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ImmuneCited

Curcumin-mediated regulation of intestinal barrier function: The mechanism underlying its beneficial effects.

Siddhartha S Ghosh, Hongliang He, Jing Wang, Todd W Gehr, Shobha Ghosh
Review Tissue barriers 2018 87 Zitierungen
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Studientyp
In Vitro
Population
Preclinical models of metabolic diseases
Intervention
Curcumin-mediated regulation of intestinal barrier function: The mechanism underlying its beneficial effects. None
Vergleichsgruppe
None
Primärer Endpunkt
Intestinal barrier function and LPS release
Wirkungsrichtung
Positive
Verzerrungsrisiko
Unclear

Abstract

Curcumin has anti-inflammatory, anti-oxidant and anti-proliferative properties established largely by in vitro studies. Accordingly, oral administration of curcumin beneficially modulates many diseases including diabetes, fatty-liver disease, atherosclerosis, arthritis, cancer and neurological disorders such as depression, Alzheimer's or Parkinson's disease. However, limited bioavailability and inability to detect curcumin in circulation or target tissues has hindered the validation of a causal role. We established curcumin-mediated decrease in the release of gut bacteria-derived lipopolysaccharide (LPS) into circulation by maintaining the integrity of the intestinal barrier function as the mechanism underlying the attenuation of metabolic diseases (diabetes, atherosclerosis, kidney disease) by curcumin supplementation precluding the need for curcumin absorption. In view of the causative role of circulating LPS and resulting chronic inflammation in the development of diseases listed above, this review summarizes the mechanism by which curcumin affects the several layers of the intestinal barrier and, despite negligible absorption, can beneficially modulate these diseases.

Zusammenfassung

The mechanism by which curcumin affects the several layers of the intestinal barrier and, despite negligible absorption, can beneficially modulate these diseases is summarized.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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