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Original Articles

Improving the Anticancer Activity of Curcumin Using Nanocurcumin Dispersion in Water

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Pages 1015-1022 | Received 21 Aug 2013, Accepted 03 May 2014, Published online: 28 Jul 2014
 

Abstract

Curcumin is a highly potent, nontoxic bioactive agent found in turmeric and is known to have significant anticancer properties against different types of cancer cells. The major disadvantage associated with the use of curcumin, however, is its low systemic bioavailability due to its poor aqueous solubility. The focus of the present study was to generate nanoparticles of curcumin with improved aqueous phase solubility, and to investigate their efficacy in treating cancer cells. Curcumin nanoparticles having particle size in the range 2–40 nm and aqueous solubility of up to a maximum of 3 mg/mL were prepared. Evaluation of anticancer properties of curcumin nanodispersion was carried out in 3 different cancer cell lines: lung (A549), liver (HepG2), and skin (A431). The results demonstrated that under aqueous conditions curcumin nanoparticles exhibited similar or a much stronger antiproliferative effect on the cancer cells compared to normal curcumin in DMSO. Our results lead way toward unharnessed potential of curcumin in the form of its nanoparticles as an adjuvant therapy for clinical application in treating various cancers.

Additional information

Funding

We are grateful to Defence Institute of Physiology and Allied Sciences, New Delhi, India (TC/333/TASK-157(NJ)/DIPAS/2009) for their financial support of this work. Rupesh Kumar Basniwal and Ritu Khosla contributed equally to this article.

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