Curcumin as a Natural Remedy for Atherosclerosis: A Pharmacological Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Atheroprotective Effects of Curcumin In Vitro
3. Atheroprotective Effects of Curcumin In Vivo
4. Clinical Studies of Curcumin
5. Conclusions and Perspectives
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Experimental Model | Concentration Used | Outcomes and Possible Mechanisms of Action | References |
---|---|---|---|
U937 monocytes | 0.01–1 µM |
| [44] |
HMEC-1 cells | 0.1–10 μM |
| [42] |
ANA-1 mouse macrophage cell line | 5–25 μM |
| [36] |
RAW 264.7 macrophages |
| [34] | |
H9c2 rat cardiac myoblasts | 5–40 μM |
| [36] |
Human monocytic THP-1 cells | 7.5–30 μM |
| [43] |
Human monocytic THP-1 cells | 5–20 μM |
| [45] |
RAW264.7 macrophage | 6.25 and 12.5 μM |
| [37] |
Ba/F3 cells | 10–20 μM |
| [46] |
RAW264.7 macrophage | 6.25–25 μM |
| [47] |
RAW264.7 macrophage | 6.25–50 μM |
| [40] |
RAW264.7 macrophage | 6.25, and 25 nM |
| [34] |
RAW264.7 macrophage | 8–128 μM |
| [48] |
Mouse peritoneal macrophages | 10–50 μM |
| [16] |
Human monocytic THP-1 cells | 20–40 μM |
| [49] |
Bovine aortic endothelial cells (BAECs) | 5–15 μM |
| [50] |
RAW264.7 macrophage | 0.1–30 μM |
| [51] |
Human monocytic THP-1 cells | 0–50 μM |
| [52] |
Human monocytic THP-1 cells | 0 to 100 μM |
| [53] |
Human monocytic THP-1 cells | 10−20 μM |
| [54] |
Human monocytic THP-1 cells | 0–50 μM |
| [55] |
THP1-derived macrophage foam cells | 0–80 μM |
| [38] |
Human monocytic THP-1 cells | 5.0 µg/mL |
| [56] |
VSMCs | 5–30 μM |
| [57] |
H9c2 embryonic rat heart derived cells | 5–15 μM |
| [58] |
VSMCs | 5–30 μM |
| [59] |
RAW264.7 macrophage | 0–40 μM |
| [60] |
3T3-L1 fibroblast cells | 0–30 μM |
| [61] |
VSMCs | 1.25–5 μM |
| [62] |
Endothelial cells | 10−5 M |
| [63] |
Cultured porcine coronary artery rings | 5 μM |
| [64] |
HUVEC cells | 1, 10,100 μM |
| [65] |
HUVEC cells | 25 μM |
| [66] |
HUVEC cells | 1–25 μM |
| [67] |
HUVEC cells | 2.5–100 μM |
| [68] |
HUVEC cells | 3–30 μM |
| [69] |
VSMCs | 20–40 μM |
| [70] |
VSMCs | - |
| [71] |
VSMCs | 12.5–50 μM |
| [72] |
HUVEC cells | 0.5–2 μM |
| [29] |
VSMCs | 10–20 μM |
| [34] |
VSMCs | 20 μM |
| [26] |
In Vivo Experimental Model | Curcumin Concentration | Outcomes and Possible Mechanisms of Action | References |
---|---|---|---|
ApoE−/− mice | 0.1% w/w |
| [16] |
Male New-Zealand rabbits | 1.66 mg/kg body weight |
| [10] |
New Zealand white male rabbits | 10 mg/kg/week |
| [35] |
Ldlr−/− mice | 500–1500 mg/kg |
| [45] |
Male Wistar rats | 100 mg/(kg/d) curcumin |
| [83] |
ApoE−/− mice | 200 mg/kg/d |
| [84] |
Male Rabbits | 0.2% |
| [85] |
ApoE/LDLR—doubleknockout mice | 0.3 mg/perday |
| [20] |
Male C57BL/6J (B6) mice | 0.09 mg |
| [86] |
ApoE−/− mice | 0.2% |
| [87] |
LDLR−/− mice | 100 mg/kg |
| [88] |
Sprague-Dawley rats | 100 mg/kg body weight |
| [44] |
Sprague-Dawley rats | 0.2–5.0 mg/kg |
| [89] |
Zebrafish | 10% wt/wt |
| [90] |
ApoE−/− mice | 15–25mg/kg/d |
| [29] |
ApoE−/− mice | 10 mg/kg |
| [59] |
LDLR−/− mice | 0.02%w/w |
| [91] |
ApoE−/− mice | 40, 60, and 80 mg/kg/d curcumin |
| [92] |
Male ICR mice | 1–2mmol/kg/day |
| [93] |
ApoE−/− mice | 0.1% w/w |
| [94] |
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Singh, L.; Sharma, S.; Xu, S.; Tewari, D.; Fang, J. Curcumin as a Natural Remedy for Atherosclerosis: A Pharmacological Review. Molecules 2021, 26, 4036. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules26134036
Singh L, Sharma S, Xu S, Tewari D, Fang J. Curcumin as a Natural Remedy for Atherosclerosis: A Pharmacological Review. Molecules. 2021; 26(13):4036. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules26134036
Chicago/Turabian StyleSingh, Laxman, Shikha Sharma, Suowen Xu, Devesh Tewari, and Jian Fang. 2021. "Curcumin as a Natural Remedy for Atherosclerosis: A Pharmacological Review" Molecules 26, no. 13: 4036. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules26134036
APA StyleSingh, L., Sharma, S., Xu, S., Tewari, D., & Fang, J. (2021). Curcumin as a Natural Remedy for Atherosclerosis: A Pharmacological Review. Molecules, 26(13), 4036. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules26134036