Siukan Law, Chuiman Lo, Jie Han, Albert Wingnang Leung, Chuanshan Xu
{"title":"中草药“马来栗”是天然抗癌药物吗?","authors":"Siukan Law, Chuiman Lo, Jie Han, Albert Wingnang Leung, Chuanshan Xu","doi":"10.3831/KPI.2022.25.2.145","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"under the presently valid name Bombax ceiba, and is known as “Muk Min” in Cantonese [1]. Bombax ceiba was used in Chinese medicine a thousand years ago as recorded in Bencao Gangmu. That work encouraged its use in the treatment of diseases, including those of the spleen, liver, and large intestine, as well as in the elimination of wind (external evil) from the body [2]. According to Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) theory, B. ceiba has the ability to treat fever, alleviate dampness, detoxify the body, and prevent bleeding. It is said to be cool in nature and has a “yin” content, helping to balance the “yin-yang” inside the body. The flowers and bark of B. ceiba have medicinal properties, exhibiting a detoxifying, moisture-eliminating, and cold-expelling function, and providing “pure heat” [3]. Bombax ceiba has been shown to have anti-cancer effects, as it significantly increased the rate of HL-60 human leukemia cell death, raising caspase-3 activity and sub-G1 apoptosis [4]. During early 2014, B. ceiba was discovered to have the strongest antiproliferative activity against human renal adenocarcinoma (ACHN) cells [5]. Several flavonoids (Fig. 1), xanthones (Fig. 2), and coumarins (Fig. 3) isolated from B. ceiba have been shown to inhibit cancer cell proliferation by inducing apoptosis, interrupting the cell cycle, inducing stress proteins, destroying microtubules and mitochondria, releasing cytochrome c, or activating caspases [6]. The anticancer mechanism of B. ceiba is related to neutrophil activity. It significantly increases the number of neutrophils involved in cell-mediated immunity and activates T cells to release several lymphokines. This attracts macrophages, induces vasodilation, and prevents inflammation [4]. Bombax ceiba also decreases myelosuppression and enhances immune response for cancer treatment, e.g., by elevating caspase-3 levels in a caspase-dependent pathway. Caspases are proteins that cleave the major cellular components in cells, in addition to their role as repair enzymes during normal cellular functions. Caspases are characteristically activated during apoptosis and stimulate various lytic enzymes, e.g., DNases, which cleave nuclear DNA, causing cell apoptosis as part of the growth and aging processes in various tissues and organs [7]. In summary, the traditional Chinese herb B. ceiba has anti-","PeriodicalId":16769,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Pharmacopuncture","volume":"25 2","pages":"145-147"},"PeriodicalIF":1.2000,"publicationDate":"2022-06-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pub/pmc/oa_pdf/57/f7/jop-25-2-145.PMC9240408.pdf","citationCount":"2","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Is the Traditional Chinese Herb \\\"Bombax Malabaricum\\\" a Natural Anticancer Medicine?\",\"authors\":\"Siukan Law, Chuiman Lo, Jie Han, Albert Wingnang Leung, Chuanshan Xu\",\"doi\":\"10.3831/KPI.2022.25.2.145\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"under the presently valid name Bombax ceiba, and is known as “Muk Min” in Cantonese [1]. Bombax ceiba was used in Chinese medicine a thousand years ago as recorded in Bencao Gangmu. That work encouraged its use in the treatment of diseases, including those of the spleen, liver, and large intestine, as well as in the elimination of wind (external evil) from the body [2]. According to Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) theory, B. ceiba has the ability to treat fever, alleviate dampness, detoxify the body, and prevent bleeding. It is said to be cool in nature and has a “yin” content, helping to balance the “yin-yang” inside the body. The flowers and bark of B. ceiba have medicinal properties, exhibiting a detoxifying, moisture-eliminating, and cold-expelling function, and providing “pure heat” [3]. Bombax ceiba has been shown to have anti-cancer effects, as it significantly increased the rate of HL-60 human leukemia cell death, raising caspase-3 activity and sub-G1 apoptosis [4]. During early 2014, B. ceiba was discovered to have the strongest antiproliferative activity against human renal adenocarcinoma (ACHN) cells [5]. Several flavonoids (Fig. 1), xanthones (Fig. 2), and coumarins (Fig. 3) isolated from B. ceiba have been shown to inhibit cancer cell proliferation by inducing apoptosis, interrupting the cell cycle, inducing stress proteins, destroying microtubules and mitochondria, releasing cytochrome c, or activating caspases [6]. The anticancer mechanism of B. ceiba is related to neutrophil activity. It significantly increases the number of neutrophils involved in cell-mediated immunity and activates T cells to release several lymphokines. This attracts macrophages, induces vasodilation, and prevents inflammation [4]. Bombax ceiba also decreases myelosuppression and enhances immune response for cancer treatment, e.g., by elevating caspase-3 levels in a caspase-dependent pathway. Caspases are proteins that cleave the major cellular components in cells, in addition to their role as repair enzymes during normal cellular functions. Caspases are characteristically activated during apoptosis and stimulate various lytic enzymes, e.g., DNases, which cleave nuclear DNA, causing cell apoptosis as part of the growth and aging processes in various tissues and organs [7]. 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Is the Traditional Chinese Herb "Bombax Malabaricum" a Natural Anticancer Medicine?
under the presently valid name Bombax ceiba, and is known as “Muk Min” in Cantonese [1]. Bombax ceiba was used in Chinese medicine a thousand years ago as recorded in Bencao Gangmu. That work encouraged its use in the treatment of diseases, including those of the spleen, liver, and large intestine, as well as in the elimination of wind (external evil) from the body [2]. According to Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) theory, B. ceiba has the ability to treat fever, alleviate dampness, detoxify the body, and prevent bleeding. It is said to be cool in nature and has a “yin” content, helping to balance the “yin-yang” inside the body. The flowers and bark of B. ceiba have medicinal properties, exhibiting a detoxifying, moisture-eliminating, and cold-expelling function, and providing “pure heat” [3]. Bombax ceiba has been shown to have anti-cancer effects, as it significantly increased the rate of HL-60 human leukemia cell death, raising caspase-3 activity and sub-G1 apoptosis [4]. During early 2014, B. ceiba was discovered to have the strongest antiproliferative activity against human renal adenocarcinoma (ACHN) cells [5]. Several flavonoids (Fig. 1), xanthones (Fig. 2), and coumarins (Fig. 3) isolated from B. ceiba have been shown to inhibit cancer cell proliferation by inducing apoptosis, interrupting the cell cycle, inducing stress proteins, destroying microtubules and mitochondria, releasing cytochrome c, or activating caspases [6]. The anticancer mechanism of B. ceiba is related to neutrophil activity. It significantly increases the number of neutrophils involved in cell-mediated immunity and activates T cells to release several lymphokines. This attracts macrophages, induces vasodilation, and prevents inflammation [4]. Bombax ceiba also decreases myelosuppression and enhances immune response for cancer treatment, e.g., by elevating caspase-3 levels in a caspase-dependent pathway. Caspases are proteins that cleave the major cellular components in cells, in addition to their role as repair enzymes during normal cellular functions. Caspases are characteristically activated during apoptosis and stimulate various lytic enzymes, e.g., DNases, which cleave nuclear DNA, causing cell apoptosis as part of the growth and aging processes in various tissues and organs [7]. In summary, the traditional Chinese herb B. ceiba has anti-
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Pharmacopuncture covers a wide range of basic and clinical science research relevant to all aspects of the biotechnology of integrated approaches using both pharmacology and acupuncture therapeutics, including research involving pharmacology, acupuncture studies and pharmacopuncture studies. The subjects are mainly divided into three categories: pharmacology (applied phytomedicine, plant sciences, pharmacology, toxicology, medicinal plants, traditional medicines, herbal medicine, Sasang constitutional medicine, herbal formulae, foods, agricultural technologies, naturopathy, etc.), acupuncture (acupressure, electroacupuncture, laser acupuncture, moxibustion, cupping, etc.), and pharmacopuncture (aqua-acupuncture, meridian pharmacopuncture, eight-principles pharmacopuncture, animal-based pharmacopuncture, mountain ginseng pharmacopuncture, bee venom therapy, needle embedding therapy, implant therapy, etc.). Other categories include chuna treatment, veterinary acupuncture and related animal studies, alternative medicines for treating cancer and cancer-related symptoms, etc. Broader topical coverage on the effects of acupuncture, the medical plants used in traditional and alternative medicine, pharmacological action and other related modalities, such as anthroposophy, homeopathy, ayurveda, bioelectromagnetic therapy, chiropractic, neural therapy and meditation, can be considered to be within the journal’s scope if based on acupoints and meridians. Submissions of original articles, review articles, systematic reviews, case reports, brief reports, opinions, commentaries, medical lectures, letters to the editor, photo-essays, technical notes, and book reviews are encouraged. Providing free access to the full text of all current and archived articles on its website (www.journal.ac), also searchable through a Google Scholar search.