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 Curcumin and cancer cells: how many ways can curry kill tumor cells selectively?Ravindran J; Prasad S; Aggarwal BBAAPS J  2009[Sep]; 11 (3): 495-510Cancer is a hyperproliferative disorder that is usually treated by  chemotherapeutic agents that are toxic not only to tumor cells but also to normal  cells, so these agents produce major side effects. In addition, these agents are  highly expensive and thus not affordable for most. Moreover, such agents cannot  be used for cancer prevention. Traditional medicines are generally free of the  deleterious side effects and usually inexpensive. Curcumin, a component of  turmeric (Curcuma longa), is one such agent that is safe, affordable, and  efficacious. How curcumin kills tumor cells is the focus of this review. We show  that curcumin modulates growth of tumor cells through regulation of multiple cell  signaling pathways including cell proliferation pathway (cyclin D1, c-myc), cell  survival pathway (Bcl-2, Bcl-xL, cFLIP, XIAP, c-IAP1), caspase activation pathway  (caspase-8, 3, 9), tumor suppressor pathway (p53, p21) death receptor pathway  (DR4, DR5), mitochondrial pathways, and protein kinase pathway (JNK, Akt, and  AMPK). How curcumin selectively kills tumor cells, and not normal cells, is also  described in detail.|Antineoplastic Agents/*pharmacology[MESH]|Cell Death/*drug effects[MESH]|Curcumin/*pharmacology[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Neoplasms/enzymology/metabolism/*pathology[MESH]
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