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| Bruteridin is a bergamot-derived HMG-bearing flavanone neohesperidoside isolated from Citrus bergamia fruit and best understood as a specialized citrus polyphenol rather than a cardiac glycoside or classic anticancer drug. It is commonly discussed together with the closely related compound melitidin and occurs within bergamot juice or bergamot polyphenolic fractions rather than as a clinically deployed purified agent. Functionally, it is most strongly linked to statin-like HMG-CoA reductase interaction, with broader antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and metabolic effects generally attributed to bergamot mixtures. No approved oncology use or standard abbreviation is established for purified bruteridin. Primary mechanisms (ranked):
Bioavailability / PK relevance: Dedicated human PK data for purified bruteridin are lacking. After bergamot juice intake, circulating species detected in humans are mainly phase II conjugates of hesperetin, naringenin, and eriodyctiol derivatives, indicating substantial intestinal/hepatic transformation of bergamot flavanones rather than demonstrated sustained intact systemic bruteridin exposure. In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: Most cancer-relevant data come from bergamot juice/extract studies using complex mixtures at mg/mL-range in vitro, which should not be assumed to reflect achievable free systemic concentrations of purified bruteridin. The translational bridge from bergamot mixture exposure to isolated bruteridin anticancer activity remains weak. Clinical evidence status: For cancer, evidence for bruteridin itself is preclinical/inferential only. Human data exist for bergamot extracts in cardiometabolic settings, not for purified bruteridin as an anticancer agent. At present this is best categorized as preclinical and mixture-based, with no oncology RCT or approved therapeutic deployment for the isolated compound. Mechanistic relevance table
TSF: P: 0–30 min |
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| The term "IL-1" is often used as an umbrella term for the interleukin-1 family, which includes multiple cytokines. The two best-known members are IL-1α and IL-1β. IL-1β is secreted from cells and plays a major systemic role in inflammation. It is a crucial mediator in the inflammatory response and is involved in the fever response, activation of endothelial cells, and leukocyte recruitment. Its increased expression is commonly linked to: – Promotion of a pro-inflammatory microenvironment that supports tumor growth. – Enhanced angiogenesis, invasion, and metastasis. – Recruitment of myeloid cells that may further suppress antitumor immunity. High expression of either tends to be associated with a more aggressive phenotype and worse prognosis in many cancer types. |
| 5705- | Brut, | A flavonoid-rich extract from bergamot juice prevents carcinogenesis in a genetic model of colorectal cancer, the Pirc rat (F344/NTac-Apcam1137) |
| - | in-vivo, | CRC, | 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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