Reciprocal Net Site sponsor
   Site Info    |    Search
Cisplatin - Reciprocal Net Common Molecule Log in
You will need to download and install a Java plug-in in order to view this applet. Download Sun's Java plug-in from here.
TIP > Click and drag your mouse inside the applet above to rotate the molecule in 3-D. Applet instructions...

Switch to another visualization applet:

> miniJaMM open in new window...
- JaMM1
- JaMM2

Cisplatin

Cisplatin is an anticancer drug that is used to treat ovarian, testicular, and bladder cancers.

Chemical Formula: H6Cl2N2Pt
Other names: diamino-dichloro-platinum
Layman's explanation: Cisplatin was first synthesized in 1844 by M. Peyrone, and its structure was elucidated in 1893 by Alfred Werner, who later earned a Nobel Prize for his work. It was serendipitously rediscovered in 1965 by Dr. Barnett Rosenberg at Michigan State University, who was studying mitosis in E. coli bacteria. Noticing that cisplatin inhibited cell division, Rosenburg reasoned that it could potentially be a very effective anticancer drug. After several years of testing, cisplatin was approved for use as an anticancer drug (chemotherapy) in 1978. Cisplatin is an alkylating agent that is thought to kill cancer cells by binding to its DNA. In doing so, it interferes with the repair mechanisms of the cell, which ultimately results in cell death.

Reciprocal Net site software 0.9.1-50, copyright (c) 2002-2009, The Trustees of Indiana University
Files and data presented via this software are property of their respective owners.
Reciprocal Net is funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation as part of the National Science Digital Library project. NSDL