Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2114853 | Cancer Letters | 2008 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
An ongoing strategy for cancer treatment is selective induction of apoptosis in cancer over normal cells. N-thiolated β-lactams were found to induce DNA damage, growth arrest and apoptosis in cultured human cancer cells. However, whether these compounds have a similar effect in vivo has not been studied. We report here that treatment with the β-lactam L-1 caused a significant inhibition of tumor growth in a breast cancer xenograft mouse model, associated with induction of DNA damage and apoptosis in vivo. These results suggest that the synthetic antibiotic N-thiolated β-lactams hold great potential to be developed as novel anti-cancer drugs.
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Authors
Di Chen, Samuel C. Falsetti, Michael Frezza, Vesna Milacic, Aslamuzzaman Kazi, Qiuzhi Cindy Cui, Timothy E. Long, Edward Turos, Q. Ping Dou,