Reference Text
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Curcumin
is
also
known
to
exhibit
anti-cancer
properties,
but
its
poor
solubility
in
water
had
impeded
curcumin’s
clinical
application
in
cancer.
A
drug
needs
to
be
soluble
in
water
as
otherwise
it
will
not
flow
through
the
bloodstream.
Despite
decades
of
research,
the
development
of
efficient
strategies
that
can
effectively
deliver
poorly
water-soluble
curcumin
to
cancer
cells
had
remained
a
challenge.
A
team
headed
by
Dipanjan
Pan,
associate
professor
of
bioengineering
at
UIUC,
has
now
found
a
way
out.
“Curcumin’s
medicinal
benefit
can
be
fully
appreciated
if
its
solubility
issue
is
resolved,”
Pan
told
this
correspondent
in
an
e-mail.
Pan’s
laboratory
collaborated
with
Peter
Stang
at
the
University
of
Utah
on
ways
to
be
able
to
render
curcumin
soluble,
deliver
it
to
infected
tumours
and
kill
the
cancer
cells.
Because
platinum
is
a
commonly
used
cancer
therapeutic
agent
in
the
clinic,
the
researchers
decided
to
experiment
with
a
drug
consisting
of
a
combination
of
platinum
and
curcumin.
“It
is
a
combination
of
clever
chemistry
and
nano-precipitation
utilising
host
guest
chemistry,”
Pan
explained.
“The
sophisticated
chemistry
leads
to
self-assembled
hierarchical
structure
that
drives
the
solubility
of
curcumin
and
simultaneously
delivers
an
additional
anticancer
agent,
i.e.
platinum.
The
combined
therapeutic
effect
of
curcumin
and
platinum
is
lethal
for
the
cancer
cells.”
The
team
has
reported
its
work
in
the
Proceedings
of
the
National
Academy
of
Sciences
in
the
US.
According
to
their
report,
the
metallocyclic
complex
created
using
platinum
“not
only
enabled
curcumin’s
solubility,
but
proved
to
be
100
times
more
effective
in
treating
various
cancer
types
such
as
melanoma
and
breast
cancer
cells
than
using
curcumin
and
platinum
agents
separately”.
“Our
results
demonstrate
that
curcumin
works
completely
in
sync
with
platinum
and
exerts
synergistic
effect
to
show
remarkable
anticancer
properties,”
says
the
report.
“The
platinum-curcumin
combination
kills
the
cells
by
fragmenting
its
DNA.”
“Extensive
animal
studies
are
in
progress
in
my
laboratory,
including
in
rodents
and
pigs,”
Pan
said.
His
team
also
hopes
to
prove
that
this
method
will
be
effective
in
killing
cancer
stem
cells
the
birth
place
of
cancer
cells
thereby
preventing
the
recurrence
of
cancer.
Curcumin
is
also
known
to
exhibit
anti-cancer
properties,
but
its
poor
solubility
in
water
had
impeded
curcumin’s
clinical
application
in
cancer.
A
drug
needs
to
be
soluble
in
water
as
otherwise
it
will
not
flow
through
the
bloodstream.
Despite
decades
of
research,
the
development
of
efficient
strategies
that
can
effectively
deliver
poorly
water-soluble
curcumin
to
cancer
cells
had
remained
a
challenge.
A
team
headed
by
Dipanjan
Pan,
associate
professor
of
bioengineering
at
UIUC,
has
now
found
a
way
out.
“Curcumin’s
medicinal
benefit
can
be
fully
appreciated
if
its
solubility
issue
is
resolved,”
Pan
told
this
correspondent
in
an
e-mail.
Pan’s
laboratory
collaborated
with