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| Brusatol is a quassinoid (highly oxygenated triterpenoid derivative) isolated from Brucea javanica. It is best known in oncology research as a potent functional inhibitor of the Nrf2 pathway, which places it at the center of redox regulation, chemoresistance, and mitochondrial stress in cancer cells. Brusatol — brusatol is a naturally occurring quassinoid, a highly oxygenated degraded triterpenoid isolated mainly from Brucea javanica. It is best characterized as a preclinical small-molecule anticancer sensitizer that suppresses stress-response and survival signaling, with the strongest historical association being transient depletion of NRF2-dependent cytoprotective signaling. Its formal classification is a plant-derived natural product and experimental anticancer chemosensitizer. Standard abbreviations include BRU and BT. Mechanistically, current evidence no longer supports treating brusatol as a clean or selective NRF2 inhibitor; rather, NRF2 suppression appears to be one important downstream consequence of broader translational and short-lived protein depletion, with additional context-dependent effects on STAT3, AKT/mTOR, EGFR-linked signaling, EMT/metastasis programs, and ferroptosis susceptibility. Primary mechanisms (ranked):
Bioavailability / PK relevance: Native brusatol has meaningful delivery constraints and limited development maturity. Published PK work is mainly preclinical, including intravenous mouse and rat studies, tissue-distribution studies, metabolite identification, and formulation work designed to improve oral exposure. Nanoparticle and self-microemulsifying systems have been explored because practical systemic delivery and therapeutic index remain limiting issues. In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: Many cell studies use submicromolar to low-micromolar concentrations, which may be pharmacologically active but are not yet anchored to a validated human exposure range because there is no established clinical dosing framework. Some mechanistic claims likely reflect concentration- and model-dependent pleiotropy. Combination efficacy appears more translationally relevant than assuming selective single-target inhibition at fixed in-vitro concentrations. Clinical evidence status: Preclinical only. Evidence includes extensive in-vitro work and multiple animal studies showing tumor-growth inhibition and sensitization to chemotherapy or targeted therapy, but no established human oncology efficacy and no identified registered interventional cancer trial establishing clinical use of purified brusatol as an anticancer drug. Mechanistic relevance of brusatol in cancer
P: 0–30 min R: 30 min–3 hr G: >3 hr |
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| Glycolysis is a metabolic pathway that converts glucose into pyruvate, producing a small amount of ATP (energy) in the process. It is a fundamental process for cellular energy production and occurs in the cytoplasm of cells. In normal cells, glycolysis is tightly regulated and is followed by aerobic respiration in the presence of oxygen, which allows for the efficient production of ATP. In cancer cells, however, glycolysis is often upregulated, even in the presence of oxygen. This phenomenon is known as the Warburg Mutations in oncogenes (like MYC) and tumor suppressor genes (like TP53) can alter metabolic pathways, promoting glycolysis and other anabolic processes that support cell growth.effect. Acidosis: The increased production of lactate from glycolysis can lead to an acidic microenvironment, which may promote tumor invasion and suppress immune responses. Glycolysis is a hallmark of malignancy transformation in solid tumor, and LDH is the key enzyme involved in glycolysis. Pathways: -GLUTs, HK2, PFK, PK, PKM2, LDH, LDHA, PI3K/AKT/mTOR, AMPK, HIF-1a, c-MYC, p53, SIRT6, HSP90α, GAPDH, HBT, PPP, Lactate Metabolism, ALDO Natural products targeting glycolytic signaling pathways https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9631946/ Alkaloids: -Berberine, Worenine, Sinomenine, NK007, Tetrandrine, N-methylhermeanthidine chloride, Dauricine, Oxymatrine, Matrine, Cryptolepine Flavonoids: -Oroxyline A, Apigenin, Kaempferol, Quercetin, Wogonin, Baicalein, Chrysin, Genistein, Cardamonin, Phloretin, Morusin, Bavachinin, 4-O-methylalpinumisofavone, Glabridin, Icaritin, LicA, Naringin, IVT, Proanthocyanidin B2, Scutellarin, Hesperidin, Silibinin, Catechin, EGCG, EGC, Xanthohumol. Non-flavonoid phenolic compounds: Curcumin, Resveratrol, Gossypol, Tannic acid. Terpenoids: -Cantharidin, Dihydroartemisinin, Oleanolic acid, Jolkinolide B, Cynaropicrin, Ursolic Acid, Triptolie, Oridonin, Micheliolide, Betulinic Acid, Beta-escin, Limonin, Bruceine D, Prosapogenin A (PSA), Oleuropein, Dioscin. Quinones: -Thymoquinone, Lapachoi, Tan IIA, Emodine, Rhein, Shikonin, Hypericin Others: -Perillyl alcohol, HCA, Melatonin, Sulforaphane, Vitamin D3, Mycoepoxydiene, Methyl jasmonate, CK, Phsyciosporin, Gliotoxin, Graviola, Ginsenoside, Beta-Carotene. |
| 5702- | BRU, | BJ, | Brusatol inhibits metastasis of triple-negative breast cancer through metabolic reprogramming |
| - | in-vitro, | BC, | NA |
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
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