Toxicol Appl Pharmacol
September 2018
The high-energy compound 3,4,5-trinitropyrazole (TNP) was developed as an alternative to other less energetic and more sensitive explosive materials, in particular 1-methyl-2,4,6-trinitrobenzene (TNT). However, the level of toxicity of TNP remains understudied. Here using an in vivo CD1 mouse model, we mimicked an acute exposure (24 h) to TNP, given either orally or intravenously, and determined the maximum administrable doses (190 mg/kg and 11 mg/kg, respectively), as well as the lethal dose for 50% (LD) of female or male mice (390 mg/kg for both) treated intravenously with TNP alone.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHydrazine-based liquid propellants are routinely used for space rocket propulsion, in particular monomethylhydrazine (MMH), although such compounds are highly hazardous. For several years, great efforts were devoted to developing a less hazardous molecule. To explore the toxicological effects of an alternative compound, namely (E)-1,1,4,4-tetramethyl-2-tetrazene (TMTZ), we exposed various cellular animal and human models to this compound and to the reference compound MMH.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: The chromone derivative MBL-II-141, specifically designed to inhibit ABCG2, was previously demonstrated to combine strong inhibition potency, low toxicity and good efficiency in reversing resistance to irinotecan in a xenografted mouse model. Here, the pharmacokinetic interactions in mice between irinotecan, its active metabolite SN-38 and MBL-II-141 were characterized quantitatively in the blood and in the brain.
Methods: Compartmental models were used to fit the data.
The TWIST1 bHLH transcription factor controls embryonic development and cancer processes. Although molecular and genetic analyses have provided a wealth of data on the role of bHLH transcription factors, very little is known on the molecular mechanisms underlying their binding affinity to the E-box sequence of the promoter. Here, we used an in silico model of the TWIST1/E12 (TE) heterocomplex and performed molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of its binding to specific (TE-box) and modified E-box sequences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKetonic indeno[1,2-b]indole-9,10-dione derivatives, initially designed as human casein kinase II (CK2) inhibitors, were recently shown to be converted into efficient inhibitors of drug efflux by the breast cancer resistance protein ABCG2 upon suited substitutions including a N (5)-phenethyl on C-ring and hydrophobic groups on D-ring. A series of ten phenolic and seven p-quinonic derivatives were synthesized and screened for inhibition of both CK2 and ABCG2 activities. The best phenolic inhibitors were about threefold more potent against ABCG2 than the corresponding ketonic derivatives, and showed low cytotoxicity.
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