| Literature DB >> 2159380 |
P B Jensen1, B S Sørensen, E J Demant, M Sehested, P S Jensen, L Vindeløv, H H Hansen.
Abstract
The effect of combinations of the anthracycline aclarubicin and the topoisomerase II targeting drugs 4'-demethylepipodophyllotoxin-9-(4,6-O-ethylidene-beta-D-glucopyra noside) (VP-16) and 4'-(9-acridinylamino)methanesulfon-m-anisidide (m-AMSA) was investigated in a clonogenic assay. The cytotoxicity of VP-16 was almost completely antagonized by preincubating cells with nontoxic concentrations of aclarubicin. The inhibition of cytotoxicity was not seen when the cells were exposed to aclarubicin after exposure to VP-16. The inhibition was significant over a wide range of aclarubicin concentrations (3 nM to 0.4 microM), above which the toxicity of aclarubicin became apparent. A similar effect was seen on the toxicity of m-AMSA. In contrast to aclarubicin, preincubation with Adriamycin did not antagonize the effect of VP-16. With purified topoisomerase II and naked DNA, aclarubicin did not stimulate the formation of cleavable complexes between topoisomerase II and DNA. Aclarubicin concentrations above 1 microM inhibited the baseline formation of cleavable complexes elicited with the enzyme alone. Low (1 to 10 nM) aclarubicin concentrations increased the formation of cleavable complexes obtained with VP-16 and m-AMSA; however, at aclarubicin concentrations above 1 microM an antagonistic effect was obtained. In cells, the m-AMSA- and VP-16-induced, protein-concealed DNA strand breaks were completely inhibitable by aclarubicin preincubation with no synergic dose levels. Our results suggest that aclarubicin inhibits topoisomerase II-mediated DNA cleavage. This inhibition could represent the mechanism of action of the drug and explain the lack of cross-resistance to the classical anthracyclines. The observed antagonism could have consequences for scheduling of aclarubicin with topoisomerase II-active anticancer drugs.Entities:
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Year: 1990 PMID: 2159380
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Res ISSN: 0008-5472 Impact factor: 12.701