| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10574225 | Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry | 2006 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
The tyrosine kinase inhibitor imatinib is successfully used in the treatment of chronic myeloid leukemia, but the occurrence of resistance phenomena can significantly limit therapeutic impact. Imatinib shows synergistic effects with cisplatin, suggesting that the coadministration of different cytostatics might reestablish the efficacy of treatment. We recently demonstrated that cobalt alkyne (or acetylenehexacarbonyldicobalt) complexes induce antiproliferative activity in human leukemia and lymphoma cells. The present study evaluates the effects of cobalt alkyne compounds containing propargylic acid esters on human acute (HL-60) and chronic myeloid (LAMA-84 and CML-T1) leukemia cell lines. The cell growth inhibitory activities (IC50 values of 9.5 μM and higher) and induction of apoptosis (maximum 5.5-fold increase of single-stranded DNA at a drug concentration of 50 μM) achieved with the single agents were moderate. Interestingly, suboptimal concentrations of the cobalt complexes (10 μM) together with imatinib (0.1 μM), when coadministered, showed an additive or synergistic effect on cellular proliferation inhibition. The most promising results were obtained with complexes containing ligands derived from the nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs acetylsalicylic acid and naproxene.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Inorganic Chemistry
Authors
Ingo Ott, Angelika Abraham, Petra Schumacher, Hashem Shorafa, Guenther Gastl, Ronald Gust, Brigitte Kircher,
