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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    s.l. : American Chemical Society
    Journal of medicinal chemistry 24 (1981), S. 159-167 
    ISSN: 1520-4804
    Source: ACS Legacy Archives
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1471-4159
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract : 5-Hydroxytryptamine-moduline is an endogenous cerebral tetrapeptide that regulates the activity of 5-hydroxytryptamine1B receptors. Direct binding of 5-[3H]hydroxytryptamine-moduline on rat brain homogenate evidenced the existence of two interacting sites for the peptide, very likely corresponding to different conformations of the 5-hydroxytryptamine1B receptor : The peptide first binds to a low-affinity state of the receptor (pIC50 = 7.68 ± 0.14) and then induces (or stabilizes) a high-affinity complex (pIC50 = 11.62 ± 0.18). This work focuses on the ability of 5-hydroxytryptamine-moduline analogues to recognize the high- and low-affinity sites for 5-hydroxytryptamine-moduline. The results obtained show that the two conformers of the 5-hydroxytryptamine1B receptor have similar but not identical binding pockets for 5-hydroxytryptamine-moduline. These two sites proved to be stereoselective and selective for tetrapeptides and favored the binding of peptides with hydrophobic amino acids in positions 1 and 4, serine in position 2, and a short amino acid in position 3. However, the serine in position 2 seems to be more important for the interaction of the peptide with the low-affinity site than the high-affinity one, which only needs a short hydrophobic amino acid in position 2.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1573-8744
    Keywords: antiarrhythmic compound ; experimental arrhythmia ; pharmacokinetics ; three compartment model ; pharmacological response ; combined pharmacokinetic pharmacodynamic model
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics were studied in three dogs with interventricular coronary artery ligatures (ligature of Harris) and in three control animals. Weighted nonlinear analysis was used to fit equations describing two and three compartment open models to the experimental data, obtained after intravenous injection (5 mg/kg) of the drug. The three compartment model gave a reduction in the weighted sum of squared residuals and an improvement in the randomness of scatter of the experimental points about the theoretical curve. The postdistribution elimination half-life was longer, the area under the plasma elimination curve larger, and the total body plasma clearance and apparent volume of distribution was reduced in the animals with arrhythmias. The pharmacological response was assessed by recording the ECG and calculating the percentage of normal sinus rhythm/min. A combined pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic model was used to analyze data from individual animals. ke0, a measure of the lag time of pharmacological response behind changes in plasma concentration, and Ce (50), a measure of the sensitivity of the cardiac site of action of the drug, were determined.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1573-7217
    Keywords: mammary tumor ; human ; mouse ; retinoids ; tamoxifen ; RU-486 ; apoptosis ; proliferation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Retinoids constitute a very promising class of agents for the chemoprevention or treatment of breast cancer. These retinoids exert their biological activity through two distinct classes of retinoic acid (RA) receptors (R), the RAR isotypes (α, β, and γ) and the three RXR isotypes (α, β, and γ) and their numerous isoforms which bind as RXR/RAR heterodimers to the polymorphic cis-acting response elements of RA target genes. With respect to these numerous receptor sub-types, the retinoid-induced effects at the biological level include marked modifications with respect to both cell proliferation and cell death (apoptosis), and also in the induction of differentiation processes. The present study aims to characterize the effect which four retinoids (TTNPB, 9-cis-RA, LGD 1069, 4-HPR) with distinct RAR/RXR binding properties induced on various in vitro and in vivo mouse and human breast cancer models. The experiments with the retinoids were carried out in comparison with the anti-estrogen tamoxifen and the anti-progestagen RU-486 compounds. The results show that the 6 compounds under study were markedly more efficient in terms of growth inhibition in the human T-47D cell line when maintained under anchorage-independent culture conditions than when maintained under anchorage-dependent ones. While RU-486 exhibited a weak statistically significant (p 〈 0.05) influence on the growth of the T-47D stem cells, tamoxifen had a marked inhibitory influence on the growth of these cells. Of the four retinoids, 4-HPR was the least effective since the lowest doses tested (1 and 0.1 nM) exhibited no statistically (p 〉 0.05) significant influence on the growth of the stem cells. The most efficient retinoid was TTNPB. It was only at the highest dose (10 μM) that tamoxifen and RU-486 showed a weak inhibitory influence on the growth of the T-47D non-stem cells while all 4 retinoids exerted a significant inhibitory influence on the growth of these non-stem cells, with 4-HPR being the most efficient (P 〈 0.001) at the highest dose, but ineffective (P 〉 0.05) at the lowest. Tamoxifen and TTNPB were tested in vivo on hormone-senstive (HS) and hormone-insensitive (HI) strains of the MXT murine mammary carcin oma. While TTNPB appeared to be equally efficient in terms of growth inhibition in both MXT-HS and MXT-HI models, tamoxifen had only a marginal inhibitory influence on the growth of the MXT-HI strain but did inhibit growth in the case of the MXT-HS one. TTNPB was markedly more efficient than tamoxifen in terms of both inhibiting the cell proliferation level (measured by means of computer-assisted microscopy applied to Feulgen-stained nuclei, a method which enables the percentage of cells in the S phase of the cell cycle to be determined) and triggering cell death (measured by means of the determination of the transglutaminase activity) in both the MXT-HI and MXT-HS models. The very significant TTNPB-induced inhibition of the macroscopic MXT-HS growth rate relates to the triggering of cell death (apoptosis) rather than to an inhibition of cell proliferation. All these results clearly indicate that retinoids are very efficient agents against breast cancer, at least as efficient as tamoxifen.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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