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    Int J Mol Med. 2003 Jul;12(1):17-24.

    Structure of curcumin in complex with lipoxygenase and its significance in cancer.

    Skrzypczak-Jankun E, Zhou K, McCabe NP, Selman SH, Jankun J.

    Department of Urology, Urology Research Center, Medical College of Ohio, Toledo, OH 43614-5807, USA. ewa@golemxiv.dk.mco.edu

    Scientific research provides documented evidence that fatty acid metabolites have profound impact on carcinogenesis. Intervention into dioxygenase pathways might therefore effect development, metastasis and progression of many types of cancers. This work delivers the first 3D structural data and explains how curcumin interacts with the fatty acid metabolizing enzyme, soybean lipoxygenase. Curcumin binds to lipoxygenase in a non-competitive manner. Trapped in that complex, it undergoes photodegradation in the X-rays, but utilizes enzyme catalytic ability to form the peroxy complex Enz-Fe-O-O-R as 4-hydroperoxy-2-methoxy-phenol, that later transforms into 2-methoxycyclohexa-2,5-diene-1,4-dione. Our observations about this radiation and time-dependent inhibition add new information to the role that curcumin might play in cancer prevention and treatment.

    PMID: 12792803 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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    Structures reported by this article