Where’s the Aspirin

Aspirin Binds to Multiple Enzymes of Inflammation

Cells responding to an inflammatory signal (NFkB, transcription factor is activated) synthesize enzymes that release unsaturated fatty acids (ARA, EPA, DHA) from membrane phospholipids (PLA2, phospholipase A2), form a cyclic epoxide from the fatty acid (prostaglandin H2 synthase 2, also called cyclooxygenase 2, COX-2).
Aspirin binds to the inhibitor that normally inactivates NFkB and prevents NFkB activation that is required for inflammation. Aspirin also binds to PLA2 and prevents fatty acid release and thereby blocks activation of inflammation. Aspirin also binds to COX-2 and blocks the production of inflammatory prostaglandins from ARA. But that is not all that aspirin does.
Inflammation Resolution Uses Aspirin-COX-2 Interaction
The strange interaction that makes aspirin suspicious is that aspirin doesn’t just interfere with the action of enzymes, it subtly changes their specificity. Thus aspirin chemically transfers its acetyl group (CH3-COOH-) to an amino acid in the active site of COX-2 to produce a new group of anti-inflammatory lipoxins from ARA, EPA and DHA.
This raises the question of whether aspirin is a natural dietary modulator of inflammation. Recall that aspirin was initially obtained from willow (Salix) bark. Unfortunately, the data are conflicting. Initial research indicated that grains (naturally inflammatory) lacked aspirin, but

Speculative acetyl candidates may include the menthol relatives, such as menthyl acetate (figure). Peppermint oil, which contains mostly menthol with some menthyl acetate, is more effective in the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease than most pharmaceuticals prescribed to treat the condition. This anti-inflammatory activity may be due in part to the aspirin-like chemical structure and function of the menthyl acetate. Also note that acetic acid/vinegar is sometimes suggested as a cure-all. This activity may be a consequence of its formation of ester linkages with alcohols that have structures similar to menthol.
Large Dose Aspirin as Cancer Treatment
The potent anti-inflammatory effects of aspirin have been compromised, because inflammation is an essential developmental activity. Thus, the integrity of the gut, for example, requires modest production of inflammatory prostaglandins and a pill of aspirin can disrupt gut tissue. Large doses of aspirin cannot be given orally. Intravenous administration of large doses of aspirin, however, is possible and the impact on process that require inflammation is dramatic.
Anecdotal evidence indicates that large dose aspirin is able to disrupt cancers, because proliferation of cancer cells requires NFkB activation and other inflammatory responses. High doses of aspirin also cause other potentially dangerous complications, such as short-circuiting oxidative phosphorylation of mitochondria and increasing nitric oxide free radical production. Still, the impact of high dose aspirin on some diseases is so amazing that it is being actively and carefully pursued.
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