Vitamin E / Akt Cancer Research Results

VitE, Vitamin E: Click to Expand ⟱
Features:

Vitamin E (VitE) = fat-soluble antioxidant family (tocopherols: α-, β-, γ-, δ-; tocotrienols: α-, β-, γ-, δ-), from diet (vegetable oils, nuts/seeds) and supplements (commonly α-tocopherol).
Primary mechanisms (conceptual rank):
1) Lipid-peroxidation chain-breaking antioxidant → ↓ membrane oxidative damage / ↓ lipid-ROS (anti-ferroptotic bias).
2) Redox-signaling modulation (secondary): alters ROS-triggered stress pathways (NF-κB, MAPK), inflammation tone.
3) Gene-regulatory adaptation: shifts antioxidant/stress programs (incl. NRF2 axis; context can be protective in normal tissues yet pro-survival in tumors).
4) Isoform-dependent anti-cancer signaling (notably tocotrienols): apoptosis/anti-proliferation, membrane/ER stress effects (model-dependent).
PK / bioavailability: absorption is fat-dependent; circulating levels rise modestly vs many in-vitro study doses; isoforms differ (tocotrienols often have distinct kinetics vs αT).
In-vitro vs systemic exposure: many cell studies use ≥10–100 µM or high bolus conditions that commonly exceed achievable free plasma/tissue levels from typical oral dosing (esp. for non-α isoforms).
Clinical evidence status: cancer prevention data are mixed and isoform-specific; high-dose αT (e.g., 400 IU/d) showed harm in prostate cancer risk (SELECT). Evidence is not “anti-cancer RCT–proven” and is best framed as context-/isoform-dependent with meaningful clinical constraints.

It primarily comprises two families:
Tocopherols
  α-Tocopherol (most active and abundant form found in human tissues)
  β-Tocopherol
  γ-Tocopherol
  δ-Tocopherol
Tocotrienols
  α-Tocotrienol
  β-Tocotrienol
 γ-Tocotrienol
  δ-Tocotrienol


-Vitamin E can neutralize free radicals, which are reactive molecules that may damage cells and potentially contribute to cancer development. This antioxidant property has led researchers to explore whether vitamin E could help protect cells from damage during cancer treatment.
-Cancer Prevention: Some epidemiological studies suggested that higher intake of vitamin E (usually through diet rather than supplements) might be associated with a lower risk of certain cancers.

Vitamin E (VitE) — Cancer-Relevant Pathways (isoform- and context-dependent)

Rank Pathway / Axis Cancer Cells Normal Cells TSF Primary Effect Notes / Interpretation
1 Lipid peroxidation / membrane protection ↓ (context-dependent) P Antioxidant “chain-breaker” in membranes Core pharmacology; can protect normal tissue but may also protect tumor cells from oxidative stress therapies (model-dependent).
2 ROS tone ↓ (context-/dose-dependent) P→R ↓ oxidative stress signaling Often secondary to lipid radical scavenging; can blunt ROS-mediated cytotoxicity from chemo/radiation in some settings (context-dependent).
3 Ferroptosis axis (iron/lipid-ROS death) ↓ (anti-ferroptotic bias) P→R Suppresses lipid-ROS propagation Mechanistically coherent: VitE tends to oppose ferroptotic lipid peroxidation; may be undesirable where ferroptosis is leveraged therapeutically.
4 NRF2 antioxidant program ↑ (context-dependent) G Adaptive antioxidant response NRF2 can be tissue-protective in normal cells yet pro-survival / resistance-promoting in some tumors (context-dependent).
5 NF-κB / inflammatory signaling ↓ (model-dependent) ↓ (often) R→G Anti-inflammatory bias Redox-linked; magnitude varies by isoform (αT vs γT vs tocotrienols) and stimulus.
6 Apoptosis / mitochondrial stress ↑ (tocotrienols & high concentration only) ↔ / ↓ (protective) R→G Pro-apoptotic signaling (select models) Tocotrienols are more often reported pro-apoptotic vs αT; frequently requires supra-physiologic exposure (model-dependent).
7 Ca²⁺ handling (ER/mitochondrial stress coupling) ↔ (model-dependent) R Stress-modulating cross-talk Not a universal “signature axis” for VitE, but can matter when ER stress/mitochondrial dysfunction is the readout.
8 Clinical Translation Constraint Prevention/adjunct limitations Isoform + dose matter; high-dose αT (400 IU/d) increased prostate cancer risk in SELECT; in-vitro dosing often exceeds realistic systemic exposure.

TSF Legend: P: 0–30 min (direct redox/membrane effects)   |   R: 30 min–3 hr (acute stress signaling)   |   G: >3 hr (gene-regulatory adaptation)


Vitamin E (α-tocopherol) — Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) / Neuronal-Protection-Relevant Axes

Rank Pathway / Axis Cells (AD-relevant; mostly “normal” neurons/glia under stress) TSF Primary Effect Notes / Interpretation
1 Lipid peroxidation / membrane oxidative injury P Neuroprotective antioxidant (membrane) Mechanistic fit to oxidative-stress hypothesis; strongest “core” axis for VitE in CNS stress contexts.
2 ROS tone P→R ↓ oxidative stress signaling Often downstream of lipid radical scavenging; may reduce oxidative damage markers (model-dependent).
3 Neuroinflammation (NF-κB-linked) ↓ (model-dependent) R→G Anti-inflammatory bias Magnitude depends on model and background diet/status.
4 Clinical evidence constraint Mixed RCT outcomes by stage MCI: 2000 IU/d VitE did not significantly delay progression to AD in a 3-year trial; mild–moderate AD: 2000 IU/d αT slowed functional decline vs placebo in TEAM-AD; earlier ADCS trial also reported slowed progression signals (stage-dependent).

TSF Legend: P: 0–30 min   |   R: 30 min–3 hr   |   G: >3 hr



Akt, PKB-Protein kinase B: Click to Expand ⟱
Source: HalifaxProj(inhibit)
Type:
Akt1 is involved in cellular survival pathways, by inhibiting apoptotic processes; Akt2 is an important signaling molecule in the insulin signaling pathway. It is required to induce glucose transport.

Inhibitors:
-Curcumin: downregulate AKT phosphorylation and signaling.
-Resveratrol
-Quercetin: inhibit the PI3K/AKT pathway.
-Epigallocatechin Gallate (EGCG)
-Luteolin and Apigenin: inhibit AKT phosphorylation


Scientific Papers found: Click to Expand⟱
4764- CoQ10,  VitE,    Auxiliary effect of trolox on coenzyme Q10 restricts angiogenesis and proliferation of retinoblastoma cells via the ERK/Akt pathway
- in-vitro, RPE, Y79 - in-vitro, Nor, ARPE-19 - in-vivo, NA, NA
tumCV↓, Apoptosis↑, ROS↑, MMP↓, TumCCA↑, VEGF↓, ERK↓, Akt↓, ChemoSen↑, chemoP↑, toxicity↓, angioG↓,

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:


Redox & Oxidative Stress

ROS↑, 1,  

Mitochondria & Bioenergetics

MMP↓, 1,  

Cell Death

Akt↓, 1,   Apoptosis↑, 1,  

Transcription & Epigenetics

tumCV↓, 1,  

Cell Cycle & Senescence

TumCCA↑, 1,  

Proliferation, Differentiation & Cell State

ERK↓, 1,  

Angiogenesis & Vasculature

angioG↓, 1,   VEGF↓, 1,  

Drug Metabolism & Resistance

ChemoSen↑, 1,  

Functional Outcomes

chemoP↑, 1,   toxicity↓, 1,  
Total Targets: 12

Pathway results for Effect on Normal Cells:


Total Targets: 0

Scientific Paper Hit Count for: Akt, PKB-Protein kinase B
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#:307  Target#:4  State#:%  Dir#:%
wNotes=0 sortOrder:rid,rpid

 

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