Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (somatostatin)
22,083 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A somatostatin structural derivative (TT-232) has been developed in our laboratory with strong antiproliferative effect but no GH- release inhibitory activity. TT-232 inhibited tyrosine kinase activity of tumor cells lines and this inhibition correlated well with the inhibition of cell proliferation. The antineoplastic activity of TT-232 has been found to be associated with induction of programmed cell death (apoptosis) in tumor cell, resulting in highly selective elimination of neoplastic tissue. The aim of this study was the therapeutic efficacy of TT-232 on different human models: PC-3 prostate carcinoma, MDA-MB-231 (ER-) and MCF-7 (ER+) breast carcinoma, HT-29 colon carcinoma, HT-18 melanoma, HL-60 promyelocytic leukemia. We studied the therapeutic efficacy of the novel somatostatin analog, it for 30 days with intermittent injection once daily and for 14 days with s.c. infusion using the Alzet osmotic minipump (model 2002). The antitumor activity of TT-232 was evaluated on the basis of survival time and tumor growth inhibition. The tumor growth inhibitory effect of TT-232 on human tumor xenografts proved to be significant, resulting in 30%-80% decrease in tumor volume and in 20-60% tumor free animals. This antitumor efficacy of the novel somatostatin analog was observable in almost all tumors investigated. These data suggest that the novel somatostatin analog (TT-232) is an effective and promising antitumor agent.
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PMID:The antitumor activity of the somatostatin structural derivative (TT-232) on different human tumor xenografts. 1466 19

TT-232 is a structural derivative of the natural signal inhibitory peptide somatostatin, with selective antiproliferative and anti-inflammatory properties. TT-232 activates SSTR receptors (primarily the SSTR-1), which leads to irreversible cell cycle arrest, followed by secondary induction of apoptosis. TT-232 has passed phase I clinical trials without toxicity and significant side-effects. We examined the antiproliferative effect in vitro and the antitumor effect in vivo of TT-232 on leukemia cell lines. During in vivo experiments, we evaluated the therapeutic efficacy of TT-232 in various long-term administration routes; traditional injection versus infusion treatment via an inserted Alzet minipump on P-388 mice and HL-60 human leukemia models. Treatment with TT-232 started after development of the disease. In vitro, TT-232 inhibited the proliferation of P-388 mice lymphoid cells and HL-60 human promyelocytic leukemia cells in the range of 46%-97% with 24-hour treatment and 82%-100% with 48-hour treatment. Cells were treated with 30 microg/ml and 60 microg/ml dose of TT-232. With the same in vivo models, the best results were achieved when TT-232 was applied by infusion treatments. The infusion treatment with TT-232 produced 50%-80% inhibition of growth and resulted in 20%-40% long-term and leukemia-free survivors. TT-232 showed dose-, time- and administration mode-dependent antileukemia activity in vitro and in vivo, both on rodent and human models. Our results suggest that TT-232 is a promising new antileukemia agent.
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PMID:Growth inhibitory effect of the somatostatin structural derivative (TT-232) on leukemia models. 1581 55