Literature DB >> 9373735

Modulation of cisPlatin cytotoxicity by interleukin-1 alpha and resident tumor macrophages.

P G Braunschweiger1, V S Basrur, D Cameron, L Sharpe, O Santos, J P Perras, B U Sevin, A M Markoe.   

Abstract

The modulation of cisPlatin cytotoxicity by interleukin-1 (IL-1 alpha) was studied in cultures of SCC-7 tumor cells with and without tumor macrophages to examine potential mechanisms for the synergistic antitumor activity of cisPlatin and IL-1 alpha in SCC-7 solid tumors. Neither IL-1 alpha nor tumor macrophages affected the survival of clonogenic tumor cells and IL-1 alpha had no direct effect on tumor cell growth in vitro. Macrophages had no direct effect on cisPlatin sensitivity (IC90 = 6.0 microM), but, the addition of IL-1 alpha (500-2000U/ml) to co-cultures of cisPlatin pretreated tumor cells and resident tumor macrophages increased cell killing (IC90 = 3.1 microM). Similar responses were seen in primary cultures treated with cisPlatin before IL-1 alpha. The modulation of cisPlatin cytotoxicity by IL-1 alpha exhibited a biphasic dose response that paralleled the IL-1 alpha dose dependent release of H2O2 by resident tumor macrophages. Further, IL-1 alpha modification of cisPlatin cytotoxicity was prompt and inhibited by catalase. CisPlatin and exogenous H2O2 (50 microM) produced more than additive SCC-7 clonogenic cell kill and hydroxyl radicals played an important role in the response. Interleukin-1 modulation of cisPlatin cytotoxicity was schedule dependent. IL-1 alpha treatment for 24 hrs, before cisPlatin, produced drug resistance (IC90 = 11.1 microM). Our study shows that IL-1 alpha can stimulate tumor macrophages to release pro-oxidants that modify cellular chemosensitivity in a schedule and dose dependent fashion. Our findings may also provide a mechanistic explantation for the synergistic antitumor activity of cisPlatin and IL-1 alpha in vivo.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9373735     DOI: 10.1007/bf02678540

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biotherapy        ISSN: 0921-299X


  1 in total

1.  Interleukin-1 alpha increases anti-tumor efficacy of cetuximab in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma.

Authors:  Madelyn Espinosa-Cotton; Samuel N Rodman Iii; Kathleen A Ross; Isaac J Jensen; Kenley Sangodeyi-Miller; Ayana J McLaren; Rachel A Dahl; Katherine N Gibson-Corley; Adam T Koch; Yang-Xin Fu; Vladimir P Badovinac; Douglas Laux; Balaji Narasimhan; Andrean L Simons
Journal:  J Immunother Cancer       Date:  2019-03-19       Impact factor: 13.751

  1 in total

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