Abstract

Curcumin has long been known to posses medicinal properties and recent scientific studies have shown its efficacy in treating cancer. Curcumin is now considered to be a promising anti-cancer agent and studies continue on its molecular mechanism of action. Curcumin has been shown to act in a multi-faceted manner by targeting the classical hallmarks of cancer like sustained proliferation, evasion of apoptosis, sustained angiogenesis, insensitivity to growth inhibitors, tissue invasion and metastasis etc. However, one of the emerging hallmarks of cancer is the avoidance of immune system by tumors. Growing tumors adopt several strategies to escape immune surveillance and successfully develop in the body. In this review we highlight the recent studies that show that curcumin also targets this process and helps restore the immune activity against cancer. Curcumin mediates several processes like restoration of CD4+/CD8+ T cell populations, reversal of type-2 cytokine bias, reduction of Treg cell population and suppression of T cell apoptosis; all these help to resurrect tumor immune surveillance that leads to tumor regression. Thus interaction of curcumin with the immune system is also an important feature of its multi-faceted modes of action against cancer. Finally, we also point out the drawbacks of and difficulties in curcumin administration and indicate the use of nano-formulations of curcumin for better therapeutic efficacy.

Highlights

  • Turmeric is one of the most widely used spice ingredient, derived from Curcuma longa, of the Zingiberacea (Ginger) plant family

  • This study showed that curcumin can reduce expression of CTLA4 and Forkhead Box P3 (FOXP3) both at protein and mRNA levels

  • Varalakshmi et al reported that prolonged injections of curcumin did not have any detrimental effects on the immune system; rather they maintained the levels of Th1 cytokine production, NK cell cytotoxic activity and generation of reactive oxygen species and nitric oxide by macrophages [85]

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Summary

Introduction

Turmeric is one of the most widely used spice ingredient, derived from Curcuma longa, of the Zingiberacea (Ginger) plant family. Research has progressed about using curcumin as a therapeutic agent that targets several signalling-pathways in cancer and as an immune modulator that boosts the immune system so that destruction and elimination of cancer cells from the host occurs at an early stage thereby preventing its disastrous outgrowth.

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