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| Bufalin/Huachansu is a component from Chinese toad venom. Bufalin is classified as a cardiac glycoside, specifically a type of bufadienolide. Pathways: -release of cytochrome c and subsequent activation of caspases -enhance the expression of death receptors -inhibit the PI3K/Akt/mTOR -modulate the MAPK/ERK pathway -inhibit NF-κB signaling -induce cell cycle arrest at different checkpoints (commonly G0/G1 or G2/M) -elevate intracellular ROS levels -interfere with the Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway -modulate autophagy, a process that can either promote cell survival or lead to cell death -Stabilization or activation of p53 Bufalin — Bufalin is a steroidal cardiotonic toxin and anticancer lead compound, classically isolated from toad venom (ChanSu / Huachansu) and belonging to the bufadienolide subclass of cardiac glycosides. It is commonly abbreviated BF. In cancer research, bufalin is best understood as a pleiotropic signaling disruptor whose most central pharmacology is linked to Na+/K+-ATPase engagement, with downstream effects on survival signaling, mitochondrial death pathways, redox stress, stemness, invasion, and therapy resistance. Primary mechanisms (ranked):
Bioavailability / PK relevance: Translation is constrained by poor water solubility, low/variable bioavailability of bufadienolides, short apparent plasma persistence in human Huachansu infusion studies, and a narrow therapeutic window typical of cardiac glycosides. CYP3A-mediated metabolism and CYP3A4 inhibition/time-dependent inactivation raise drug-interaction concern. Delivery optimization by nanoparticles, prodrugs, and formulation engineering is mechanistically relevant, not merely cosmetic. In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: Concentration-driven. Many mechanistic cancer studies report activity in low-nanomolar to submicromolar ranges, which is closer to plausibility than for many phytochemicals; however, human plasma bufalin levels reported during Huachansu infusion were only low ng/mL and showed little accumulation, so many higher in-vitro conditions likely exceed sustained clinically achieved free exposure. Any interpretation should therefore prioritize low-nanomolar findings and delivery-enabled tumor exposure rather than high-concentration cell-culture effects. Clinical evidence status: Preclinical to small-human evidence only. There is substantial in-vitro and animal evidence, plus early Huachansu clinical studies in China and a phase I/II development path, but no convincing randomized evidence that bufalin-containing therapy improves major cancer outcomes. Current status is best described as experimental / adjunct-oriented rather than established anticancer therapy. Mechanistic translation matrix
P: 0–30 min |
| Source: |
| Type: Protein-coding gene |
| (ALDH1A1) is a cancer stem cell marker, and its expression correlates with prognosis in a number of malignancies. Aldehyde dehydrogenases are the cancer stem cells which plays a role in CSC progression. ALDH comprise 19 subfamilies in which ALDH1A1, ALDH1A3, ALDH3A1, ALDH5A1, ALDH7A1, and ALDH18A1 are implicated in CSC. Existing chemotherapeutic drugs eliminate the bulk of tumors but are usually not effective against CSC which express ALDH+ population. Henceforth, targeting ALDH is convincing to treat the patient's post-relapse. |
| 5721- | BF, | Bufalin Suppresses Triple-Negative Breast Cancer Stem Cell Growth by Inhibiting the Wnt/β-Catenin Signaling Pathway |
| - | 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
Filter Conditions: Pro/AntiFlg:% IllCat:% CanType:% Cells:% prod#:49 Target#:7 State#:% Dir#:1
wNotes=0 sortOrder:rid,rpid