1. The Activity of Titanocene T Against Xenografted Caki-1 Tumors
- Author
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Anthony Deally, Iduna Fichtner, Matthias Tacke, Wolfgang Walther, and Megan Hogan
- Subjects
CD31 ,Cell ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Titanocene dichloride ,Pharmacology ,Staining ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,In vivo ,Drug Discovery ,Immunology ,Toxicity ,Cancer cell ,medicine ,Molecular Medicine ,Immunohistochemistry - Abstract
The indole-substituted titanocene dichloride derivative Titanocene T, which is completely water-soluble and shows micromolar activity against the human renal cancer cells Caki-1, was tested in vivo an against xenografted human renal cell tumors in mice. Titanocene T was then given at 25 and 50 mg/kg, seven times every four days during three weeks to two groups (n=6) of Caki-1 tumor-bearing female NMRI: nu/nu mice, while the control group was treated with solvent only. At both doses Titanocene T induced a moderate to good tumor growth reduction with respect to the solvent-treated control group, with an optimal T/C value of 51% and 32% and showed neither mortality nor toxicity. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed that the expression of the proliferation marker Ki-67 was reduced in the high-dosage group. Furthermore, anti-angiogenic activity was identified by CD31 staining; the number of micro vessels in a defined tumor area decreased by 27% and 29% due to Titanocene T treatment.
- Published
- 2013
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