OBJECTIVES: Identification of the genes responsible for chemotherapy toxicity in Drosophila melanogaster may allow for the identification of human orthologs that similarly mediate toxicity in humans. To develop D. melanogaster as a model of dissecting chemotoxicity, we first need to develop standardized high-throughput toxicity assays and prove that the interindividual variation in toxicity as measured by such assays is highly heritable. METHODS: We developed a method for the oral delivery of commonly used chemotherapy drugs to Drosophila. Post-treatment female fecundity displayed a dose-dependent response to varying levels of the chemotherapy drug delivered. We fixed the dose for each drug at a level that resulted in a 50% reduction in fecundity and used a paternal half-sibling heritability design to calculate the heritability attributable to chemotherapy toxicity assayed by a decrease in female fecundity. The chemotherapy agents tested were carboplatin, floxuridine, gemcitabine hydrochloride, methotrexate, mitomycin C, and topotecan hydrochloride. RESULTS: We found that six currently widely prescribed chemotherapeutic agents lowered fecundity in D. melanogaster in both a dose-dependent and a highly heritable manner. The following heritability estimates were found: carboplatin, 0.72; floxuridine, 0.52; gemcitabine hydrochloride, 0.72; methotrexate, 0.99; mitomycin C, 0.64; and topotecan hydrochloride, 0.63. CONCLUSION: The high heritability estimates observed in this study, irrespective of the particular class of drug examined, suggest that human toxicity may also have a sizable genetic component.
OBJECTIVES: Identification of the genes responsible for chemotherapy toxicity in Drosophila melanogaster may allow for the identification of human orthologs that similarly mediate toxicity in humans. To develop D. melanogaster as a model of dissecting chemotoxicity, we first need to develop standardized high-throughput toxicity assays and prove that the interindividual variation in toxicity as measured by such assays is highly heritable. METHODS: We developed a method for the oral delivery of commonly used chemotherapy drugs to Drosophila. Post-treatment female fecundity displayed a dose-dependent response to varying levels of the chemotherapy drug delivered. We fixed the dose for each drug at a level that resulted in a 50% reduction in fecundity and used a paternal half-sibling heritability design to calculate the heritability attributable to chemotherapy toxicity assayed by a decrease in female fecundity. The chemotherapy agents tested were carboplatin, floxuridine, gemcitabine hydrochloride, methotrexate, mitomycin C, and topotecan hydrochloride. RESULTS: We found that six currently widely prescribed chemotherapeutic agents lowered fecundity in D. melanogaster in both a dose-dependent and a highly heritable manner. The following heritability estimates were found: carboplatin, 0.72; floxuridine, 0.52; gemcitabine hydrochloride, 0.72; methotrexate, 0.99; mitomycin C, 0.64; and topotecan hydrochloride, 0.63. CONCLUSION: The high heritability estimates observed in this study, irrespective of the particular class of drug examined, suggest that humantoxicity may also have a sizable genetic component.
Authors: Saurajyoti Basu; John E Brown; G Michael Flannigan; Jason H Gill; Paul M Loadman; Sandie W Martin; Brian Naylor; Rajiv Puri; Andrew J Scally; Jill M Seargent; Tariq Shah; Roger M Phillips Journal: Int J Oncol Date: 2004-10 Impact factor: 5.650
Authors: R D Traver; T Horikoshi; K D Danenberg; T H Stadlbauer; P V Danenberg; D Ross; N W Gibson Journal: Cancer Res Date: 1992-02-15 Impact factor: 12.701
Authors: Vicente Alberola; Carme Sarries; Rafael Rosell; Miquel Taron; Ramon de las Peñas; Carlos Camps; Bartomeu Massuti; Amelia Insa; Ramon Garcia-Gomez; Dolores Isla; Angel Artal; Miguel Angel Muñoz; Manuel Cobo; Isabel Bover; Jose Luis Gonzalez-Larria; Josefa Terrasa; Daniel Almenar; Ramon Barcelo; Pilar Diz; Maria Sanchez-Ronco; Jose Javier Sanchez Journal: Clin Lung Cancer Date: 2004-05 Impact factor: 4.785
Authors: Amy R Jones; Tiffany R Bell-Horwath; Guorui Li; Stephanie M Rollmann; Edward J Merino Journal: Chem Res Toxicol Date: 2012-10-22 Impact factor: 3.739
Authors: Galina Kislukhin; Elizabeth G King; Kelli N Walters; Stuart J Macdonald; Anthony D Long Journal: G3 (Bethesda) Date: 2013-08-07 Impact factor: 3.154
Authors: Galen E B Wright; Ursula Amstutz; Britt I Drögemöller; Joanne Shih; Shahrad R Rassekh; Michael R Hayden; Bruce C Carleton; Colin J D Ross Journal: Clin Pharmacol Ther Date: 2018-08-17 Impact factor: 6.875