Literature DB >> 11335794

Vanadocenes as potent anti-proliferative agents disrupting mitotic spindle formation in cancer cells.

C S Navara1, A Benyumov, A Vassilev, R K Narla, P Ghosh, F M Uckun.   

Abstract

We present experimental data which establish the organometallic compounds vanadocene dichloride (VDC) and vanadocene acetylacetonate (VDacac) as potent anti-proliferative agents. We first examined the effects of VDC and VDacac on the rapid embryonic cell division and development of Zebrafish. Both compounds were capable of causing cell division block at the 8-16 cell stage of embryonic development followed by total cell fusion and developmental arrest. We next examined the effect of VDC and VDacac on proliferation of human breast cancer and glioblastoma cell lines using MTT assays. VDC inhibited the proliferation of the breast cancer cell line BT-20 as well as the glioblastoma cell line U373 in a concentration-dependent fashion with IC50 values of 11.0, 14.9 and 18.6 microM, respectively. VDacac inhibited cellular proliferation with IC50 values of 9.1, 26.9 and 35.5 microM, respectively. Whereas in vehicle-treated control cancer cells mitotic spindles were organized as a bipolar microtubule array and the DNA was organized on a metaphase plate, vanadocene-treated cancer cells had aberrant monopolar mitotic structures where microtubules were detected only on one side of the chromosomes and the chromosomes were arranged in a circular pattern. In contrast to control cells which showed a single focus of gamma-tubulin at each pole of the bipolar mitotic spindle, VDC- or VDacac-treated cells had two foci of gamma-tubulin on the same side of the chromosomes resulting in a broad centrosome at one pole. All monopolar spindles examined had two foci of gamma-tubulin labeling consistent with a mechanism in which the centrosomes duplicate but do not separate properly to form a bipolar spindle. These results provide unprecedented evidence that organometallic compounds can block cell division in human cancer cells by disrupting bipolar spindle formation. In accordance with these results vanadocene treatment caused an arrest at the G2/M phase of the cell cycle. This unique mechanism of anti-mitotic function warrants further development of vanadocene complexes as anti-cancer drugs.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11335794     DOI: 10.1097/00001813-200104000-00010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anticancer Drugs        ISSN: 0959-4973            Impact factor:   2.248


  10 in total

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2.  Pedigreed primate embryonic stem cells express homogeneous familial gene profiles.

Authors:  Jocelyn D Mich-Basso; Carrie J Redinger; Christopher S Navara; Ahmi Ben-Yehudah; Ethan Jacoby; Elizabeta Kovkarova-Naumovski; Meena Sukhwani; Kyle Orwig; Naftali Kaminski; Carlos A Castro; Calvin R Simerly; Gerald Schatten
Journal:  Stem Cells       Date:  2007-07-19       Impact factor: 6.277

3.  Specific Interactions of Antitumor Metallocenes with Deoxydinucleoside Monophosphates.

Authors:  Rahel P Eberle; Yvonne Hari; Stefan Schürch
Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2017-05-12       Impact factor: 3.109

4.  Chemopreventive effect of vanadium in a rodent model of chemical hepatocarcinogenesis: reflections in oxidative DNA damage, energy-dispersive X-ray fluorescence profile and metallothionein expression.

Authors:  Tridib Chakraborty; Amrita Chatterjee; Mahesh G Saralaya; Malay Chatterjee
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5.  Vanadocene dichloride induces apoptosis in HeLa cells through depolymerization of microtubules and inhibition of Eg5.

Authors:  Susobhan Mahanty; Darpan Raghav; Krishnan Rathinasamy
Journal:  J Biol Inorg Chem       Date:  2021-05-31       Impact factor: 3.358

Review 6.  The state of the art of the zebrafish model for toxicology and toxicologic pathology research--advantages and current limitations.

Authors:  Jan M Spitsbergen; Michael L Kent
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7.  Evaluating protocols for embryonic stem cell differentiation into insulin-secreting beta-cells using insulin II-GFP as a specific and noninvasive reporter.

Authors:  Ahmi Ben-Yehudah; Carlie White; Christopher S Navara; Carlos A Castro; Diego Ize-Ludlow; Benjamin Shaffer; Meena Sukhwani; Clayton E Mathews; J Richard Chaillet; Selma F Witchel
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8.  The zebrafish embryo as a tool for screening and characterizing pleurocidin host-defense peptides as anti-cancer agents.

Authors:  Michael G Morash; Susan E Douglas; Anna Robotham; Christina M Ridley; Jeffrey W Gallant; Kelly H Soanes
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Review 9.  Vanadium Compounds as PTP Inhibitors.

Authors:  Elsa Irving; Andrew W Stoker
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2017-12-19       Impact factor: 4.411

10.  On the discovery, biological effects, and use of Cisplatin and metallocenes in anticancer chemotherapy.

Authors:  Santiago Gómez-Ruiz; Danijela Maksimović-Ivanić; Sanja Mijatović; Goran N Kaluđerović
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  10 in total

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