Wednesday, 7 June 2017

Cisplatin & doxorubicin thuốc kháng MCF7

Molecular profile and cell cycle in MCF-7 cells resistant to cisplatin and doxorubicin

Cisplatin & doxorubicin thuốc kháng MCF7
Cisplatin
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cisplatin
Cisplatin-stereo.svg
Cisplatin-3D-vdW.png
Clinical data
Trade namesPlatinol, others
AHFS/Drugs.comMonograph
MedlinePlusa684036
Pregnancy
category
  • US: D (Evidence of risk)
    Routes of
    administration
    Intravenous
    ATC code
    Legal status
    Legal status
    Pharmacokinetic data
    Bioavailability100% (IV)
    Protein binding> 95%
    Biological half-life30–100 hours
    ExcretionRenal
    Identifiers
    Synonymscisplatinum, platamin, neoplatin, cismaplat, cis-diamminedichloridoplatinum(II) (CDDP)
    CAS Number
    PubChem CID
    DrugBank
    ChemSpider
    UNII
    KEGG
    ChEBI
    ChEMBL
    PDB ligand
    ECHA InfoCard100.036.106
    Chemical and physical data
    Formula[Pt(NH3)2Cl2]
    Molar mass300.01 g/mol
    3D model (Jmol)
     Yes (what is this?)  (verify)
    Common side effects include bone marrow suppressionhearing problemskidney problems, and vomiting. Other serious side effects include numbness, trouble walking, allergic reactionselectrolyte problems, and heart disease. Use during pregnancy is known to harm the baby. Cisplatin is in the platinum-based antineoplastic family of medications. It works in part by binding to and blocking the duplication of DNA.[1]
    Cisplatin was discovered in 1845 and licensed for medical use in 1978/1979.[2][1] It is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines, the most effective and safe medicines needed in a health system.[3] The wholesale cost in the developing world is about 5.56 to 7.98 USD per 50 mg vial.[4] In the United Kingdom this costs the NHS about £17.[5]

    Medical use[edit]

    Cisplatin is administered intravenously as short-term infusion in normal saline for treatment of solid malignancies. It is used to treat various types of cancers, including sarcomas, some carcinomas (e.g., small cell lung cancersquamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck and ovarian cancer), lymphomasbladder cancercervical cancer,[6] and germ cell tumors.
    Cisplatin is particularly effective against testicular cancer; the cure rate was improved from 10% to 85%.[7]
    In addition, cisplatin is used in Auger therapy.

    Side effects[edit]

    Cisplatin has a number of side-effects that can limit its use:
    • Nephrotoxicity (kidney damage) is a major concern. The dose is reduced when the patient's creatinine clearance (a measure of renal function) is reduced. Adequate hydration and diuresis is used to prevent renal damage. The nephrotoxicity of platinum-class drugs seems to be related to reactive oxygen species and in animal models can be ameliorated by free radical scavenging agents (e.g., amifostine). Nephrotoxicity is a dose-limiting side effect.[8]
    • Neurotoxicity (nerve damage) can be anticipated by performing nerve conduction studies before and after treatment. Common neurological side effects of cisplatin include visual perception and hearing disorder, which can occur soon after treatment begins.[9] While triggering apoptosis through interfering with DNA replication remains the primary mechanism of cisplatin, this has not been found to contribute to neurological side effects. Recent studies have shown that cisplatin noncompetitively inhibits an archetypal, membrane-bound mechanosensitive sodium-hydrogen ion transporter known as NHE-1.[9] It is primarily found on cells of the peripheral nervous system, which are aggregated in large numbers near the ocular and aural stimuli-receiving centers. This noncompetitive interaction has been linked to hydroelectrolytic imbalances and cytoskeleton alterations, both of which have been confirmed in vitro and in vivo. However, NHE-1 inhibition has been found to be both dose-dependent (half-inhibition = 30 µg/mL) and reversible.[9]
    • Nausea and vomiting: cisplatin is one of the most emetogenic chemotherapy agents, but this symptom is managed with prophylactic antiemetics (ondansetrongranisetron, etc.) in combination with corticosteroidsAprepitant combined with ondansetron and dexamethasone has been shown to be better for highly emetogenic chemotherapy than just ondansetron and dexamethasone.
    • Ototoxicity (hearing loss): there is at present no effective treatment to prevent this side effect, which may be severe. Audiometric analysis may be necessary to assess the severity of ototoxicity. Other drugs (such as the aminoglycoside antibiotic class) may also cause ototoxicity, and the administration of this class of antibiotics in patients receiving cisplatin is generally avoided. The ototoxicity of both the aminoglycosides and cisplatin may be related to their ability to bind to melanin in the stria vascularis of the inner ear or the generation of reactive oxygen species.
    • Electrolyte disturbance: Cisplatin can cause hypomagnesaemia, hypokalaemia and hypocalcaemia. The hypocalcaemia seems to occur in those with low serum magnesium secondary to cisplatin, so it is not primarily due to the cisplatin.
    • Hemolytic anemia can be developed after several courses of cisplatin. It is suggested that an antibody reacting with a cisplatin-red-cell membrane is responsible for hemolysis.[10]

    Mechanism of action[edit]

    Cisplatin interferes with DNA replication, which kills the fastest proliferating cells, which in theory are carcinogenic. Following administration, one of the two chloride ligands is slowly displaced by water to give the aquo complex cis-[PtCl(NH3)2(H2O)]+, in a process termed aquation. Dissociation of the chloride ligand is favored inside the cell because the intracellular chloride concentration is only 3–20% of the approximately 100 mM chloride concentration in the extracellular fluid.[11][12]
    The aqua ligand in cis-[PtCl(NH3)2(H2O)]+ is itself easily displaced by the N-heterocyclic bases on DNAGuanine preferentially binds. Subsequent to formation of [PtCl(guanine-DNA)(NH3)2]+, crosslinking can occur via displacement of the other chloride ligand, typically by another guanine.[13] Cisplatin crosslinks DNA in several different ways, interfering with cell division by mitosis. The damaged DNA elicits DNA repair mechanisms, which in turn activate apoptosis when repair proves impossible. In 2008, researchers were able to show that the apoptosis induced by cisplatin on human colon cancer cells depends on the mitochondrial serine-protease Omi/Htra2.[14] Since this was only demonstrated for colon carcinoma cells, it remains an open question if the Omi/Htra2 protein participates in the cisplatin-induced apoptosis in carcinomas from other tissues.
    Most notable among the changes in DNA are the 1,2-intrastrand cross-links with purine bases. These include 1,2-intrastrand d(GpG) adducts which form nearly 90% of the adducts and the less common 1,2-intrastrand d(ApG) adducts. 1,3-intrastrand d(GpXpG) adducts occur but are readily excised by the nucleotide excision repair (NER). Other adducts include inter-strand crosslinks and nonfunctional adducts that have been postulated to contribute to cisplatin's activity. Interaction with cellular proteins, particularly HMG domain proteins, has also been advanced as a mechanism of interfering with mitosis, although this is probably not its primary method of action.
    Although cisplatin is frequently designated as an alkylating agent, it has no alkyl group and it therefore cannot carry out alkylating reactions. It is correctly classified as alkylating-like.

    Cisplatin resistance[edit]

    Cisplatin combination chemotherapy is the cornerstone of treatment of many cancers. Initial platinum responsiveness is high but the majority of cancer patients will eventually relapse with cisplatin-resistant disease. Many mechanisms of cisplatin resistance have been proposed including changes in cellular uptake and efflux of the drug, increased detoxification of the drug, inhibition of apoptosis and increased DNA repair.[15] Oxaliplatin is active in highly cisplatin-resistant cancer cells in the laboratory; however, there is little evidence for its activity in the clinical treatment of patients with cisplatin-resistant cancer.[15] The drug paclitaxel may be useful in the treatment of cisplatin-resistant cancer; the mechanism for this activity is unknown.[16]

    Transplatin[edit]

    Transplatin, the trans stereoisomer of cisplatin, has formula trans-[PtCl2(NH3)2] and does not exhibit a comparably useful pharmacological effect. Its low activity is generally thought to be due to rapid deactivation of the drug before it can arrive at the DNA.[citation needed] It is toxic, and it is desirable to test batches of cisplatin for the absence of the trans isomer. In a procedure by Woollins et al., which is based on the classic Kurnakov testthiourea reacts with the sample to give derivatives which can easily be separated and detected by HPLC.[17]

    History[edit]

    The compound cis-[Pt(NH3)2(Cl)2] was first described by Michele Peyrone in 1845, and known for a long time as Peyrone's salt.[18] The structure was deduced by Alfred Werner in 1893.[13] In 1965, Barnett Rosenberg, Van Camp et al. of Michigan State University discovered that electrolysis of platinum electrodes generated a soluble platinum complex which inhibited binary fission in Escherichia coli (E. coli) bacteria. Although bacterial cell growth continued, cell division was arrested, the bacteria growing as filaments up to 300 times their normal length.[19] The octahedral Pt(IV) complex cis-[PtCl4(NH3)2], but not the trans isomer, was found to be effective at forcing filamentous growth of E. coli cells. The square planar Pt(II) complex, cis-[PtCl2(NH3)2] turned out to be even more effective at forcing filamentous growth.[20][21] This finding led to the observation that cis-[PtCl2(NH3)2] was indeed highly effective at regressing the mass of sarcomas in rats.[22] Confirmation of this discovery, and extension of testing to other tumour cell lines launched the medicinal applications of cisplatin. Cisplatin was approved for use in testicular and ovarian cancers by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration on 19 December 1978.,[13][23][24] and in the UK (and in several other European countries) in 1979.[25]

    Synthesis[edit]

    The synthesis of cisplatin starts from potassium tetrachloroplatinate.[26][27] The tetraiodide is formed by reaction with an excess of potassium iodide. Reaction with ammonia forms K2[PtI2(NH3)2] which is isolated as a yellow compound. When silver nitrate in water is added insoluble silver iodide precipitates and K2[Pt(OH2)2(NH3)2] remains in solution. Addition of potassium chloride will form the final product which precipitates [26] In the triiodo intermediate the addition of the second ammonia ligand is governed by the trans effect.[26]
    Cisplatin synthesis.svg
    For the synthesis of transplatin K2[PtCl4] is first converted to Cl2[Pt(NH3)4] by reaction with ammonia. The trans product is then formed by reaction with hydrochloric acid.[26]

    Frangula alnus dược liệu kháng MCF7

    Effects of Rhamnus frangula Extract on MCF7 Cells in Cell Culture

    Frangula alnus dược liệu kháng MCF7


    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Frangula alnus
    Frangula-alnus-fruits.JPG
    Foliage with mature and immature fruit
    Scientific classification
    Kingdom:Plantae
    (unranked):Angiosperms
    (unranked):Eudicots
    (unranked):Rosids
    Order:Rosales
    Family:Rhamnaceae
    Genus:Frangula
    Species:F. alnus
    Binomial name
    Frangula alnus
    Mill.
    Frangula alnus range.svg
    Distribution map
    Synonyms[1][2]
    • Rhamnus frangula L.
    • Frangula atlantica Grubov
    • Frangula dodonei Ard. nom. inval.
    • Frangula frangula H.Karst.
    • Frangula nigra Samp.
    • Frangula pentapetala Gilib.
    • Frangula vulgaris Hill
    • Girtanneria frangula Neck.
    Frangula alnus, commonly known as the alder buckthornglossy buckthorn, or breaking buckthorn, is a tall deciduous shrub in the family Rhamnaceae. It is native to Europe, northernmost Africa, and western Asia, from Ireland and Great Britain north to the 68th parallel in Scandinavia, east to central Siberia and Xinjiang in western China, and south to northern MoroccoTurkey, and the Alborz and Caucasus Mountains; in the northwest of its range (Ireland, Scotland), it is rare and scattered. It is also introduced and naturalised in eastern North America.[3][4][5][6][7]

    Taxonomy and naming[edit]


    Flowering shoot
    Alder buckthorn was first formally described by Carl Linnaeus in 1753 as Rhamnus frangula. It was subsequently separated by Philip Miller in 1768 into the genus Frangula on the basis of its hermaphrodite flowers with a five-parted corolla (in Rhamnus the flowers are dioecious and four-parted); this restored the treatment of pre-Linnaean authors, notably Tournefort.[8] Although much disputed historically, the separation of Frangula from Rhamnus is now widely accepted, being supported by recent genetic data[9] though a few authorities still retain the genus within Rhamnus (e.g. the Flora of China[7]).
    The genus name Frangula, from Latin frango "to break", refers to the brittle wood. Both the common name alder buckthorn and species name alnus refer to its association with alders (Alnus) on damp sites. Unlike other "buckthorns", alder buckthorn does not have thorns.[10][11] Other recorded names include glossy buckthorn and breaking buckthorn; historically, it was sometimes called "dogwood" through confusion of the leaves with those of Dogwood Cornus sanguinea.[10]

    Description[edit]


    Winter shoot with buds
    Alder buckthorn is a non-spiny deciduous shrub, growing to 3–6 m (10–20 ft), occasionally to 7 m (23 ft) tall. It is usually multistemmed, but rarely forms a small tree with a trunk diameter of up to 20 cm (8 in). The bark is dark blackish-brown, with bright lemon-yellow inner bark exposed if cut. The shoots are dark brown, the winter buds without bud scales, protected only by the densely hairy outer leaves.
    The leaves are arranged alternately on 8–15-millimetre (5161932-inch) petioles. They are ovate, 3–7 cm (1 142 34 in) long by 2.5–4 cm (1–1 58 in) wide (rarely to 11 cm or 4 14 in by 6 cm or 2 14 in). They have 6–10 pairs of prominently grooved and slightly downy veins and an entire margin.
    The flowers are small, 3–5 mm (18316 inch) in diameter, star-shaped with five greenish-white acute triangular petalshermaphroditic, and insect-pollinated, flowering in May to June in clusters of two to ten in the leaf axils.
    The fruit is a small black berry 6–10 mm (141332 inch) in diameter, ripening from green through red in late summer to dark purple or black in early autumn, containing two or three pale brown 5-millimetre (316-inch) seeds. The seeds are primarily dispersed by frugivorous birds, which readily eat the fruit.[3][5][6][7][11][12]

    Ecology[edit]

    Alder buckthorn grows in wet soils in open woods, scrub, hedgerows and bogs, thriving well in sunlight and moderate shade, but less vigorously in dense shade; it prefers acidic soils though will also grow on neutral soils.[6][10][12]
    Frangula alnus is one of just two food plants (the other being Rhamnus cathartica) used by the Common Brimstone butterfly Gonepteryx rhamni. The flowers are valuable for bees, and the fruit an important food source for birds, particularly thrushes.[11]

    Invasive species[edit]

    Frangula alnus was probably introduced to North America about 200 years ago, and in Canada about 100 years ago. It was planted for hedgerows, forestry plantings, and wildlife habitat, but has become an invasive species, invading forests in the northeastern United States and wetlands and moist forest in the Midwestern United States.[13][14][15] It is predicted to continue to expand its North American range with time.[13] Its invasiveness is assisted by its high adaptability and pollution tolerance.[16]
    It invades forests and grows in the understory in spots with a lot of light. These areas, usually where a tree has fallen, normally allow locally native tree seedlings to grow and eventually fill in the gap in the canopy. But when Frangula alnus invades and grows in these locations, its dense canopy prevents light from reaching the ground and therefore prevents other seedlings from growing.[16] It tends to grow more densely and with larger individuals in lower topographical areas with moist, fertile soils, and is very problematic for land managers. Uplands forests are not invaded as easily as lower lying ones. Hemlock-oak stands, which tend to be older stands of trees, are much less suitable for Frangula alnus because the density of the tree canopy creates a more shady environment that is not as suitable for Frangula alnusEastern White Pine stands are easily invaded because they allow more light to reach the forest floor, and tree stands that are cut are very quickly invaded while undisturbed stands are rarely invaded.[17]

    Control[edit]

    Small saplings can be hand-pulled, but control of larger examples is best achieved using herbicides.[18] Frangula alnus and the related species Rhamnus cathartica have been banned from sale, transport, or import to Minnesota[19] and Illinois.[20] It is considered invasive, but not banned, in Connecticut.[21]

    Uses[edit]

    Decorative[edit]


    Frangula alnus 'Asplenifolia' with autumn colours
    Alder buckthorn has limited decorative qualities without conspicuous flowers or bold foliage, and is mainly grown for its conservation value, particularly to attract Brimstone butterflies. A variegated cultivar Frangula alnus 'Variegata' and a cultivar with very slender leaves 'Asplenifolia' are sometimes grown in gardens as ornamental shrubs. The cultivar 'Tallhedge' has been selected for hedging.[22]

    Medicinal[edit]

    Galen, a Greek physician of the 2nd century A.D., knew of alder buckthorn, although he did not distinguish clearly in his writings between it and other closely related species. All of these plants though, were credited with the power to protect against witchcraft, demons, poisons, and headaches.[citation needed]
    The bark (and to a lesser extent the fruit) has been used as a laxative, due to its 3 – 7% anthraquinone content. Bark for medicinal use is dried and stored for a year before use, as fresh bark is violently purgative; even dried bark can be dangerous if taken in excess.[3][22]

    Charcoal[edit]

    Alder buckthorn charcoal is prized in the manufacture of gunpowder, being regarded as the best wood for the purpose. It is particularly highly valued for time fuses because of its very even burn rate.[3][10] The wood was formerly used for shoe lasts, nails, and veneer. The bark yields a yellow dye, and the unripe berries furnish a green dye.[22]