Antimelanoma Activity of Chloroquine, an Antimalarial Agent With High Affinity for Melanin

1993 
The antimalarial agent chloroquine is known for high affinity for melanin. This 4-aminoquinoline derivative was examined for anti-melanoma activity and uptake into melanoma cells. Chloroquine inhibited growth of cultured melanoma cells; the effect was much greater to a moderately pigmented cell line HMV-II than to a nonpigmented HMV-I. Treatment with chloroquine at a dose of 62 mg/kg i.p. for 12 days prolonged by 71% the life span of mice bearing B16 melanoma, while 24-day treatment at 31 mg/kg resulted in a 81% increase in life span. HMV-II cells showed a two-fold increase in up-take of chloroquine as compared with HMV-I cells. Chloroquine, 24 hr after administration to mice implanted s.c. with B16 melanoma, was selectively accumulated in the pigmented tissues, melanoma and eyes. Other nonpigmented tissues such as the liver, lung, and kidney showed rapid uptake (within 1 hr) and release. These results suggest that chloroquine is toxic to pigmented melanoma cells, the process being partly mediated by binding to melanin
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    17
    References
    28
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []