Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2138461 | Leukemia Research | 2010 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Cytotoxic concentrations of imatinib mesylate (10-50 μM) were required to trigger markers of apoptosis and endoplasmic reticulum stress response in neonatal rat ventricular myocytes and fibroblasts, with no significant differences observed between c-Abl silenced and nonsilenced cells. In mice, oral or intraperitoneal imatinib treatment did not induce cardiovascular pathology or heart failure. In rats, high doses of oral imatinib did result in some cardiac hypertrophy. Multi-organ toxicities may have increased the cardiac workload and contributed to the cardiac hypertrophy observed in rats only. These data suggest that imatinib is not cardiotoxic at clinically relevant concentrations (5 μM).
Keywords
MTSNRVMNeonatal rat ventricular myocyteend-diastoleend-systoletmaxADPCMLCmaxPBSFBSAUCc-AblAdenosine TriphosphateATPadenosine diphosphateImatinibLeft ventricularintraperitonealfetal bovine serumCardiotoxicityendoplasmic reticulummaximal concentrationPhosphate buffered salineFibroblastsCardiomyocyteslactate dehydrogenaseLDHChronic myeloid leukemiaarea under the concentration–time curveoral gavage
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Authors
Armin Wolf, Philippe Couttet, Min Dong, Olivier Grenet, Marcia Heron, Ursula Junker, Ulrich Laengle, David Ledieu, Estelle Marrer, Anja Nussher, Elke Persohn, Francois Pognan, Gilles-Jacques Rivière, Daniel Robert Roth, Christian Trendelenburg,