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| Butyrate — a four-carbon short-chain fatty acid produced mainly by gut microbial fermentation of dietary fiber, functioning as both a colonocyte energy substrate and a pleiotropic signaling metabolite. It is formally classified as an endogenous microbial metabolite and short-chain fatty acid; common research and delivery forms include sodium butyrate and the oral prodrug tributyrin. Standard abbreviations include butyrate, NaBu, SCFA, and TB for tributyrin. Its source is primarily the colonic microbiome–fiber axis, with highest physiological relevance in the colon lumen and colonic epithelium rather than in systemic circulation. In cancer biology, its effects are highly context-dependent: it is most mechanistically credible in colorectal and inflammation-linked gastrointestinal settings, while newer tumor-microbiome data indicate that intratumoral butyrate can also support progression in some non-colorectal contexts. Butyric acid primarily exerts its anticancer properties through two mechanisms:(i) Activation of cell-surface receptors (GPR41, GPR43 and HCAR2/GPR109A) (ii) inhibition of HDACs in different cells. butyrate paradox: butyrate promotes proliferation of normal colonocytes, it has the opposite effect on cancerous cells where it inhibits cell proliferation and also induces apoptosis Primary mechanisms (ranked):
Bioavailability / PK relevance: Butyrate is rapidly absorbed and extensively metabolized, so systemic exposure is limited and transient. Physiologic and therapeutic relevance is therefore mainly local to the colon; oral strategies that matter most are colonic-release sodium butyrate, microbiome/fiber approaches, or tributyrin-type prodrugs that improve delivery. In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: Many cancer-cell studies use roughly 0.5–5 mM, with some using higher concentrations. Those ranges are plausible in the colonic lumen and at the epithelial interface, where butyrate commonly reaches about 10–20 mM, but they are generally not representative of sustained plasma exposure after ordinary oral dosing. Clinical evidence status: Preclinical for direct anticancer efficacy; small early-phase human oncology studies exist for tributyrin and other butyrate-delivery approaches, but no established antitumor standard-of-care role is supported. Human evidence is stronger for GI-supportive or radiotherapy-supportive use than for tumor control. Butyrate mechanistic matrix
TSF legend: P: 0–30 min (primary/rapid effects) | R: 30 min–3 hr (acute signaling + stress responses) | G: >3 hr (gene-regulatory adaptation; phenotype outcomes) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| LC3II (Microtubule-associated protein 1A/1B light chain 3, also known as LC3) is a protein that plays a crucial role in the process of autophagy. Autophagy is a cellular process in which cells recycle and remove damaged or dysfunctional components. LC3II is often used as a marker for autophagy, as its levels increase during autophagic activity. LC3II is overexpressed in certain types of cancer, including breast, lung, and colon cancer. LC3II is also known by other names, including: MAP1LC3B (Microtubule-associated protein 1 light chain 3 beta) LC3B (Microtubule-associated protein 1 light chain 3 beta) ATG8F (Autophagy-related protein 8F) : In many cancers, increased LC3-II expression indicates enhanced autophagy, which can support tumor cell survival, especially under stress conditions (e.g., nutrient deprivation, hypoxia). This is often associated with poor prognosis and treatment resistance. |
| 2047- | Buty, | Sodium butyrate inhibits migration and induces AMPK-mTOR pathway-dependent autophagy and ROS-mediated apoptosis via the miR-139-5p/Bmi-1 axis in human bladder cancer cells |
| - | in-vitro, | CRC, | T24/HTB-9 | - | in-vitro, | Nor, | SV-HUC-1 | - | in-vitro, | Bladder, | 5637 | - | in-vivo, | NA, | 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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