Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

Inhibitory effect of endothelin A receptor blockade on tumor growth and liver metastasis of a human gastric cancer cell line

Gastric Cancer(2007)

Cited 12|Views15
No score
Abstract
Background With metastatic progression, gastric cancer is incurable. Using a DNA microarray, we performed differential gene expression analysis of established highly metastatic gastric cancer cell lines and compared the findings with those from a low-metastatic parental cell line. The results demonstrated that the endothelin A receptor (ET-A) gene was the only one from the highly metastatic cell lines that was generally up-regulated. Methods To investigate the role that ET-A plays in gastric cancer metastasis, we studied the effect of an ET-A-selective antagonist, YM598, on cell proliferation, tumor growth, and liver metastasis of the highly liver metastatic cell line AZ-H5c, established from the low metastatic human gastric cancer cell line AZ-521. Results An in vivo study using nude mice demonstrated that YM598 had a significant growth inhibition effect on AZ-H5c at doses of 0.5–10.0 mg/kg. The liver metastatic rate was also significantly reduced by YM598: control, 83.3%; 1 mg/kg dosage, 16.7%; 10 mg/kg, 20%; and pretreatment at 1 mg/kg, 16.7%. There was no evidence of gross toxicity resulting from the YM598 treatment. Conclusion The ET-A blockade by YM598 had a strong inhibitory effect against tumor growth and liver metastasis of the gastric cancer cell lines. These data suggest that YM598 has potential as a novel therapeutic agent for inhibiting liver metastasis of gastric cancer.
More
Translated text
Key words
endothelin A receptor,gastric cancer,liver metastasis,metastasis-related gene,microarray analysis
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined