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| Caffeic acid is a polyphenol antioxidant found in coffee, fruits, vegetables, and herbs. It may have anti-inflammatory, anticancer, anti-aging, and other health benefits. Caffeic acid (CA) is a dietary hydroxycinnamic acid found widely in plant foods and in coffee largely as chlorogenic acids (caffeoylquinic acids). CA is generally antioxidant / anti-inflammatory and is frequently reported to modulate Nrf2 and NF-κB signaling, with downstream effects on survival pathways (PI3K/AKT), MAPKs, cell cycle, and apoptosis in preclinical cancer models. A notable mechanistic nuance is a context-dependent pro-oxidant effect described in the presence of copper (Cu), where CA can drive oxidative DNA damage in vitro (often discussed as potentially relevant to tumors with higher copper levels). -Caffeic acid phenethyl ester, the main representative component of propolis -Black chokeberry 141.14 mg/100 g F -Sunflower seed, meal 8.17 mg/100 g FW -Common sage, dried 26.40 mg/100 g FW -Ceylan cinnamon 24.20 mg/100 g FW -Nutmeg 16.30 mg/100 g FW -Dual capacity of CA to act as an antioxidant during carcinogenesis and as a pro-oxidant against cancer cells, promoting their apoptosis or sensitizing them to chemotherapeutic drugs. Pathways: -Caffeic acid is a potent antioxidant -Caffeic acid may also exhibit pro-oxidant behavior. At higher concentrations( 50–100 µM ?) or/and in the presence of transition metal ions (such as copper or iron), caffeic acid can participate in Fenton-like reactions, potentially leading to increased ROS generation. -Shown to inhibit NF-κB activation -Inhibitory effects on MAPK/ERK Pathway -PI3K/Akt Signaling Pathway -Activation of the Nrf2/ARE pathway -Cell cycle arrest at various checkpoints -Angiogenesis Inhibition Caffeic acid typically shows low oral bioavailability (sometimes only a few percent of the ingested dose is systemically available) and a short plasma half-life (around 1–2 hours in animal models). Caffeic acid — Caffeic acid is a dietary hydroxycinnamic acid polyphenol present in coffee, fruits, vegetables, and many herbs, and is also generated from hydrolysis of chlorogenic acids. It is formally classified as a small-molecule plant phenolic acid with redox-active, anti-inflammatory, and signal-modulating properties. Standard abbreviations include CA for caffeic acid; it should be distinguished from CAPE (caffeic acid phenethyl ester), which is a different propolis-derived ester with overlapping but not identical pharmacology. In cancer research, CA is best viewed as a pleiotropic preclinical modulator of inflammatory signaling, stress adaptation, metabolism, apoptosis, invasion, and angiogenesis, with translation limited by rapid conjugation and generally low free-aglycone systemic exposure. Primary mechanisms (ranked):
Bioavailability / PK relevance: CA is absorbable in humans, but after oral intake much of the circulating material appears rapidly as sulfate, glucuronide, and methylated metabolites rather than persistent free aglycone. Peak plasma timing is typically early, and delivery is constrained less by gut uptake than by fast metabolic conversion and short-lived free exposure. In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: Many anticancer studies use tens of micromolar CA, and some mechanistic claims depend on 50–100 µM or higher conditions that are not reliably reproduced as sustained free systemic exposure after ordinary oral intake. Accordingly, anti-inflammatory/adjuvant interpretations translate better than claims requiring strong direct tumor-cidal free-drug concentrations; metal-assisted pro-oxidant effects are especially context-dependent. Clinical evidence status: Primarily preclinical. The cancer evidence base consists mainly of cell and animal studies, with some adjunct/chemosensitization signals. Human oncology evidence remains very limited; at least one registered esophageal squamous cell carcinoma trial has been reported, but caffeic acid is not an established anticancer drug or standard adjunct. Mechanistic matrix
Time-Scale Flag (TSF): P / R / G
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| Type: protein |
| Also known as SLC2A1 An important hallmark in cancer cells is the increase in glucose uptake. GLUT1 is an important target in cancer treatment because cancer cells upregulate GLUT1, a membrane protein that facilitates the basal uptake of glucose in most cell types, to ensure the flux of sugar into metabolic pathways. GLUT1 is a member of the facilitated glucose transporter family and is widely expressed in various tissues, including red blood cells, brain, and cancer cells. GLUT1 has been shown to be overexpressed in many types of tumors, including breast, lung, and colon cancer. This overexpression may contribute to the development and progression of cancer by promoting glucose uptake and energy production in cancer cells. GLUT1 is a protein that facilitates the transport of glucose across cell membranes. GLUT1 plays a role in the regulation of glucose metabolism in diabetes. GLUT1 plays a role in the regulation of glucose metabolism in diabetes. GLUT1 is also known to be involved in the Warburg effect. GLUTs are expressed 10–12-fold higher in cancer cells than in healthy tissues, especially in highly proliferative and malignant tumors. Downregulators: -Resveratrol: associated with reduced GLUT1 expression. -Curcumin: downregulate GLUT1 in various cancer cell lines -Quercetin: downregulating the expression and function of GLUT1. -EGCG: suppress GLUT1 expression -Berberine: linked to decreased expression or activity of GLUT1. |
| - | in-vitro, | Cerv, | SiHa |
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#:51 Target#:566 State#:% Dir#:1
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