Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.3.5.1 (succinate dehydrogenase)
8,177 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The purpose of this study is to assess effects of fibroblasts in the vitro chemosensitivity testing on human lung cancer cells and to remove them. Fourteen lung cancer cell lines and 14 fibroblasts derived from resected specimens of lung cancers were used, whose S.D (succinate dehydrogenase) activities were measured with MTT colorimetric assay. The chemosensitivity of a lung cancer cell alone was compared with that of mixed cancer cell and fibroblast. As results, S.D activities of fibroblasts were less 2-4 fold than those of lung cancer cells. Fibroblasts were as sensitive to CDDP, MMC and 5-FU as lung cancer cells, but more sensitive to ADM and VP-16 than them. When sensitivity testings were performed on mixed cancer cells and fibroblasts, or mixed cancer cells and conditioned media of fibroblasts to CDDP with 3 day's incubation times, the sensitivity was affected in 61%, or 10% of all the pairs, respectively. However, when these tests were done without any incubation times, the sensitivity was not affected. Therefore, it was suggested that anticancer drugs had to be simultaneously added when single cell suspensions were plated if resected specimens were used in a anticancer drug sensitivity test.
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PMID:[A study of fibroblasts in the chemosensitivity testing on human lung cancer cell lines]. 180 80

This study was undertaken in order to evaluate the effect of intraoperative intraperitoneal (i.p.) administration of CDDP on patients who underwent gastrectomy for gastric cancer with peritoneal dissemination, compared with MMC or OK-432 i.p. administration group and untreated group. The median survival time was 11 months in CDDP i.p. group (35 patients), 8 months in MMC or OK-432 Ip group (33 patients) and 7 months in untreated group (25 patients). 1- and 2-year survival rates were 30.4% and 12.1% for MMC or OK-432 i.p. group, and 28% and 8% for untreated group, while in CDDP i.p. group, the rates were higher at 46.4% and 14.7%, respectively (CDDP i.p. group vs. untreated group, p less than 0.05). In vitro chemosensitivity test by succinate dehydrogenase inhibition (SDI) test supported the clinical results. CDDP had higher sensitivities than MMC and ADM on poorly differentiated cases as well as peritoneal dissemination cases. Our results suggest that intraoperative i.p. administration of CDDP was useful for the treatment of gastric cancer with peritoneal dissemination.
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PMID:[Intraoperative intraperitoneal administration of CDDP against gastric cancer with peritoneal dissemination]. 210 97

In vitro chemosensitivity was evaluated in human head and neck cancers using the succinate dehydrogenase (SD) test and the results were compared to findings in cases of malignant lymphomas and gastric cancers. Tumor fragments were exposed to several antitumor drugs at ten times the peak plasma concentration and assayed for SD activity. Decrease of SD activity was most prominent in the malignant lymphomas in cases of exposure to ADM, ACR, DDP, MMC and CQ; in which the average of SD activity decreased to below 30%. In the squamous cell carcinomas, SD activity below 40% was also observed with the same drugs, while the SD activity of gastric cancers was about 50%. There was a change of chemosensitivity following chemotherapy. The use of the SDI test will aid in selecting drugs for the prevention of recurrence or metastasis in head and neck cancers.
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PMID:Succinate dehydrogenase inhibition test for evaluating head and neck tumors. 271 26

In vitro chemosensitivity was evaluated by SDI test in various human tumors including 1 lymph node metastasis of esophageal cancer, 10 gastric cancers, 4 colo-rectal cancers, 1 hepatoma, 2 lung cancers, 2 breast cancers and 1 gallbladder cancer. Tumor fragments cut with scissors were exposed to twelve kinds of antitumor drugs at five to ten times peak plasma concentration. After 3 days at 37 degrees C, each tumor fragment suspension was washed with phosphate-buffered saline and assayed for succinate dehydrogenase (SD) activity using 3-(4,5- dimethyl-2-thiazolyl)-2, 5-diphenyl-2H tetrazolium bromide (MTT) as a hydrogen acceptor. When the SD activity of the drug-treated cells was reduced to below 50% that of control cells, the chemosensitivity to the antitumor drug was considered positive. The chemosensitivity of each tumor varied individually. Mitomycin C or 5-fluorouracil are regularly used to treat gastric cancer patients, but, some specimens of gastric cancer in this study showed a resistance to these drugs and an unexpected sensitivity to other drugs. Our results show that the SDI test is a convenient method for clinical use and gives significant information about drug sensitivity.
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PMID:[In vitro chemosensitivity of various human tumors evaluated by the SDI (succinate dehydrogenase inhibition) test]. 405 18

We retrospectively evaluated the clinical usefulness of the succinate dehydrogenase inhibition (SDI) test as a chemosensitivity test, using 168 resected specimens of gastric cancer, with special reference to the correlation between the results of the SDI test and clinical effects of the corresponding chemotherapy. The rate of sensitivity of these tissues to DDP, CQ, ACR, MMC, ADM, and 5-FU were 63.5%, 54.2%, 47.4%, 42.9%, 31.4%, and 10.8%, respectively. Survival rates for patients with a positive chemosensitivity to MMC and postoperatively prescribed more than 20 mg of MMC were significantly better than those without sensitivity to MMC, even when treated with MMC, although no statistical differences existed in clinicopathologic factors between the two groups. We conclude that the SDI test for human gastric cancer is a rapid, reliable, and useful assay to determine the compatibility between the results of assay and the clinical effects of corresponding chemotherapy. We propose that the regimen of postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy be tailored according to results of the SDI test, using tissues resected from individual patients.
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PMID:Clinical value of SDI test for predicting effect of postoperative chemotherapy for patients with gastric cancer. 805 84

The possible existence of a threshold for compounds inducing chromosomal loss was investigated for four known aneugens (colchicine, COL; carbendazim, MBC; mebendazole, MEB; nocodazole, NOC) and two clastogens (methyl methanesulfonate, MMS; mitomycin C, MMC) using the micronucleus (MN) test in human lymphocytes. The presence of a whole chromosome in the MN was studied by fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) using a synthetic pancentromeric oligonucleotide probe. FISH was applied on two different MN preparations: cytokinesis-blocked MN (MNCB) assay, and MN sorted by flow cytometry. At subtoxic concentrations analyzed by MNCB and FISH, COL, MEB, MBC, and NOC induced a concentration-dependent increase in centromere-positive MN (MNCen+). MMC seemed to induce an increase in both types of MN (MNCen- and MNCen+), while MMS induced only MNCen-. On the sorted micronuclei (in a wide range of low to subtoxic concentrations), the concentration-effect profile for MNCen+, with the four aneugens tested, showed a statistically nonsignificant increase over a range of concentrations, followed by a second range of high concentrations with a statistically significant increase. To analyze the existence of a threshold, a piecewise linear regression was applied to the data. The first concentration that showed a statistically significant increase in MNCen+ was chosen as a breakpoint (0.037 microM for COL, 2.62 microM for MBC, 0.27 microM for MEB, and 0.066 microM for NOC). The statistical correlation between observed and predicted values showed a high correlation (r = 0.99), indicating a clear threshold for aneuploidy induction. However, for MMS the concentration-effect profile for MNCen+ showed a continuous concentration-dependent decrease with no threshold. With the two cytotoxicity assays used (Bio-Rad and MTT), no significant reduction was detected either in the protein content or in mitochondrial succinate dehydrogenase activity with all chemicals tested for MN induction. Therefore, our data suggest that the observed thresholds were not due to indirect toxic effects but to real aneugenic effects.
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PMID:Indications for a threshold of chemically-induced aneuploidy in vitro in human lymphocytes. 857 18

The efficacy of two monothiols, N-acetyl-DL-homocysteine thiolactone (NAHT) and glutathione (GSH) either alone or in combination with two vitamins, vitamin B complex and vitamin E were studied in 7 days methylmercury chloride (MMC; I mg kg) intoxicated male Swiss albino mice. Thirteen groups of animals, each containing 6 animals were used for the study. Three groups of animals were kept as control (treated either with vehicle, normal saline or olive oil). Rest of the ten groups were kept as treatment groups. All the animals were treated subcutaneously for 7 days with MMC and one group was sacrificed on the 8th day. The second group was kept without toxicant for another 7 days and were sacrificed on the 15th day. Two MMC pretoxicated groups were treated either with vitamin B complex (20 mg kg) or vitamin E (60 mg kg) and two other groups were treated with N-acetyl-DL-homocysteine thiolactone (40 mg kg) or glutathione (50 mg kg) for another 7 days. The rest of the four groups were treated with either N-acetyl-DL-homocysteine thiolactone or glutathione in combination with either vitamin B complex or vitamin E. All the animals were sacrificed on the 15th day, brain and spinal cord were dissected and estimated for acid phosphatase, alkaline phosphatase, succinic dehydrogenase and alpha mannosidases. Some of the antidotes showed significant recovery of the enzymes in one tissue while some showed significant recovery in the other tissue depicting the need for treating methylmercury poisoned animals with multi-chelation therapy rather than as a monotherapy.
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PMID:Organelle specific enzyme markers as indicators of methylmercury neurotoxicity and antidotal efficacy in mice. 1257 86