Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P30536 (PBS)
9,886 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Hsp90 is a chaperone protein that allows cancer cells to tolerate the many components of dysregulated pathways. Its inactivation may result in targeting multiple molecular alterations and, thus, in reverting the transformed phenotype. The PU-class, a purine-scaffold Hsp90 inhibitor series, has been reported to be potent and selective against Hsp90 both in vitro and in vivo models of cancer. Here, a series of this class was synthesized and evaluated as inhibitors of the chaperone. The structure-activity relationship and selectivity for tumor Hsp90 of compounds within the series is presented. The study identifies water soluble derivatives (>5 mM in PBS pH 7.4) of nanomolar potency (IC(50) approximately 50 nM) in cellular and animal models of cancer. Binding affinities of these compounds for Hsp90 correlate well with their biological activities. When administered in vivo to mice bearing MDA-MB-468 human breast cancer xenografted tumors, these agents result in pharmacologically relevant concentrations and, accordingly, in modulation of Hsp90-client proteins in tumors.
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PMID:Identification of potent water soluble purine-scaffold inhibitors of the heat shock protein 90. 1639 23

We have demonstrated that in vivo administration of phosphorothioate antisense oligodeoxynucleotides (AS[S]ODNs) to type I insulin-like growth factor receptor (IGF-IR) mRNA resulted in inhibition of C4HD breast cancer growth in BALB/c mice. The present study focused on whether in vivo administration of C4HD tumor cells pretreated with IGF-IR AS[S]ODN and irradiated could provide protection against C4HD wild-type tumor challenge and also on elucidating the mechanism mediating this effect. Our results showed that mice immunized with IGF-IR AS[S]ODN-treated C4HD cells experienced a growth inhibition of 53.4%, 61.6%, and 60.2% when compared with PBS-treated mice, wild-type C4HD cell-injected mice, or phosphorothioate sense oligodeoxynucleotide-treated C4HD cell-injected mice, respectively. The protective effect was C4HD-specific, because no cross-protection was observed against other syngeneic mammary tumor lines. The lack of protection against tumor formation in nude mice indicated that T cells were involved in the antitumoral response. Furthermore, cytotoxicity and splenocyte proliferation assays demonstrated that a cellular CD8(+)-dependent immune response, acting through the Fas/Fas ligand death pathway, could be mediating the antitumor effect induced by immunization with AS[S]ODN-treated cells. Immunization also induced splenocytes to produce Ag-dependent IFN-gamma, indicating the presence of a type 1 response. We demonstrated for the first time that IGF-IR AS[S]ODN treatment of breast cancer cells induced expression of CD86 and heat shock protein 70 molecules, both involved in the induction of the immunogenic phenotype. Immunization with these tumor immunogens imparted protection against parental tumor growth through activation of a specific immune response.
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PMID:Immunization with murine breast cancer cells treated with antisense oligodeoxynucleotides to type I insulin-like growth factor receptor induced an antitumoral effect mediated by a CD8+ response involving Fas/Fas ligand cytotoxic pathway. 1651 11

An easily administered cis-dichlorodiammineplatinum (II) (CDDP) formulation with less toxicity and greater antitumor effect would be extremely valuable. We describe PGA-CDDP, a water-soluble CDDP derivative. The hydrolyzed gamma-PGA has a molecular weight between 45 and 60 kDa, and is a water-soluble, biodegradable, and nontoxic polymer produced by microbial fermentation. CDDP can be released from the resulting conjugate in PBS: there was initially a burst release during the first 6h, followed by sustained release. In vitro, PGA-CDDP was less potent than free CDDP at inhibiting cell growth in the Bcap-37 cell line. PGA-CDDP was given as 3 doses at an equivalent CDDP dose of 4 or 12 mg/kg with 2-day intervals between injections to Bcap-37-grafted mice. This treatment showed stronger antitumor activity and was less toxic than CDDP in vivo. Antitumor activity assays demonstrated that the PGA-CDDP conjugate treatment had significantly higher antitumor activity than control PBS treatment (P<0.01). PGA-CDDP also increased the survival of mice bearing Bcap-37 cells with reference to PBS treatment or free CDDP treatment. Furthermore, mice treated with PGA-CDDP (4 mg/kg, administered on day 0 and 5) showed no body weight loss (P>0.05 with respect to PBS treatment), whereas free CDDP treatment at the same dose caused a body weight loss of 20-30% (P<0.001). These findings suggest that PGA produced by microbial fermentation may be used as an effective drug carrier for CDDP and that PGA-CDDP may have potential applications in the treatment of human breast cancer.
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PMID:Poly(gamma,L-glutamic acid)-cisplatin conjugate effectively inhibits human breast tumor xenografted in nude mice. 1694 49

Tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) gene therapy and canstatin gene therapy have been investigated extensively in human xenograft tumor models established in immunocompromised nude mice. However, combination antitumor activity of these two agents and the safety of such gene constructs driven by the human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT) promoter in nude mice have not been well documented. We hypothesized that TRAIL and canstatin gene therapy driven by the hTERT promoter might overcome the problem of liver toxicity and still effectively induce apoptosis on tumor cells. In this study, we evaluated the antitumor effects of TRAIL in human breast cancer cell lines and the antiangiogenic effects of canstatin on ECV204 cells. We also analyzed the effects of combined gene therapy using both TRAIL and canstatin in a human breast cancer nude mouse model. Tumor growth, tumor inhibition rate of each group, and toxicity were evaluated after gene therapy. Our results demonstrate that treatment using the canstatin- or TRAIL-expressing vector alone significantly suppresses tumor growth, compared to PBS or a vector control. We also found that combining these two therapies had greater antitumor activity than either treatment alone in the mouse model. Moreover, induction of apoptosis was not detected in normal mouse tissues after intratumoral injection of vectors and liver toxicity did not occur with either treatment. Thus, the combination of TRAIL and canstatin appears to be a promising approach for the gene therapy of breast tumors.
Breast Cancer Res Treat 2008 Jul
PMID:Combination of tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) and canstatin gene suppression therapy on breast tumor xenograft growth in mice. 1789 69

Morphine and its congener opioids are the main therapy for severe pain in cancer. However, chronic morphine treatment stimulates angiogenesis and tumour growth in mice. We examined if celecoxib (a cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibitor) prevents morphine-induced tumour growth without compromising analgesia. The effect of chronic treatment with celecoxib (by gavage) and/or morphine (subcutaneously), or PBS on tumour prostaglandin E(2) (PGE(2)), COX-2, angiogenesis, tumour growth, metastasis, pain behaviour and survival was determined in a highly invasive SCK breast cancer model in A/J mice. Two weeks of chronic morphine treatment at clinically relevant doses stimulates COX-2 and PGE(2) (4.5-fold compared to vehicle alone) and angiogenesis in breast tumours in mice. This is accompanied by increased tumour weight ( approximately 35%) and increased metastasis and reduced survival. Co-administration of celecoxib prevents these morphine-induced effects. In addition, morphine and celecoxib together provided better analgesia than either agent alone. Celecoxib prevents morphine-induced stimulation of COX-2, PGE(2), angiogenesis, tumour growth, metastasis and mortality without compromising analgesia in a murine breast cancer model. In fact, the combination provided significantly better analgesia than with morphine or celecoxib alone. Clinical trials of this combination for analgesia in chronic and severe pain in cancer are warranted.
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PMID:COX-2 inhibitor celecoxib prevents chronic morphine-induced promotion of angiogenesis, tumour growth, metastasis and mortality, without compromising analgesia. 1797 69

We report a new series of Herceptin-platinum(II) binding complexes, Her-nLPt(II) (Her denotes Herceptin; L denotes diamino ligands and L=L1-L4; n=1, 5, or 10). Solution chemistry studies have shown that these complexes are stable under physiological conditions (pH 7.4 in PBS). The platinum(II) compound L1Pt(II)Cl(2) inhibits the growth of a panel of human cancer cell lines at sub-micromolar concentrations. Remarkable cancer-cell-specific cytotoxicity was observed with Her-nL1Pt(II) (n=1, 5, 10) toward Her2/neu-overexpressing cancer cells (SK-BR-3 and SK-OV-3) over normal fibroblast cells. Annexin V apoptosis assays in SK-BR-3 and low-Her2/neu-expressing MCF-7 breast cancer cells further confirmed the critical role of Herceptin with this cancer-cell-specific agent. It was also found that the L1Pt(II)Cl(2) complex is an efficient regulator of the apoptotic genes Bcl-2 in the treated SK-BR-3 cells. Also, enhanced regulatory effects were observed in Her-10L1Pt(II). Taken together, this study suggests a new approach for the development of mAb-platinum(II)-based targeting agents for the treatment of human cancers.
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PMID:Herceptin-platinum(II) binding complexes: novel cancer-cell-specific agents. 1836 39

D-Penicillamine (D-pen) is an established copper chelator. We have recently shown that the copper-catalyzed D-pen oxidation generates concentration-dependent hydrogen peroxide (H 2O 2). Additionally, D-pen coincubated with cupric sulfate resulted in cytotoxicity in human leukemia and breast cancer cells due to the extracellular generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). The inherent physicochemical properties of D-pen such as its short in vivo half-life, low partition coefficient, and rapid metal catalyzed oxidation limit its intracellular uptake and the potential utility as an anticancer agent in vivo. Therefore, to enhance the intracellular delivery and to protect the thiol moiety of D-pen, we designed, synthesized, and evaluated a novel gelatin-D-pen conjugate. D-pen was covalently coupled to gelatin with a biologically reversible disulfide bond with the aid of a heterobifunctional cross-linker ( N-succinimidyl-3-(2-pyridyldithio)-propionate) (SPDP). Additionally, fluorescein-labeled gelatin-D-pen conjugate was synthesized for cell uptake studies. D-pen alone was shown not to enter leukemia cells. In contrast, the qualitative intracellular uptake of the conjugate in human leukemia cells (HL-60) was shown with confocal microscopy. The conjugate exhibited slow cell uptake (over the period of 48 to 72 h). A novel HPLC assay was developed to simultaneously quantify both D-pen and glutathione in a single run. The conjugate was shown to completely release D-pen in the presence of glutathione (1 mM) in approximately 3 h in PBS buffer, pH 7.4. The gelatin-D-pen conjugate resulted in significantly greater cytotoxicity compared to free D-pen, gelatin alone, and a physical mixture of gelatin and D-pen in human leukemia cells. Further studies are warranted to assess the potential of D-pen conjugate in the delivery of D-pen as a ROS generating anticancer agent.
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PMID:Enhanced intracellular delivery of the reactive oxygen species (ROS)-generating copper chelator D-penicillamine via a novel gelatin--D-penicillamine conjugate. 1857 Apr 51

The purpose of this study was to assess in rats the pharmacological parameters and effects on gene expression in the liver of the triterpene glycoside actein. Actein, an active component from the herb black cohosh, has been shown to inhibit the proliferation of human breast cancer cells. To conduct our assessment, we determined the molecular effects of actein on livers from Sprague-Dawley rats treated with actein at 35.7 mg/kg for 6 and 24 h. Chemogenomic analyses indicated that actein elicited stress and statin-associated responses in the liver; actein altered expression of cholesterol and fatty acid biosynthetic genes, p53 pathway genes, CCND1 and ID3. Real-time RT-PCR validated that actein induced three time-dependent patterns of gene expression in the liver: (i) a decrease followed by a significant increase of HMGCS1, HMGCR, HSD17B7, NQO1, S100A9; (ii) a progressive increase of BZRP and CYP7A1 and (iii) a significant increase followed by a decrease of CCND1 and ID3. Consistent with actein's statin- and stress-associated responses, actein reduced free fatty acid and cholesterol content in the liver by 0.6-fold at 24 h and inhibited the growth of human HepG2 liver cancer cells. To determine the bioavailability of actein, we collected serum samples for pharmacokinetic analysis at various times up to 24 h. The serum level of actein peaked at 2.4 microg/mL at 6 h. Actein's ability to alter pathways involved in lipid disorders and carcinogenesis may make it a new agent for preventing and treating these major disorders.
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PMID:Actein activates stress- and statin-associated responses and is bioavailable in Sprague-Dawley rats. 1952

Despite palliative treatments, tumor-induced bone disease (TIBD) remains highly debilitating for many cancer patients and progression typically results in death within two years. Therefore, more effective therapies with enhanced anti-resorptive and cytotoxic characteristics are needed. We developed bisphosphonate-chemotherapeutic conjugates designed to bind bone and hydrolyze, releasing both compounds, thereby targeting both osteoclasts and tumor cells. This study examined the effects of our lead compound, MBC-11 (the anhydride formed between arabinocytidine (AraC)-5'-phosphate and etidronate), on bone tumor burden, bone volume, femur bone mineral density (BMD), and overall survival using two distinct mouse models of TIBD, the 4T1/luc breast cancer and the KAS-6/1-MIP1alpha multiple myeloma models. In mice orthotopically inoculated with 4T1/luc mouse mammary cells, MBC-11 (0.04 microg/day; s.c.) reduced the incidence of bone metastases to 40% (4/10), compared to 90% (9/10; p=0.057) and 100% (5/5; p=0.04) of PBS- or similarly-dosed, zoledronate-treated mice, respectively. MBC-11 also significantly decreased bone tumor burden compared to PBS- or zoledronate-treated mice (p=0.021, p=0.017, respectively). MBC-11 and zoledronate (0.04 microg/day) significantly increased bone volume by two- and four-fold, respectively, compared to PBS-treated mice (p=0.005, p<0.001, respectively). In mice systemically injected with human multiple myeloma KAS-6/1-MIP1alpha cells, 0.04 and 4.0 microg/day MBC-11 improved femur BMD by 13% and 16%, respectively, compared to PBS (p=0.025, p=0.017, respectively) at 10 weeks post-tumor cell injection and increased mean survival to 95 days compared to 77 days in mice treated with PBS (p=0.047). Similar doses of zoledronate also improved femur BMD (p< or =0.01 vs PBS) and increased mean survival to 86 days, but this was not significantly different than in PBS-treated mice (p=0.53). These results demonstrate that MBC-11 decreases bone tumor burden, maintains bone structure, and may increase overall survival, warranting further investigation as a treatment for TIBD.
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PMID:A promising approach for treatment of tumor-induced bone diseases: utilizing bisphosphonate derivatives of nucleoside antimetabolites. 2023 12

In this study, we labeled trastuzumab with (177)Lu to synthesize a new radiopharmaceutical for therapy of breast cancer and at the first stage investigated its therapeutic effects on SKBr3 and MCF7 breast cancer cell lines. Trastuzumab-(177)Lu showed very good in-vitro characteristics such as high radiochemical purity (91+/-0.9%), good stability in PBS buffer (86+/-2.3%) and blood serum (81+/-2.7%) up to 96 h, appropriate immunoreactivity (85.4+/-1.1%) and high cytotoxicity in HER2 expression cells. 5 fold increase in toxicity of trastuzumab-(177)Lu was observed when compared with unlabeled trastuzumab on SKBr3 cells.
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PMID:Toxicity of trastuzumab labeled 177Lu on MCF7 and SKBr3 cell lines. 2053 46


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