curcumin and quercetin antagonistic?
Comments
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This is way above my head and hoping someone can answer you question. What type cancer and when were you dx?0
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It's above my head too. Maybe you could ask your Dr. to read it and explain it to you. If not your Dr., maybe another one? Maybe take it to someone at a medical school, if there is one nearby? Sorry, I am out of my element with that.
Hope you find your answer. seof0 -
I didn't read the whole article, just the abstract, but this would be my take on the study you are referring to.
It looks like they are priming Laryngeal Carcinoma Hep-2 cell lines with natural chemopreventatives and antioxidants and then giving cisplatin after to see if they enhance the chemo.
The cisplatin induced apoptosis was increased with both, 7.1% with curcumin and 16.3% with quercetin. They did this through two different pathways.
This was their conclusion: CONCLUSION: The data suggests that priming with curcumin or quercetin may improve the efficacy of chemotherapy for head and neck cancer by inducing apoptosis through the mitochondrial pathway, thus minimizing the side effects associated with combination chemotherapy.
So they would be antagonistic towards the cancer cell line. If it were an agonist I think it would promote tumour growth. That isn't the official meaning of agonist but that's how I see it in the case of breast cancer and substances that promote its growth. The official meaning is:
a chemical substance capable of combining with a specific receptor on a cell and initiating the same reaction or activity typically produced by the binding endogenous substance
If I'm wrong, hopefully someone will correct me.
Hope this helps.
jan0 -
Wow. This is way over my head. I think this is something that you need to discuss with a physician/scientist and not all of them will be able to answer, if molecular science is not their particular area of expertise. These studies need to be interpreted in the much larger context of all of the research that is being done (both clinical and basci science).
I too get out there and try and research, but we have to recognize that some of this is a "Brave New World". My docs are all researchers and I often get "I don't know" as an answer to my questions. I am satisfied with my choice of docs, I keep asking questions when I see someting that might help and then I just have to accept that we together are doing all we can and that the outcome is unknown.
I really applaud you trying to stay ahead of your disease.
She0 -
Thank you all for your replies. To anyone looking to research this topic himself, please see the clarification I provide phoenixrising below. Feel free to reply to this topic at any time, even years from the posting date; it may help someone else.
survivor51: my mom has triple negative breast cancer and was diagnosed back in '02.
Joycelouise: Thank you for the phone number.
phoenixrising: Thank you for providing your analysis of the article. By "would quercetin and curcumin be antagonistic", I meant, would they be antagonistic toward each other, not just toward the cancer.0 -
No, I don't think they would be antagonistic towards each other at all. Glad I could be of some help.knairb01 said:Thank you all for your replies. To anyone looking to research this topic himself, please see the clarification I provide phoenixrising below. Feel free to reply to this topic at any time, even years from the posting date; it may help someone else.
survivor51: my mom has triple negative breast cancer and was diagnosed back in '02.
Joycelouise: Thank you for the phone number.
phoenixrising: Thank you for providing your analysis of the article. By "would quercetin and curcumin be antagonistic", I meant, would they be antagonistic toward each other, not just toward the cancer.0 -
Hello Ladies,
I just wanted to let you know that if you choose to quote from a study, please provide a link to the original information so that others can see where the information is coming from and can read the entire study. This will help to make sure that information shared is the most helpful it can be.
Thank you for all of your contributions!
Dana0 -
The study I was referring to is here: http://www.mupnet.com/JOCM 3(4) 121.htmAuthorUnknown said:Hello Ladies,
I just wanted to let you know that if you choose to quote from a study, please provide a link to the original information so that others can see where the information is coming from and can read the entire study. This will help to make sure that information shared is the most helpful it can be.
Thank you for all of your contributions!
Dana0 -
Do you see what I think the problem may be? The authors say that curcumin decreased AIF, while quercetin increased it, but the authors speculate that the apoptotic effect curcumin has is mediated by AIF. So, because curcumin affects AIF one way, and quercetin in the opposite way, the apoptotic effect of curcumin may be lessened.phoenixrising said:No, I don't think they would be antagonistic towards each other at all. Glad I could be of some help.
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