K/Nrf2/HO-1 pathway |
| |
| ↑ Antioxidant defense | ↑GST, ↑QR and ↑HO-1 | ||
| ↓ Lipid peroxidation | ↑SOD, ↑CAT, ↑GPx, ↑GR, ↑ G6PD | ||
| ↑ Chemotherapeutic efficacy | ↓P-gp | ||
| ↓ Inflammation | ↓Substance-P, ↓IL-1β, ↓IL-6, ↓TNFα, ↓Cox-2, ↓NF-κB | ||
| ↓Activation of carcinogens | ↓CYP1A1, ↓CYP1A2, ↓CYP3A4/5, ↓CYP2B6, ↓CYP2C19, ↓CYP2D6 and ↓CYP2E1 | ||
| II. Natural Capsaicin Analogues | |||
| | ↑ Apoptosis | ↑ROS, ↑NF-κB ↓ ΔΨm |
|
| ↓ Angiogenesis | ↓ Src Kinase, ↓ p125, ↓ p125, ↓ VE-Cadherin | ||
| | |||
| | ↑Apoptosis | ↑p53 and ↑p21 cells | |
| ↑Autophagy | ↑ ROS, ↑NO, ↑Bax,↑Ca2+, ↓ Bcl-2, ↓JNK | ||
| ↓Angiogenesis | ↓ MAPK and ↓ERK | ||
| ↓Metastasis | ↓MMP2,3, ↓JAK/STAT, ↓PGI | ||
| | ↑Cell Cycle Arrest | ↓ΔΨm, ↑PKC, ↑p21, ↓CCND1 | |
| ↑Apoptosis | ↓CoQ, ↓Mitochondrial Respiration | ||
| | ↑Apoptosis | ↓ΔΨm, ↑Cyt-c, ↑Cytosolic Ca2+, ↑Cas-3 and 9 | |
| ↑Autophagy | ↑Catalase | ||
| II. Capsaicin synergistic action with other compounds | |||
| Combination |
|
|
|
| | ↑ Apoptosis - p53-dependent NO elevation and enhanced caspase-3 activity | Colon Cancer | |
| | TRPV1 activation and inhibition of nuclear localization of PCNA | Bladder Cancer | |
| | ↑AMPK, ↓Cox-2 | Breast Cancer | |
| | Modulating the transcriptional activity of NF-κB, ↑OR↓ target genes downstream of NF-κB and p53 | Colorectal Cancer | |
| | ↓ MMP-2 and -9 expression and enzymatic activities | Prostate Cancer | |
| | |||
|
| ↑phospho- MLKL, phospho- RIP3 and | ||
| ↑ necroptosis | HSC-3 and SAS oral cancer cell lines |
| |
Abbreviations: ΔΨm- Mitochondrial membrane potential, Cytochrome-c–Cyt-c.
FIGURE 4Chemical structure and activity relationship of capsaicin and its analogy (A). Capsaicin, (B). Dihydrocapsaicin, (C). Capsiate, (D). Dihydrocapsiate, (E). Evodiamine, (F). Rutaecarpine.