Feedback

Asiatic acid in anticancer effects: emerging roles and mechanisms

Affiliation
College of Traditional Chinese Medicine ,Shandong University of Traditional Chinese Medicine ,Jinan ,Shandong ,China
Chen, Rong;
Affiliation
Graduate School of Dalian Medical University ,Dalian ,Liaoning ,China
Zhang, Wan;
Affiliation
College of Traditional Chinese Medicine ,Shandong University of Traditional Chinese Medicine ,Jinan ,Shandong ,China
Zhang, Meizhi;
Affiliation
College of Traditional Chinese Medicine ,Shandong University of Traditional Chinese Medicine ,Jinan ,Shandong ,China
Liu, Weidong;
Affiliation
College of Traditional Chinese Medicine ,Shandong University of Traditional Chinese Medicine ,Jinan ,Shandong ,China
Feng, Weike;
Affiliation
College of Traditional Chinese Medicine ,Shandong University of Traditional Chinese Medicine ,Jinan ,Shandong ,China
Zhang, Yanan

Medicinal plants are crucial in the comprehensive treatment of anti-tumor with the advantages of high efficacy, low toxicity, multiple pathways and multi-targets synergy, leading to be a focal point of study for many oncologists. Identifying effective monomer components with anti-tumor properties from medicinal plants has long been a crucial focus in the study and development of traditional Chinese medicine. This endeavor has significant research value and promising possibilities for further advancement. Asiatic Acid (AA), a pentacyclic triterpenoid derived from Centella asiatica (L.) Urb, is used in traditional Chinese medicine and has been shown to have anti-tumor properties on a range of tumor types. The present study assessed the anti-tumor properties of AA from five different perspectives: inhibiting proliferation, inducing apoptosis, inhibiting invasion and metastasis, regulating cell autophagy, enhancing the resistance of tumor cells to drugs, and minimizing adverse side effects.

Cite

Citation style:
Could not load citation form.

Access Statistic

Total:
Downloads:
Abtractviews:
Last 12 Month:
Downloads:
Abtractviews:

Rights

License Holder: Copyright © 2025 Chen, Zhang, Zhang, Liu, Feng and Zhang.

Use and reproduction: