Gholami Mina, Adibipour Fatemeh, Valipour Sanaz M, Ulloa Luis, Motaghinejad Majid
Department of Medicinal Chemistry, Faculty of Pharmacy, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.
Department of Pharmaceutical Nanotechnology, School of Pharmacy, Mashhad University of Medical Sciences, Mashhad, Iran.
Int J Prev Med. 2022 Dec 26;13:156. doi: 10.4103/ijpvm.IJPVM_565_20. eCollection 2022.
The current pandemic coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19) is still a global medical and economic emergency with over 244 million confirmed infections and over 4.95 million deaths by October 2021, in less than 2 years. Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), the Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS), and COVID-19 are three recent coronavirus pandemics with major medical and economic implications. Currently, there is no effective treatment for these infections. One major pathological hallmark of these infections is the so-called ',' which depicts an unregulated production of inflammatory cytokines inducing detrimental inflammation leading to organ injury and multiple organ failure including severe pulmonary, cardiovascular, and kidney failure in COVID-19. Several studies have suggested the potential of curcumin to inhibit the replication of some viruses similar to coronaviruses. Multiple experimental and clinical studies also reported the anti-inflammatory potential of curcumin in multiple infectious and inflammatory disorders. Thus, we hypothesized that curcumin may provide antiviral and anti-inflammatory effects for treating COVID-19. Although these studies suggest that curcumin could serve as an adjuvant treatment for COVID-19, its molecular mechanisms are still debated, especially its potential to modulate the toll-like receptors/TIR-domain-containing adapter-inducing interferon-β/nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells (TLR/TRIF/NF-κB) pathway. The preliminary results showed that curcumin modulates the nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells (NF-κB) pathway, a common pathway controlling cytokine production in multiple infectious and inflammatory disorders. Here, we hypothesize and discuss whether curcumin treatment may provide antiviral and anti-inflammatory clinical advantages for treating COVID-19 by modulating the TLR/TRIF/NF-κB pathway. We also review the current data on curcumin and discuss potential experimental and clinical studies that require defining its potential clinical implications in COVID-19.
当前的大流行冠状病毒病2019(COVID-19)仍是一场全球医疗和经济危机,截至2021年10月,在不到两年的时间里,确诊感染病例超过2.44亿例,死亡病例超过495万例。严重急性呼吸综合征(SARS)、中东呼吸综合征冠状病毒(MERS)和COVID-19是最近三次具有重大医学和经济影响的冠状病毒大流行。目前,针对这些感染尚无有效的治疗方法。这些感染的一个主要病理特征是所谓的“ ”,它描述了炎症细胞因子的不受控制的产生,诱导有害炎症,导致器官损伤和多器官衰竭,包括COVID-19中的严重肺、心血管和肾衰竭。多项研究表明姜黄素具有抑制某些类似于冠状病毒的病毒复制的潜力。多项实验和临床研究也报道了姜黄素在多种感染性和炎症性疾病中的抗炎潜力。因此,我们推测姜黄素可能为治疗COVID-19提供抗病毒和抗炎作用。尽管这些研究表明姜黄素可作为COVID-19的辅助治疗药物,但其分子机制仍存在争议,尤其是其调节Toll样受体/TIR结构域含接头诱导干扰素-β/活化B细胞核因子κB轻链增强子(TLR/TRIF/NF-κB)途径的潜力。初步结果表明,姜黄素可调节活化B细胞核因子κB轻链增强子(NF-κB)途径,这是一条在多种感染性和炎症性疾病中控制细胞因子产生的常见途径。在此,我们推测并讨论姜黄素治疗是否可能通过调节TLR/TRIF/NF-κB途径为治疗COVID-19提供抗病毒和抗炎的临床优势。我们还回顾了关于姜黄素的现有数据,并讨论了需要确定其在COVID-19中潜在临床意义的潜在实验和临床研究。