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Träfflista för sökning "WFRF:(Larsson Rolf) ;mspu:(article);pers:(Nygren Peter)"

Search: WFRF:(Larsson Rolf) > Journal article > Nygren Peter

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1.
  • Carlier, Charlotte, et al. (author)
  • Preclinical activity of melflufen (J1) in ovarian cancer
  • 2016
  • In: Oncotarget. - : Impact Journals, LLC. - 1949-2553. ; 7:37, s. 59322-59335
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Ovarian cancer carries a significant mortality. Since symptoms tend to be minimal, the disease is often diagnosed when peritoneal metastases are already present. The standard of care in advanced ovarian cancer consists of platinum-based chemotherapy combined with cytoreductive surgery. Unfortunately, even after optimal cytoreduction and adjuvant chemotherapy, most patients with stage III disease will develop a recurrence. Intraperitoneal administration of chemotherapy is an alternative treatment for patients with localized disease. The pharmacological and physiochemical properties of melflufen, a peptidase potentiated alkylator, raised the hypothesis that this drug could be useful in ovarian cancer and particularily against peritoneal carcinomatosis. In this study the preclinical effects of melflufen were investigated in different ovarian cancer models. Melflufen was active against ovarian cancer cell lines, primary cultures of patient-derived ovarian cancer cells, and inhibited the growth of subcutaneous A2780 ovarian cancer xenografts alone and when combined with gemcitabine or liposomal doxorubicin when administered intravenously. In addition, an intra-and subperitoneal xenograft model showed activity of intraperitoneal administered melflufen for peritoneal carcinomatosis, with minimal side effects and modest systemic exposure. In conclusion, results from this study support further investigations of melflufen for the treatment of peritoneal carcinomatosis from ovarian cancer, both for intravenous and intraperitoneal administration.
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  • Gullbo, Joachim, et al. (author)
  • Antitumor activity of the novel melphalan containing tripeptide J3 (L-prolyl-melphalanyl-p-L-fluorophenylalanine ethyl ester) : Comparison with its m-L-sarcolysin analogue P2
  • 2003
  • In: Molecular Cancer Therapeutics. - 1535-7163 .- 1538-8514. ; 2:12, s. 1331-1339
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Peptichemio (PTC), a mixture of six oligopeptides all containing m-L-sarcolysin, has previously shown impressive results in clinical trials. The tripeptide P2 (L-prolyl-m-L-sarcolysyl-p-L-fluorophenylalanine ethyl ester) has been suggested as the main contributor to PTC activity. In contrast to its analogue melphalan, m-L-sarcolysin never reached clinical use. To allow a direct comparison, the corresponding melphalan containing tripeptide J3 (L-prolyl-L-melphalanyl-p-L-fluorophenylalanine ethyl ester) was synthesized and its activity was compared with that of P2; the activities of melphalan and m-L-sarcolysin were studied in parallel. Cytotoxic activity in human tumor cell lines and some fresh human tumor specimens were analyzed as well as effects on cellular metabolism, macromolecular synthesis, and preliminary evaluation of the cell death characteristics. The results show that melphalan and m-L-sarcolysin display similar activity in these systems and that the tripeptides were more active than their parent monomers. Surprisingly however, the melphalan containing tripeptide J3 demonstrated a significantly more rapid and stronger activity than the m-L-sarcolysin analogue P2. Finally, the in vivo toxicity and activity of melphalan and J3 were investigated in mice bearing human leukemia cells in s.c. fibers. The in vitro results seem translatable into the in vivo situation, demonstrating better antileukemic effect of J3 but similar side effects as melphalan.
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4.
  • Gullbo, Joachim, et al. (author)
  • Antitumor efficacy and acute toxicity of the novel dipeptide melphalanyl-p-L-fluorophenylalanine ethyl ester (J1) in vivo.
  • 2004
  • In: Investigational new drugs. - 0167-6997. ; 22:4, s. 411-20
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The novel alkylating dipeptide melphalanyl-p-L-fluorophenylalanine ethyl ester (J1) was evaluated for acute toxicity and antitumor activity in mice, with melphalan as a reference. To determine a safe and tolerable dose for efficacy studies the acute toxicity following intravenous injection in the tail vein was monitored using a 14-day schedule with up to four doses. The highest tested dose, 25 micromoles/kg, was considered close to this level, with minor effects on body weight gain but significant effects on hematological parameters. Melphalan and J1 appeared equitoxic with no statistically significant differences. Subsequently a mouse hollow fiber model was employed with subcutaneous implantation of fibers containing human tumor cells. Three different human tumor cell lines as well as two samples of primary human tumor cells (ovarian carcinoma and chronic lymphatic leukemia) were used as tumor models. At the dose level tested there was a marked and statistically significant decrease in both T-cell leukemia CCRF-CEM and small cell lung cancer NCI-H69 tumor cell growth and viability in response to J1 as compared with both placebo and melphalan treated groups. In primary ovarian carcinoma cells only J1 treatment resulted in significant tumor regression (net cell kill). In summary the results indicate that, despite an expected short half time in the blood circulation, the promising in vitro data from the previous studies of J1 seems translatable into the in vivo situation. At equal doses of alkylating units J1, compared to melphalan, was more active in the mouse hollow-fiber model, but showed similar general toxicity.
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  • Gullbo, Joachim, et al. (author)
  • Structure activity relationship for alkylating dipeptide nitrogen mustard derivatives
  • 2003
  • In: Oncology Research. - : Computers, Materials and Continua (Tech Science Press). - 0965-0407 .- 1555-3906. ; 14:3, s. 113-132
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The strategy of using small peptides for effective targeting of tumor cells in chemotherapy has proven beneficial. Recently we showed that J1 (L-melphalanyl-p-L-fluorophenylalanine ethyl ester), an alkylating nitrogen mustard-containing dipeptide, exhibited strong cytotoxic activity in fresh human tumor samples in addition to rapid and pronounced inhibition of macromolecular syntheses and cellular respiration in the human tumor lymphoma cell line U-937 GTB. In this study, an additional series of 17 nitrogen mustard-containing dipeptides has been synthesized and analyzed for cytotoxic activity in a panel of 10 human tumor cell lines. The results were compared to the single amino acid mustard derivative melphalan and its ethyl and isopropyl esters. Also P2 (L-prolyl-m-L-sarcolysyl-p-L-fluorophenylalanine ethyl ester), a tripeptide that previously has shown impressive effects in human tumor cells, was used as reference. The tested compounds displayed various activities in the different cell lines but also showed a high correlation, indicating a similar mechanism of action. Factors like amino acid composition, amino acid sequence, modifications of the C- and N-termini, and to a minor extent the lipophilicity of the dipeptide derivatives appear to influence the in vitro activity. The results indicate that the activity of these compounds not only relies on their chemical reactivity, but also on active biological interactions such as transport across membranes and/or enzymatic liberation of reactive molecular entities.
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  • Aftab, Obaid, 1984-, et al. (author)
  • Label free quantification of time evolving morphologies using time-lapse video microscopy enables identity control of cell lines and discovery of chemically induced differential activity in iso-genic cell line pairs
  • 2015
  • In: Chemometrics and Intelligent Laboratory Systems. - 0169-7439 .- 1873-3239. ; 141, s. 24-32
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Label free time-lapse video microscopy based monitoring of time evolving cell population morphology has potential to offer a simple and cost effective method for identity control of cell lines. Such morphology monitoring also has potential to offer discovery of chemically induced differential changes between pairs of cell lines of interest, for example where one in a pair of cell lines is normal/sensitive and the other malignant/resistant. A new simple algorithm, pixel histogram hierarchy comparison (PHHC), for comparison of time evolving morphologies (TEM) in phase contrast time-lapse microscopy movies was applied to a set of 10 different cell lines and three different iso-genic colon cancer cell line pairs, each pair being genetically identical except for a single mutation. PHHC quantifies differences in morphology by comparing pixel histogram intensities at six different resolutions. Unsupervised clustering and machine learning based classification methods were found to accurately identify cell lines, including their respective iso-genic variants, through time-evolving morphology. Using this experimental setting, drugs with differential activity in iso-genic cell line pairs were likewise identified. Thus, this is a cost effective and expedient alternative to conventional molecular profiling techniques and might be useful as part of the quality control in research incorporating cell line models, e.g. in any cell/tumor biology or toxicology project involving drug/agent differential activity in pairs of cell line models.
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10.
  • Andersson, Claes, et al. (author)
  • Assessment in vitro of interactions between anti-cancer drugs and noncancer drugs commonly used by cancer patients
  • 2023
  • In: Anti-Cancer Drugs. - : Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. - 0959-4973 .- 1473-5741. ; 34:1, s. 92-102
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Cancer patients often suffer from cancer symptoms, treatment complications and concomitant diseases and are, therefore, often treated with several drugs in addition to anticancer drugs. Whether such drugs, here denoted as 'concomitant drugs', have anticancer effects or interact at the tumor cell level with the anticancer drugs is not very well known. The cytotoxic effects of nine concomitant drugs and their interactions with five anti-cancer drugs commonly used for the treatment of colorectal cancer were screened over broad ranges of drug concentrations in vitro in the human colon cancer cell line HCT116wt. Seven additional tyrosine kinase inhibitors were included to further evaluate key findings as were primary cultures of tumor cells from patients with colorectal cancer. Cytotoxic effects were evaluated using the fluorometric microculture cytotoxicity assay (FMCA) and interaction analysis was based on Bliss independent interaction analysis. Simvastatin and loperamide, included here as an opioid agonists, were found to have cytotoxic effects on their own at reasonably low concentrations whereas betamethasone, enalapril, ibuprofen, metformin, metoclopramide, metoprolol and paracetamol were inactive also at very high concentrations. Drug interactions ranged from antagonistic to synergistic over the concentrations tested with a more homogenous pattern of synergy between simvastatin and protein kinase inhibitors in HCT116wt cells. Commonly used concomitant drugs are mostly neither expected to have anticancer effects nor to interact significantly with anticancer drugs frequently used for the treatment of colorectal cancer.
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  • Result 1-10 of 118
Type of publication
Type of content
peer-reviewed (113)
other academic/artistic (5)
Author/Editor
Larsson, Rolf (118)
Fryknäs, Mårten (35)
Gullbo, Joachim (34)
Rickardson, Linda (15)
Lindhagen, Elin (13)
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Andersson, Claes (13)
Jarvius, Malin (12)
Senkowski, Wojciech (11)
Blom, Kristin (10)
Wickström, Malin (9)
Gustafsson, Mats (8)
Linder, Stig (8)
Gustafsson, Mats G. (8)
Isaksson, Anders (8)
Höglund, Martin (8)
Nilsson, Kenneth (6)
Mahteme, Haile (6)
Lewensohn, Rolf (6)
Karlsson, Henning (6)
Berglund, Malin (5)
Lenhammar, Lena (5)
Ehrsson, Hans (5)
Zhang, Xiaonan (4)
Öberg, Fredrik (4)
Selvin, Tove (4)
Eriksson, Anna (4)
Graf, Wilhelm (4)
Gustafsson, G. (4)
Luthman, Kristina (4)
Tholander, B (4)
Frost, Britt-Marie (4)
Lönnerholm, Gudmar (4)
Karlsson, MO (3)
Jonsson, B (3)
Karlsson, Mats O. (3)
Hassan, Saadia (3)
Westman, Gunnar, 196 ... (3)
Schmiegelow, K. (3)
von Heideman, Anne (3)
Rubin, Jenny (3)
Parrow, Vendela (3)
Andersson, Claes R. (3)
Lonnerholm, G (3)
Kashif, Muhammad (3)
Grundmark, Birgitta (3)
de la Torre, M (3)
Liminga, Gunnar (3)
de la Torre, Manuel (3)
Forestier, E (3)
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University
Uppsala University (116)
Karolinska Institutet (25)
Umeå University (5)
Linköping University (4)
Chalmers University of Technology (3)
University of Gothenburg (2)
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Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (2)
Lund University (1)
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Language
English (106)
Undefined language (12)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Medical and Health Sciences (46)
Natural sciences (3)

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