Publication | Closed Access
In vivo antitumor activity of choline kinase inhibitors: a novel target for anticancer drug discovery.
117
Citations
46
References
1999
Year
Chok InhibitorsChemoprevention StrategyTumor BiologyMedicinal ChemistryPhosphorylcholine ProductionAnticancer Drug DiscoveryAnti-cancer AgentRadiation OncologyCancer ResearchOncogenic AgentCholine Kinase InhibitorsTumor TargetingPharmacologyCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentDrug TargetingVivo Antitumor ActivityMedicineCholine KinaseDrug Discovery
Transformation by some oncogenes is associated with increased activity of choline kinase (ChoK), resulting in elevated constitutive levels of phosphorylcholine, a proposed second messenger required for DNA synthesis induced by growth factors. Here we describe the characterization of ChoK inhibitors with antiproliferative properties against human tumor-derived cell lines. The new molecules were tolerated in mice at doses that showed in vivo antitumor activity against human tumor xenografts derived from HT-29 and A431 cell lines implanted s.c. in nude mice. This first generation of inhibitors provides in vivo evidence that blockade of phosphorylcholine production is a valid strategy for the development of new anticancer agents, opening a new avenue for the development of antitumor drugs with a novel mechanism of action.
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