Targeting Cancer Stem Cells with Phytochemicals: Molecular Mechanisms and Therapeutic Potential

Cancer stem cells (CSCs) represent a small but highly resilient tumor subpopulation responsible for sustained growth, metastasis, therapeutic resistance, and recurrence. Their survival is supported by

Last updated on 2026.01.30 (Posted on 2026.01.30)

Biomedicines. 2026 Jan 19;14(1):215. doi: 10.3390/biomedicines14010215.

ABSTRACT

Cancer stem cells (CSCs) represent a small but highly resilient tumor subpopulation responsible for sustained growth, metastasis, therapeutic resistance, and recurrence. Their survival is supported by aberrant activation of developmental and inflammatory pathways, including Wnt/ฮฒ-catenin, Notch, Hedgehog, PI3K/Akt/mTOR, STAT3, and NF-ฮบB, as well as epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) programs and niche-driven cues. Increasing evidence shows that phytochemicals, naturally occurring bioactive compounds from medicinal plants, can disrupt these networks through multi-targeted mechanisms. This review synthesizes current findings on prominent phytochemicals such as curcumin, sulforaphane, resveratrol, EGCG, genistein, quercetin, parthenolide, berberine, and withaferin A. Collectively, these compounds suppress CSC self-renewal, reduce sphere-forming capacity, diminish ALDH+ and CD44+/CD24- fractions, reverse EMT features, and interfere with key transcriptional regulators that maintain stemness. Many phytochemicals also sensitize CSCs to chemotherapeutic agents by downregulating drug-efflux transporters (e.g., ABCB1, ABCG2) and lowering survival thresholds, resulting in enhanced apoptosis and reduced tumor-initiating potential. This review further highlights the translational challenges associated with poor solubility, rapid metabolism, and limited bioavailability of free phytochemicals. Emerging nanotechnology-based delivery systems, including polymeric nanoparticles, lipid carriers, hybrid nanocapsules, and ligand-targeted formulations, show promise in improving stability, tumor accumulation, and CSC-specific targeting. These nanoformulations consistently enhance intracellular uptake and amplify anti-CSC effects in preclinical models. Overall, the consolidated evidence supports phytochemicals as potent modulators of CSC biology and underscores the need for optimized delivery strategies and evidence-based combination regimens to achieve meaningful clinical benefit.

PMID:41595749 | PMC:PMC12838567 | DOI:10.3390/biomedicines14010215

; ; ; ;

Tags