CURCUMIN'S HEALTH PROMOTING BENEFITS
The health benefits of
over-the-counter curcumin supplements might not get past your gut, but new
research shows that a modified formulation of the spice releases its
anti-inflammatory goodness throughout the body.
Curcumin is a
naturally occurring compound found in the spice turmeric that has been used for
centuries as an Ayurvedic medicine treatment for such ailments as allergies,
diabetes and ulcers.
Anecdotal and
scientific evidence suggests curcumin promotes health because it lowers
inflammation, but it is not absorbed well by the body. Most curcumin in food or
supplements stays in the gastrointestinal tract, and any portion that's
absorbed is metabolized quickly.
Many research groups
are testing the compound's effects on disorders ranging from colon cancer to
osteoarthritis. Others, like these Ohio State University scientists, are
investigating whether enabling widespread availability of curcumin's biological
effects to the entire body could make it useful both therapeutically and as a
daily supplement to combat disease.
"There's a reason
why this compound has been used for hundreds of years in Eastern medicine. And
this study suggests that we have identified a better and more effective way to
deliver curcumin and know what diseases to use it for so that we can take
advantage of its anti-inflammatory power," said Nicholas Young, a
postdoctoral researcher in rheumatology and immunology at Ohio State and lead
author of the study.
The research is
published in the Nov. 4, 2014, issue of the journal PLOS ONE.
Curcumin powder was
mixed with castor oil and polyethylene glycol in a process called nano-emulsion
(think vinaigrette salad dressing), creating fluid teeming with microvesicles
that contain curcumin. This process allows the compound to dissolve and be more
easily absorbed by the gut to enter the bloodstream and tissues.
Feeding mice this
curcumin-based drug shut down an acute inflammatory reaction by blocking
activation of a key protein that triggers the immune response. The researchers
were also the first to show that curcumin stops recruitment of specific immune
cells that, when overactive, are linked to such problems as heart disease and
obesity.
Young and his
colleagues, including co-senior authors Lai-Chu Wu and Wael Jarjour of the
Division of Rheumatology and Immunology at Ohio State's Wexner Medical Center,
now want to know if curcumin in this form can counter the chronic inflammation
that is linked to sickness and age-related frailty. They have started with animal
studies testing nano-emulsified curcumin's ability to prevent or control
inflammation in a lupus model.
"We envision that
this nutraceutical could be used one day both as a daily supplement to help
prevent certain diseases and as a therapeutic drug to help combat the bad
inflammation observed in many diseases," Young said. "The distinction
will then be in the amount given -- perhaps a low dose for daily prevention and
higher doses for disease suppression."
The term nutraceutical
refers to foods or nutrients that provide medical or health benefits.
The curcumin delivery
system was created in Ohio State's College of Pharmacy, and these researchers
previously showed that concentrations of the emulsified curcumin in blood were
more than 10 times higher than of curcumin powder suspended in water. From
there, the researchers launched experiments in mice and cell cultures,
generating artificial inflammation and comparing the effects of the
nano-emulsified curcumin with the effects of curcumin powder in water or no
treatment at all.
The researchers
injected mice with lipopolysaccharide, a bacteria cell wall extract that
stimulates an immune reaction in animals. Curcumin can target many molecules,
but the research team zeroed in on NF-kB, a protein that is known to play an
important role in the immune response.
In a specialized
imaging machine, mice receiving plain curcumin lit up with bioluminescent
signals indicating that NF-kB was actively triggering an immune response, while
mice receiving nano-emulsified curcumin showed minimal signs -- a 22-fold
reduction -- that the protein had been activated at all.
Knowing that curcumin
delivered in this way could shut down NF-kB activation throughout the animals'
bodies, researchers looked for further details about the compound's effects on
inflammation. They found that nano-emulsified curcumin halted the recruitment
of immune cells called macrophages that "eat" invading pathogens but
also contribute to inflammation by secreting pro-inflammatory chemicals. And in
cells isolated from human blood samples, macrophages were stopped in their
tracks.
"This
macrophage-specific effect of curcumin had not been described before,"
Young said. "Because of that finding, we propose nano-emulsified curcumin
has the best potential against macrophage-associated inflammation."
Inflammation triggered
by overactive macrophages has been linked to cardiovascular disease, disorders
that accompany obesity, Crohn's disease, rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory
bowel disease, diabetes and lupus-related nephritis.
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