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Curcumin as a Dual Modulator of Pyroptosis: Mechanistic Insights and Therapeutic Potential

Dong Oh Moon

2025International Journal of Molecular Sciences10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

, has drawn significant attention for its pleiotropic pharmacological activities, including anti-inflammatory and anticancer effects. Pyroptosis, an inflammatory form of programmed cell death mediated by inflammasome activation and gasdermin cleavage, has emerged as a critical target in both chronic inflammatory diseases and cancer therapy. This review comprehensively explores the dual roles of curcumin in the regulation of NLRP3 inflammasome-mediated pyroptosis. Curcumin exerts inhibitory effects by suppressing NF-κB signaling, attenuating mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS) and ER stress, preventing potassium efflux, and disrupting inflammasome complex assembly. Conversely, in certain cancer contexts, curcumin promotes pyroptosis by stabilizing NLRP3 through the inhibition of Smurf2-mediated ubiquitination. Molecular docking studies support curcumin's direct binding to several pyroptosis-associated proteins, including NLRP3, AMPK, caspase-1, and Smurf2. These context-dependent regulatory effects underscore the therapeutic potential of curcumin as both an inflammasome suppressor in inflammatory diseases and a pyroptosis inducer in cancer.

Topics & Concepts

PyroptosisCurcuminInflammasomeChemistryCell biologyPharmacologyCancer researchBiologyBiochemistryReceptorInflammasome and immune disordersCurcumin's Biomedical ApplicationsGout, Hyperuricemia, Uric Acid
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