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Down-regulation of tumour gelatinase/inhibitor balance and preservation of tumour endothelium by an anti-metastatic ruthenium complex

Authors :
Enzo Alessio
Moreno Cocchietto
Alberta Bergamo
Giovanni Mestroni
Maurizio Onisto
R. Gagliardi
Gianni Sava
Ilaria Capozzi
Laura Masiero
Spiridione Garbisa
Sava, Gianni
Capozzi, I
Bergamo, A
Gagliardi, R
Cocchietto, M
Masiero, L
Onisto, M
Alessio, Enzo
Mestroni, G
Garbisa, S.
Source :
International Journal of Cancer. 68:60-66
Publication Year :
1996
Publisher :
Wiley, 1996.

Abstract

The anti-metastatic ruthenium complex NaCtransRuCI4(DMSO)lm] was given i.p. at 22 and 44 mg/kg/day, on days 8-13 after tumour implantation, to mice carrying S.C. implants of MCa mammary carcinoma. The aim ofthe study was to compare the effects on lung metastasis formation with those on primary tumour cells. This investigation was based on flow cytometry analysis after propidium iodide and acridine orange staining, histology of tumour parenchyma and RT-PCR analysis for the type-IV collagenases MMP-9 and MMP-2 and their respective inhibitors TIMP-I and TIMP-2 mRNAs. NactransRuCl,(DMSO)lm] is not cytotoxic for tumour cells but has the capacity of interacting with nucleic acids, giving a general reduction of nucleic acid content as shown by a marked reduction of acridine orange staining and a tendency to a reduction of DNA polyploidy with marked reduction of 8n and 4n cell populations. Na[trans-RuCI~(DMSO)lm] also influences a proteolytic system which has the potential of degrading the basement membrane and has been related to metastatic aggressiveness: it markedly reduces, in a dose-dependent manner, MMP-2/TIMP-2 balance, but not that of MMP-9/TIMP-I. The different enzyrne/inhibitor mRNA levels between untreated and treated tumours seem to be unaffected by tumourinfiltrating lymphocytes and are paralleled by the maintenance of connective tissue around blood vessels in the tumour mass. Correspondingly, lung metastasis formation is markedly reduced, to less than 10% of that seen in conbols. o 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc. Basic research on synthetic drugs, effective against tumour metastases, has recently highlighted the effects of a ruthenium complex, namely sodium trans-rutheniumtetrachloridedimethylsulphoxideimidazole (hereafter indicated by Na[transRuCI4(DMSO)Im]) (Sava er al., 1992a, b, 1993, 1994). The effects of this new generation ruthenium(II1) complex on solid metastasizing tumour are particularly evident on the formation of spontaneous metastases. The selectivity of Na[transRuCI4(DMSO)Im] on lung metastases is also marked on advanced metastases and accounts for a significant prolongation of the host's survival time; combined with surgical removal of primary tumour, Na[trans-RuC14(DMSO)Im] prevents the formation of metastases and inhibits the growth of those already formed (Sava et al., 1994). The histological analysis of tumour growth and of healthy host tissues such as lung and kidney epithelia, muscle and liver cells, splenocytes and bone-marrow cells, by light microscopy and by SEM, shows a lack of significant cytotoxicity (Gagliardi et al., 1994). It thus appears that the selective anti-metastatic effects do not result directly from histological modification of the primary tumour structure.

Details

ISSN :
10970215 and 00207136
Volume :
68
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c66fe1b7b02262a79a25d31e7ef91ce8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1097-0215(19960927)68:1<60::aid-ijc12>3.0.co;2-a