Garcinol / Gli1 Cancer Research Results

GAR, Garcinol: Click to Expand ⟱
Features:
Found in dried fruit rind of Garcinia Indica with anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, anticancer, and antibacterial properties
Garcinia Cambogia Extract.
"We conclude that patients who are T-cadherin-positive could especially benefit from a therapy with garcinol."

🔬1) NF-κB & AP-1 Suppression
Garcinol inhibits NF-κB and AP-1 transcriptional activity in multiple cancer cell systems, reducing pro-inflammatory and pro-survival gene expression.
📚 2) Epigenetic Regulation
Garcinol is one of the few natural products shown to inhibit p300/CBP histone acetyltransferases, shifting chromatin acetylation and influencing gene expression (differentiation, apoptosis, EMT). This is more specific than general “HDAC modulation.”
💀 3) Apoptosis
Studies report modulation of the Bcl-2 family and increased caspase activity, but this is often downstream of transcription/epigenetic changes, not a direct redox trigger.
🧬 4) Cell Cycle & Proliferation
Lower Cyclin D1, higher p21/p27, and G1/S arrest are common phenotypes.
🧭 5) Invasion & Angiogenesis
Garcinol reduces MMP-2/9 and angiogenic markers in multiple tumor cell assays.

Rank Pathway / Axis Cancer Cells Normal Cells TSF Primary Effect Notes / Interpretation
1 NF-κB / AP-1 signaling NF-κB ↓; AP-1 ↓; downstream pro-survival/inflammatory outputs ↓ ↔ or anti-inflammatory modulation in immune cells R, G Pro-survival & inflammatory transcription suppression Garcinol is reported to inhibit NF-κB and AP-1 transcriptional activity, reducing inflammation and pro-growth signaling in multiple models.
2 Epigenetic regulation (HAT/HDAC modulation) Inhibition of p300/CBP histone acetyltransferase; altered acetylation patterns ↔ baseline epigenetic state R, G Gene regulatory reprogramming Garcinol directly inhibits histone acetyltransferases (especially p300/CBP), influencing chromatin state and gene expression linked to differentiation and proliferation.
3 Intrinsic apoptosis (mitochondrial / caspase-linked) ↑ Bax/Bak; ↓ Bcl-2/Bcl-xL; ↑ caspase-9/3 ↔ minimal activation in normal cells G Execution of apoptosis Often downstream of stress and survival pathway modulation; not as dominant as classic pro-oxidant molecules but consistent in many cell lines.
4 Cell-cycle checkpoints (p21/p27; Cyclin D1) Cell-cycle arrest (often G1/S); Cyclin D1 ↓ G Cytostasis Frequently reported as later phenotypic outcome tied to reduced proliferation.
5 Invasion / metastasis programs (MMPs / EMT) MMP-2/9 ↓; invasion/migration ↓; EMT markers ↓ G Anti-invasive phenotype Linked mechanistically to NF-κB/AP-1 and epigenetic changes influencing MMP expression and EMT regulators.
6 Angiogenesis signaling (VEGF & pro-angiogenic factors) VEGF ↓; pro-angiogenic markers ↓ G Anti-angiogenic support Sometimes measured in later in vivo or emulated assay systems; reflects downstream gene expression changes.
7 PI3K/AKT / survival kinases ↓ PI3K/AKT signaling (model-dependent) R, G Survival/growth suppression Modulation of survival kinases is reported in some systems but not a universal primary mechanism.
8 ROS / oxidative stress (context–dependent) ROS modulation (inconsistent across models) P, R, G Conditional stress modulation Some studies report mild ROS changes, but garcinol is not a strong pro-oxidant driver like BetA or curcumin in cancer cells.
9 Chemo-sensitization / combination relevance Enhanced sensitivity to chemotherapeutics (context) G Combination leverage Combination effects are reported in selected cell lines/model systems; not universal.
10 Bioavailability constraint (oral exposure / formulation dependence) Systemic exposure often limited without enhanced delivery Translation constraint Poor native bioavailability is common across polyphenols/bzp molecules; formulations improve systemic exposure.

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

  • P: 0–30 min (primary/physical-chemical effects; rapid signaling / kinase shifts)
  • R: 30 min–3 hr (acute stress-response and transcription signaling)
  • G: >3 hr (gene-regulatory adaptation and phenotype-level outcomes)


Gli1, glioma-associated oncogene homolog 1: Click to Expand ⟱
Source:
Type: HH
Gli family zinc-finger transcription factors; GLI1‐dependent target genes (CyclinD1, Bcl‐2, Foxm1)

Glioma-associated oncogene homolog 1 (GLI1) is a transcription factor that plays a significant role in the Hedgehog signaling pathway, which is crucial for cell growth, differentiation, and tissue patterning during embryonic development.
GLI1 can promote tumor growth and survival by regulating the expression of genes involved in cell proliferation, apoptosis, and angiogenesis. Its overexpression has been associated with aggressive tumor behavior and poor prognosis in several cancer types.
ts overexpression is often associated with aggressive tumor behavior, poor prognosis, and resistance to therapy


Scientific Papers found: Click to Expand⟱
816- GAR,    Garcinol downregulates Notch1 signaling via modulating miR-200c and suppresses oncogenic properties of PANC-1 cancer stem-like cells
- in-vitro, PC, PANC1
Mcl-1↓, EZH2↓, ABCG2↓, Gli1↓, NOTCH1↓, miR-200c↑,

Showing Research Papers: 1 to 1 of 1

* indicates research on normal cells as opposed to diseased cells
Total Research Paper Matches: 1

Pathway results for Effect on Cancer / Diseased Cells:


Cell Death

Mcl-1↓, 1,  

Transcription & Epigenetics

EZH2↓, 1,  

Proliferation, Differentiation & Cell State

Gli1↓, 1,   NOTCH1↓, 1,  

Migration

miR-200c↑, 1,  

Drug Metabolism & Resistance

ABCG2↓, 1,  

Clinical Biomarkers

EZH2↓, 1,  
Total Targets: 7

Pathway results for Effect on Normal Cells:


Total Targets: 0

Scientific Paper Hit Count for: Gli1, glioma-associated oncogene homolog 1
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#:83  Target#:124  State#:%  Dir#:1
wNotes=0 sortOrder:rid,rpid

 

Home Page