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| Bufalin/Huachansu is a component from Chinese toad venom. Bufalin is classified as a cardiac glycoside, specifically a type of bufadienolide. Pathways: -release of cytochrome c and subsequent activation of caspases -enhance the expression of death receptors -inhibit the PI3K/Akt/mTOR -modulate the MAPK/ERK pathway -inhibit NF-κB signaling -induce cell cycle arrest at different checkpoints (commonly G0/G1 or G2/M) -elevate intracellular ROS levels -interfere with the Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway -modulate autophagy, a process that can either promote cell survival or lead to cell death -Stabilization or activation of p53 Bufalin — Bufalin is a steroidal cardiotonic toxin and anticancer lead compound, classically isolated from toad venom (ChanSu / Huachansu) and belonging to the bufadienolide subclass of cardiac glycosides. It is commonly abbreviated BF. In cancer research, bufalin is best understood as a pleiotropic signaling disruptor whose most central pharmacology is linked to Na+/K+-ATPase engagement, with downstream effects on survival signaling, mitochondrial death pathways, redox stress, stemness, invasion, and therapy resistance. Primary mechanisms (ranked):
Bioavailability / PK relevance: Translation is constrained by poor water solubility, low/variable bioavailability of bufadienolides, short apparent plasma persistence in human Huachansu infusion studies, and a narrow therapeutic window typical of cardiac glycosides. CYP3A-mediated metabolism and CYP3A4 inhibition/time-dependent inactivation raise drug-interaction concern. Delivery optimization by nanoparticles, prodrugs, and formulation engineering is mechanistically relevant, not merely cosmetic. In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: Concentration-driven. Many mechanistic cancer studies report activity in low-nanomolar to submicromolar ranges, which is closer to plausibility than for many phytochemicals; however, human plasma bufalin levels reported during Huachansu infusion were only low ng/mL and showed little accumulation, so many higher in-vitro conditions likely exceed sustained clinically achieved free exposure. Any interpretation should therefore prioritize low-nanomolar findings and delivery-enabled tumor exposure rather than high-concentration cell-culture effects. Clinical evidence status: Preclinical to small-human evidence only. There is substantial in-vitro and animal evidence, plus early Huachansu clinical studies in China and a phase I/II development path, but no convincing randomized evidence that bufalin-containing therapy improves major cancer outcomes. Current status is best described as experimental / adjunct-oriented rather than established anticancer therapy. Mechanistic translation matrix
P: 0–30 min |
| Source: HalifaxProj(inhibit) |
| Type: |
| A member of the Bcl-2 family of proteins, which play a crucial role in regulating apoptosis, or programmed cell death. In cancer, Mcl-1 is often overexpressed, contributing to the development and progression of various types of tumors. Mcl-1 is often overexpressed in several cancers, including hematological malignancies (like leukemia and lymphoma) and solid tumors (such as breast, lung, and prostate cancers). Mcl-1 inhibits apoptosis by binding to pro-apoptotic proteins, preventing them from triggering the cell death pathway. |
| 5720- | BF, | Acetyl-bufalin shows potent efficacy against non-small-cell lung cancer by targeting the CDK9/STAT3 signalling pathway |
| - | in-vitro, | NSCLC, | 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
Filter Conditions: Pro/AntiFlg:% IllCat:% CanType:% Cells:% prod#:49 Target#:182 State#:% Dir#:%
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