Curcumin (chemically known as Diferuloylmethane) is the main active ingredient of the spice Turmeric (Curcuma Longa or JiangHuang) and is the main 'curcuminoid' compound (80% of curcuminoid weight is curcumin[2]) alongside the other three curcuminoids known as demethoxycurcumin, bisdemethoxycurcumin, and cyclocurcumin.[3][4] Curcuminoids in general are known to exist in the curcuma genus[5] (just in highest amounts in curcuma longa) although they are not exclusive to this plant.
Curcumin is the main molecule in the curcuminoid class of molecules (similar to how resveratrol is the main molecule in the stilbene class of molecules), and is most commonly associated with turmeric as that is its largest naturally occurring source
Curcuminoids are known to exist in:
- Turmeric (Curcuma longa or JiangHuang) at around 22.21-40.36mg/g in the rhizomes and 1.94mg/g in the tuberous roots[5] as well as other curcuma species such as phaeocaulis (0.098mg/g)
- Common Ginger (Zingiber officinale) and shampoo ginger (Zingiber zerumbet)[6]
Commercially available extracts of 'curcumin' may not be wholly curcumin, but a blend consisting of 77% curcumin (17% demethoxycurcumin, 3% bisdemethoxycurcumin, last 3% not classified but assumed to possess a cyclocurcumin content).[7] Curcumin can also be referred to as NCB-02 (a standardized mixture of curcuminoids)[8][9] or E100 (the code for curcumin in the usage of food coloring).[10]




