Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Indian-American Researchers Unleash Turmeric’s Power To Fight Cancer

IANS, 13 Aug, 2018 12:35 PM
    A team of Indian-American researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) and at the University of Utah at Salt Lake City, has used an ingenious process to enable curcumin to kill cancer cells.
     
     
    Curcumin is the active ingredient of turmeric (haldi), the ubiquitous kitchen spice that gives curry its yellow color. Turmeric has been used in India for thousands of years as a spice and medicinal herb because of its powerful anti-inflammatory and strong antioxidant property.
     
     
    Curcumin is also known to exhibit anti-cancer properties, but its poor solubility in water had impeded curcumin's clinical application in cancer. A drug needs to be soluble in water as otherwise it will not flow through the bloodstream.
     
     
    Despite decades of research, the development of efficient strategies that can effectively deliver poorly water-soluble curcumin to cancer cells had remained a challenge.
     
     
    A team headed by Dipanjan Pan, associate professor of bioengineering at UIUC, has now found a way out.
     
     
    "Curcumin's medicinal benefit can be fully appreciated if its solubility issue is resolved," Pan told this correspondent in an e-mail.
     
     
    Pan's laboratory collaborated with Peter Stang at the University of Utah on ways to be able to render curcumin soluble, deliver it to infected tumors and kill the cancer cells.
     
     
    Because platinum is a commonly used cancer therapeutic agent in the clinic, the researchers decided to experiment with a drug consisting of a combination of platinum and curcumin.
     
     
    "It is a combination of clever chemistry and nano-precipitation utilising host guest chemistry," Pan explained. "The sophisticated chemistry leads to self-assembled hierarchical structure that drives the solubility of curcumin and simultaneously delivers an additional anticancer agent, i.e. platinum. The combined therapeutic effect -- of curcumin and platinum -- is lethal for the cancer cells."
     
     
    The team has reported its work in the "Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences" in the US.
     
     
    According to their report, the metallocyclic complex created using platinum "not only enabled curcumin's solubility, but proved to be 100 times more effective in treating various cancer types such as melanoma and breast cancer cells than using curcumin and platinum agents separately".
     
     
    "Our results demonstrate that curcumin works completely in sync with platinum and exerts synergistic effect to show remarkable anticancer properties," says the report. "The platinum-curcumin combination kills the cells by fragmenting its DNA."
     
     
    "Extensive animal studies are in progress in my laboratory, including in rodents and pigs," Pan said. His team also hopes to prove that this method will be effective in killing cancer stem cells -- the birth place of cancer cells -- thereby preventing the recurrence of cancer.
     
     
    Pan's team included post-doctoral researcher Santosh Misra at UIUC, and Sougata Datta, Manik Lal Saha, Nabajit Lahiri, Janis Louie, and Peter J. Stang from the University of Utah.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    'Recurrent cough and cold in children are signs of asthma'

    'Recurrent cough and cold in children are signs of asthma'
    Children with recurrent cough, cold and wheeze should visit their physician as these are clear symptoms that the child may be suffering from asthma, a medical...

    'Recurrent cough and cold in children are signs of asthma'

    'Good fat' could help manage diabetes

    'Good fat' could help manage diabetes
    Brown fat, nicknamed the ‘good fat’ because it warms up the body in cold temperatures, burning up calories in the process, could also be used to manage...

    'Good fat' could help manage diabetes

    Sleep apnea leads to poor aerobic fitness

    Sleep apnea leads to poor aerobic fitness
      People with sleep apnea, in which breathing repeatedly starts and stops during slumber, are likely to have reduced aerobic fitness, even compared with those....

    Sleep apnea leads to poor aerobic fitness

    Protein 'switch' to turn off Alzheimer's identified

    Protein 'switch' to turn off Alzheimer's identified
    Blocking a protein that acts like switch to wake us up may help prevent Alzheimer's disease, new research has found, pointing towards a new target to prevent this...

    Protein 'switch' to turn off Alzheimer's identified

    Houses Should Be Checked For Radon Gas, Can Cause Lung Cancer

    Houses Should Be Checked For Radon Gas, Can Cause Lung Cancer
    TORONTO — It's a naturally occurring radioactive gas that can seep through cracks and crevices in houses and other enclosed spaces — and can cause lung cancer. Yet many Canadians aren't even aware of its existence or the health risk the substance can pose.

    Houses Should Be Checked For Radon Gas, Can Cause Lung Cancer

    Exercise and fasting could boost brain's functions

    Exercise and fasting could boost brain's functions
    The research on animals showed how intermittent fasting in rats and mice can enhance learning and memory and decrease the risk of degeneration of those...

    Exercise and fasting could boost brain's functions