| Literature DB >> 18797509 |
Waldemar Waldeck1, Manfred Wiessler, Volker Ehemann, Ruediger Pipkorn, Herbert Spring, Juergen Debus, Bernd Didinger, Gabriele Mueller, Joerg Langowski, Klaus Braun.
Abstract
There is a large number of effective cytotoxic drugs whose side effect profile, efficacy, and long-term use in man are well understood and documented over decades of use in clinical routine e.g. in the treatment of recurrent glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) and the hormone-refractory prostate cancer (HRPC). Both cancers are insensitive against most chemotherapeutic interventions; they have low response rates and poor prognoses. Some cytotoxic agents can be significantly improved by using modern technology of drug delivery or formulation. We succeeded to enhance the pharmacologic potency with simultaneous reduction of unwanted adverse reactions of the highly efficient chemotherapeutic temozolomide (TMZ) as an example. The TMZ connection to transporter molecules (TMZ-BioShuttle) resulted in a much higher pharmacological effect in glioma cell lines while using reduced doses. This permits the conclusion that a suitable chemistry could realize the ligation of pharmacologically active, but sensitive and highly unstable pharmaceutical ingredients without functional deprivation. The re-formulation of TMZ to TMZ-BioShuttle achieved a nearly 10-fold potential of the established pharmaceutic TMZ far beyond the treatment of brain tumors cells and results in an attractive reformulated drug with enhanced therapeutic index.Entities:
Keywords: BioShuttle; Carrier Molecules; Drug Delivery; Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM); Reformulation; Temozolomide (TMZ); facilitated Transport
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18797509 PMCID: PMC2536715 DOI: 10.7150/ijms.5.273
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Med Sci ISSN: 1449-1907 Impact factor: 3.738
Figure 1Microscopical monitoring of the human prostate cancer DU 145 cells 2 days after treatment with TMZ. In the comet column the scale bar represents 20 µm. The microscopic pictures were taken in phase-contrast, enlargement 200×.
Figure 2Microscopical monitoring of the human prostate cancer DU 145 cells 2 days after treatment with TMZ-BioShuttle. In the comet column, the scale bars in the maps represent 20 µm. The microscopic pictures were taken in phase-contrast, enlargement 200×.
Figure 3Microscopic and comet assay studies of untreated TP 366 cells and treated with various concentrations of TMZ; the scale bar represents 20µm.
Figure 4Microscopic and comet assay of untreated TP 366 glioblastoma cells, and 6 days after treatment with TMZ-BioShuttle; the scale bar represents 20µm. Microscopic magnification is 200-fold in the phase contrast microscope.
Figure 5The cell cycle distribution in TP 366 glioblastoma cells dependent on the applied concentration of TMZ (right column) and TMZ-BioShuttle (left column) 6 days after treatment. The axes of coordinates represent the cell number; the abscissae represent the corresponding DNA content. The left peak depicts the amount of cells in the G1 phase; the area of the right peak describes the ratio of cells in the G2/M phase. The area between both peaks displays the amount of the cell fraction residing in the S phase. The insert describes the percentage of cells in the phases of the cell cycle.
Figure 6The cell cycle ratio of DU 145 prostate cancer cells dependent on the applied concentration of TMZ (right column) and TMZ-BioShuttle (left column) 2 days after treatment. The axes of coordinates represent the cell number; the abscissae represent the corresponding DNA content. The left peak depicts the amount of cells in the G1 phase; the area of the right peak describes the ratio of cells in the G2/M phase. The area between both peaks displays the amount of the cell fraction residing in the S phase.