Taurine / Apoptosis Cancer Research Results

Taur, Taurine: Click to Expand ⟱
Features:
Taurine (2-aminoethanesulfonic acid) is a sulfur-containing “amino acid–like” molecule (not incorporated into proteins). It’s abundant in many tissues and is best thought of as a homeostatic modulator rather than a direct cytotoxin.
Core biology themes:
-Osmoregulation / membrane stabilization
-Mitochondrial support + anti-oxidant tone (indirect)
-Calcium handling modulation
-Anti-inflammatory signaling (context-dependent)
-Bile acid conjugation (tauroursodeoxycholic-type physiology, but taurine itself is a conjugating substrate)

Cancer relevance (preclinical/adjunct framing):
-Often discussed as protective (normal-tissue protection) and stress-modulating, not a primary anti-cancer agent.
-May influence redox balance, ER stress, and inflammation, which can indirectly affect tumor biology or therapy tolerance (model-dependent).
-ROS axis: tends to reduce oxidative injury (indirect)
-NRF2: sometimes reported as part of antioxidant adaptation, but not a “core direct target”
Amino acid that benefits the heart, brain and immune system.

Taurine, an organic compound containing sulfur in its chemical structure, possesses anti-inflammatory, anti-oxidant, and various physiological functions within the cardiovascular, kidney, endocrine, and immune systems.
Also an LDH inhibitor
-Neuroprotection: helps protect neurons against excitotoxicity (e.g., glutamate damage) and ROS stress.
-Anti-oxidative action:	scavenges ROS, reducing oxidative stress seen in AD brains.
-Anti-inflammatory	
-Calcium homeostasis	Helps maintain intracellular calcium balance, disrupted in AD.
-Amyloid-beta toxicity	May reduce Aβ-induced neurotoxicity and cell death in vitro.
-Tau pathology: possible reduction of tau hyperphosphorylation.
-Memory and cognition may improve learning and memory.

Rank Pathway / Axis Cancer / Tumor Context Normal Tissue Context TSF Primary Effect Notes / Interpretation
1 Cellular osmolyte / membrane stabilization Stress tolerance modulation (context-dependent) Osmoregulation ↑; membrane stability ↑ P, R Homeostatic buffering Taurine is a major organic osmolyte; stabilizes membranes and can reduce stress-induced damage.
2 Redox tone modulation (indirect antioxidant) Oxidative stress ↓ (reported in some models) Oxidative injury ↓ (common in injury models) R, G Redox buffering Taurine is not a classic radical scavenger like polyphenols; benefits are often indirect (mitochondrial + inflammation effects).
3 Anti-inflammatory signaling (NF-κB / cytokine tone) Inflammatory tumor-support signaling ↓ (reported; model-dependent) Inflammation tone ↓ R, G Anti-inflammatory modulation Often reported to reduce pro-inflammatory cytokines and NF-κB-linked outputs in stress/injury contexts.
4 Mitochondrial function / bioenergetic stability Mitochondrial stress ↓ (context) ΔΨm stability ↑; mitochondrial resilience ↑ R, G Organelle protection Commonly framed as improving mitochondrial resilience under stress (ischemia/toxicity models); cancer direction is context-dependent.
5 Calcium handling (Ca2+ homeostasis) Stress signaling modulation (context) Ca2+ buffering / excitability modulation P, R Signal stabilization Taurine is often described as modulating Ca2+ fluxes and reducing Ca2+-overload injury.
6 ER stress / UPR modulation ER stress ↓ (reported in some systems) Proteostasis protection ↑ R, G Proteotoxic stress buffering Reported to blunt ER-stress signaling in some injury models; cancer relevance depends on whether ER stress is pro-death or pro-survival in that tumor.
7 Apoptosis modulation (context-dependent) Apoptosis ↑ or ↓ depending on model Often anti-apoptotic under toxic stress G Cell-fate modulation Most consistent pattern is protection in normal tissues; direct tumor-killing is not a dominant taurine signature.
8 Bile acid conjugation / metabolic handling Indirect systemic metabolism effects Bile acid conjugation ↑; lipid handling modulation G Systemic metabolic support Taurine is used for bile acid conjugation; may affect gut-liver signaling indirectly.
9 Chemo-/radioprotection signals (adjunct angle) Could reduce oxidative injury (might reduce efficacy for ROS-driven modalities) Normal tissue protection potential G Supportive-care relevance If positioned, best framed as “supportive/normal-tissue buffering” and kept separate from “tumor kill” claims.
10 Translation constraint (not a primary anti-cancer agent) Direct anti-tumor efficacy is inconsistent / model-dependent Generally well-tolerated in typical dietary ranges Expectation management Best classified as a homeostasis modulator; cancer claims should be qualified and tied to specific models.

Time-Scale Flag (TSF): P / R / G

  • P: 0–30 min (osmolyte + membrane/Ca2+ effects begin)
  • R: 30 min–3 hr (inflammation/redox/ER-stress signaling shifts)
  • G: >3 hr (phenotype outcomes: resilience, apoptosis modulation)


Alzheimer’s Disease (AD)-Oriented Time-Scale Flagged Pathway Table
Rank Pathway / Axis AD / Brain Context TSF Primary Effect Notes / Interpretation
1 Neuroinflammation (microglia / cytokine tone) Inflammatory signaling ↓ (reported in neuroinflammation models) R, G Anti-inflammatory modulation Taurine and taurine-derived signals are often discussed as dampening pro-inflammatory cytokine output; relevance is strongest where inflammation drives synaptic dysfunction.
2 Oxidative stress / redox buffering ROS injury ↓; lipid peroxidation ↓ (reported) R, G Neuroprotection (stress buffering) Taurine is not a classic polyphenol antioxidant; protective effects are typically indirect (mitochondrial stabilization, inflammation reduction).
3 Mitochondrial function / energy stability ΔΨm stability ↑; mitochondrial stress ↓ (reported) R, G Bioenergetic support AD is associated with mitochondrial dysfunction; taurine is often positioned as improving resilience under metabolic/oxidative stress.
4 Calcium handling / excitotoxicity buffering Ca2+ dysregulation ↓; excitotoxic pressure ↓ (reported) P, R Signal stabilization Taurine is frequently described as modulating Ca2+ flux and reducing Ca2+-overload injury, which can be relevant to excitotoxic synapse loss.
5 Osmoregulation / membrane stabilization Cell volume + membrane stability ↑ P, R Cellular resilience As a major osmolyte, taurine can stabilize membranes and reduce stress-induced injury in neurons and glia.
6 ER stress / UPR modulation ER stress ↓; proteostasis pressure ↓ (reported) R, G Proteostasis support Protein-misfolding/UPR burden is relevant in neurodegeneration; taurine is reported to buffer ER stress in several injury models.
7 Synaptic function support (neurotransmission tone) Synaptic resilience ↑ (reported) G Functional support Taurine can act as a neuromodulator (inhibitory tone) and may support synaptic stability indirectly via reduced inflammation/oxidative stress.
8 Aβ / Tau pathology (direct effects) Mixed / limited direct evidence; indirect effects via inflammation/redox more plausible G Downstream pathology modulation (uncertain) If included, keep conservative: taurine is more strongly supported as a stress-buffering agent than a direct anti-amyloid or anti-tau drug.
9 BBB / CNS exposure CNS availability depends on transport; dietary taurine raises systemic levels R PK constraint Taurine is abundant in brain but transport and distribution still matter; effects depend on achievable CNS shifts.
10 Translation constraint (adjunct positioning) Supportive neuroprotection likely; disease-modifying AD benefit not established Expectation management Best positioned as neuroprotective / resilience-supporting; avoid claiming proven disease modification without trial-level support.

Time-Scale Flag (TSF): P / R / G

  • P: 0–30 min (membrane/osmolyte + Ca2+ signaling effects)
  • R: 30 min–3 hr (inflammation, mitochondrial/redox, ER-stress signaling shifts)
  • G: >3 hr (synaptic/phenotype outcomes; longer-term pathology effects if any)


Apoptosis, Apoptosis: Click to Expand ⟱
Source:
Type: type of cell death
Situation in which a cell actively pursues a course toward death upon receiving certain stimuli.
Cancer is one of the scenarios where too little apoptosis occurs, resulting in malignant cells that will not die.


Scientific Papers found: Click to Expand⟱
3957- Taur,    Expedition into Taurine Biology: Structural Insights and Therapeutic Perspective of Taurine in Neurodegenerative Diseases
*UPR↑, *Inflam↓, *antiOx↑, *ROS↓, *Apoptosis↓, *Ca+2↓, *neuroP↑,
3955- Taur,    Mechanism of neuroprotective function of taurine
- in-vitro, NA, NA
*Ca+2↓, *MMP↑, *Apoptosis↓, *Bcl-2↑, *cal2↓, *LDH↓,
3950- Taur,    Taurine Supplementation as a Neuroprotective Strategy upon Brain Dysfunction in Metabolic Syndrome and Diabetes
- Review, Diabetic, NA - Review, Stroke, NA - Review, AD, NA
*Ca+2↝, *neuroP↑, *other↝, *pH↝, *ROS∅, eff↑, *MMP↑, *Apoptosis↓, *other↝, *ER Stress↓, *Bcl-xL↓, *BAX↑, *Cyt‑c↑, *cal2↓, *Casp3↓, *UPR↓, *other↝, *NF-kB↓, *NRF2↑, *GLUT1↑, *GLUT3↑, *memory↑,

Showing Research Papers: 1 to 3 of 3

* indicates research on normal cells as opposed to diseased cells
Total Research Paper Matches: 3

Pathway results for Effect on Cancer / Diseased Cells:


Drug Metabolism & Resistance

eff↑, 1,  
Total Targets: 1

Pathway results for Effect on Normal Cells:


Redox & Oxidative Stress

antiOx↑, 1,   NRF2↑, 1,   ROS↓, 1,   ROS∅, 1,  

Mitochondria & Bioenergetics

MMP↑, 2,  

Core Metabolism/Glycolysis

LDH↓, 1,  

Cell Death

Apoptosis↓, 3,   BAX↑, 1,   Bcl-2↑, 1,   Bcl-xL↓, 1,   Casp3↓, 1,   Cyt‑c↑, 1,  

Transcription & Epigenetics

other↝, 3,  

Protein Folding & ER Stress

ER Stress↓, 1,   UPR↓, 1,   UPR↑, 1,  

Migration

Ca+2↓, 2,   Ca+2↝, 1,   cal2↓, 2,  

Barriers & Transport

GLUT1↑, 1,   GLUT3↑, 1,  

Immune & Inflammatory Signaling

Inflam↓, 1,   NF-kB↓, 1,  

Cellular Microenvironment

pH↝, 1,  

Clinical Biomarkers

LDH↓, 1,  

Functional Outcomes

memory↑, 1,   neuroP↑, 2,  
Total Targets: 27

Scientific Paper Hit Count for: Apoptosis, Apoptosis
3 Taurine
Query results interpretion may depend on "conditions" listed in the research papers.
Such Conditions may include : 
  -low or high Dose
  -format for product, such as nano of lipid formations
  -different cell line effects
  -synergies with other products 
  -if effect was for normal or cancerous cells
Filter Conditions: Pro/AntiFlg:%  IllCat:%  CanType:%  Cells:%  prod#:158  Target#:14  State#:%  Dir#:1
wNotes=0 sortOrder:rid,rpid

 

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