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| Carvacrol monoterpenoid phenol with odor of oregano. Found in essential oils and plants, has antimicorbial and antioxidant properties. Carvacrol is present abundantly in the essential oils of many medicinal plants and well known for its numerous biological activities. Carvacrol — Carvacrol is a small lipophilic monoterpenoid phenol that occurs naturally in oregano, thyme, and related essential oils. It is best classified as a natural product phytochemical and food-flavoring constituent rather than an approved anticancer drug. Standard abbreviations include CAR and CARV. In translational oncology, carvacrol is mainly a preclinical multitarget stress-response modulator with recurring signals around mitochondrial apoptosis, PI3K/Akt suppression, TRPM7-linked Ca²⁺ handling, and anti-migratory/anti-inflammatory effects. Primary mechanisms (ranked):
Bioavailability / PK relevance: Carvacrol is orally absorbable but has clear translational PK constraints: it is volatile, highly lipophilic, rapidly metabolized, and cleared mainly as glucuronide and sulfate conjugates. Reported plasma half-life in animal PK work is short, around 1.5 hours, which supports frequent dosing or formulation strategies if systemic antitumor exposure is desired. In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: Many mechanistic cancer studies use micromolar concentrations that may exceed sustained free systemic exposure achievable with simple oral dosing. Accordingly, positive cell-culture findings should be treated as exposure-sensitive unless supported by in-vivo efficacy or delivery enhancement. The mechanism is concentration-driven, not field-based. Clinical evidence status: Preclinical anticancer evidence with some in-vivo support, but no established oncology RCTs or approved cancer use. Human evidence is limited mainly to early safety/tolerability rather than efficacy, so current oncology relevance is investigational and adjunct-conceptual rather than clinically validated. Mechanistic pathway table
P: 0–30 min Carvacrol in Alzheimer’s diseaseCarvacrol in Alzheimer’s disease — Carvacrol is a small lipophilic monoterpenoid phenol found in oregano and thyme oils. In the AD context it is best classified as a preclinical neuroprotective natural product rather than a validated anti-dementia drug. The main recurring signals are anti-neuroinflammatory activity, oxidative-stress attenuation, partial cholinesterase inhibition, and protection against amyloid-β-associated synaptic and cognitive impairment. It is brain-active, but current AD evidence remains largely limited to cell and rodent models, with no established clinical efficacy. Primary mechanisms (ranked):
Bioavailability / PK relevance: Carvacrol is lipophilic and appears capable of CNS activity, but it is also rapidly metabolized and conjugated, which likely limits sustained free brain exposure with simple oral dosing. This makes formulation and exposure profile important for translation. In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: Several mechanistic studies use exposure conditions that may not map cleanly onto sustained human brain concentrations. The AD signal is still concentration-dependent and preclinical, so mechanistic plausibility is stronger than translational certainty. Clinical evidence status: Preclinical only for AD. There are rodent and cell-model signals for cognitive and biochemical benefit, but no established AD randomized clinical trials demonstrating efficacy. AD mechanistic pathway table
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| Also known as CP32. Cysteinyl aspartate specific proteinase-3 (Caspase-3) is a common key protein in the apoptosis and pyroptosis pathways, and when activated, the expression level of tumor suppressor gene Gasdermin E (GSDME) determines the mechanism of tumor cell death. As a key protein of apoptosis, caspase-3 can also cleave GSDME and induce pyroptosis. Loss of caspase activity is an important cause of tumor progression. Many anticancer strategies rely on the promotion of apoptosis in cancer cells as a means to shrink tumors. Crucial for apoptotic function are executioner caspases, most notably caspase-3, that proteolyze a variety of proteins, inducing cell death. Paradoxically, overexpression of procaspase-3 (PC-3), the low-activity zymogen precursor to caspase-3, has been reported in a variety of cancer types. Until recently, this counterintuitive overexpression of a pro-apoptotic protein in cancer has been puzzling. Recent studies suggest subapoptotic caspase-3 activity may promote oncogenic transformation, a possible explanation for the enigmatic overexpression of PC-3. Herein, the overexpression of PC-3 in cancer and its mechanistic basis is reviewed; collectively, the data suggest the potential for exploitation of PC-3 overexpression with PC-3 activators as a targeted anticancer strategy. Caspase 3 is the main effector caspase and has a key role in apoptosis. In many types of cancer, including breast, lung, and colon cancer, caspase-3 expression is reduced or absent. On the other hand, some studies have shown that high levels of caspase-3 expression can be associated with a better prognosis in certain types of cancer, such as breast cancer. This suggests that caspase-3 may play a role in the elimination of cancer cells, and that therapies aimed at activating caspase-3 may be effective in treating certain types of cancer. Procaspase-3 is a apoptotic marker protein. Prognostic significance: • High Cas3 expression: Associated with good prognosis and increased sensitivity to chemotherapy in breast, gastric, lung, and pancreatic cancers. • Low Cas3 expression: Linked to poor prognosis and increased risk of recurrence in colorectal, hepatocellular carcinoma, ovarian, and prostate cancers. |
| 5907- | CAR, | Anti-proliferative and pro-apoptotic effect of carvacrol on human hepatocellular carcinoma cell line HepG-2 |
| - | in-vitro, | Liver, | HepG2 |
| 5901- | CAR, | Neuroprotective role of carvacrol in ischemic brain injury: a systematic review of preclinical evidence and proposed TRPM7 involvement |
| - | Review, | Stroke, | 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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