52 research outputs found
Prospective clinical study of R-CMD therapy for indolent B cell lymphoma and mantle cell lymphoma from the Hokuriku Hematology Oncology Study Group
Fludarabine-Mediated Circumvention of Cytarabine Resistance Is Associated with Fludarabine Triphosphate Accumulation in Cytarabine-Resistant Leukemic Cells
The combination of cytarabine (ara-C) with fludarabine is a common approach to treating resistant acute myeloid leukemia. Success depends on a fludarabine triphosphate (F-ara-ATP)-mediated increase in the active intracellular metabolite of ara-C, ara-C 5'-triphosphate (ara-CTP). Therapy-resistant leukemia may exhibit ara-C resistance, the mechanisms of which might induce cross-resistance to fludarabine with reduced F-ara-ATP formation. The present study evaluated the effect of combining ara-C and fludarabine on ara-C-resistant leukemic cells in vitro. Two variant cell lines (R1 and R2) were 8-fold and 10-fold more ara-C resistant, respectively, than the parental HL-60 cells. Reduced deoxycytidine kinase activity was demonstrated in R1 and R2 cells, and R2 cells also showed an increase in cytosolic 5'-nucleotidase II activity. Compared with HL-60 cells, R1 and R2 cells produced smaller amounts of ara-CTP. Both variants accumulated less F-ara-ATP than HL-60 cells and showed cross-resistance to fludarabine nucleoside (F-ara-A). R2 cells, however, accumulated much smaller amounts of F-ara-ATP and were more F-ara-A resistant than R1 cells. In HL-60 and R1 cells, F-ara-A pretreatment followed by ara-C incubation produced F-ara-ATP concentrations sufficient for augmenting ara-CTP production, thereby enhancing ara-C cytotoxicity. No potentiation was observed in R2 cells. Nucleotidase might preferentially degrade F-ara-A monophosphate over ara-C monophosphate, leading to reduced F-ara-ATP production and thereby compromising the F-ara-A-mediated potentiation of ara-C cytotoxicity in R2 cells. Thus, F-ara-A-mediated enhancement of ara-C cytotoxicity depended on F-ara-ATP accumulation in ara-C-resistant leukemic cells but ultimately was associated with the mechanism of ara-C resistance.othe
Close correlation of 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine 5'-triphosphate, an intracellular active metabolite, to the therapeutic efficacy of N(4)-behenoyl-1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine therapy for acute myelogenous leukemia.
N(4)-Behenoyl-1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine (BHAC), a prodrug of 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine, is used effectively for the treatment of leukemia in Japan. BHAC therapy may be more effective if it is delivered in conjunction with monitoring of 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine 5'-triphosphate (ara-CTP), the intracellular active metabolite of ara-C derived from BHAC. However, previous monitoring methods for ara-CTP were insufficiently sensitive. Here, using our new sensitive method, we evaluated the ara-CTP pharmacokinetics in relation to the therapeutic response in 11 acute myelogenous leukemia patients who received a 2-h infusion of BHAC (70 mg / m(2)) in combination remission induction therapy. ara-CTP could be monitored at levels under 1 mM. BHAC maintained effective levels of plasma ara-C and intracellular ara-CTP for a longer time, even compared with historical values of high-dose ara-C. The area under the concentration-time curve of ara-CTP was significantly greater in the patients with complete remission than in the patients without response. This greater amount of ara-CTP was attributed to the higher ara-CTP concentrations achieved in the responding patients. There was no apparent difference of plasma ara-C pharmacokinetics between the two groups. Thus, for the first time, the ara-CTP pharmacokinetics was evaluated in relation to the therapeutic effect of BHAC, and the importance of ara-CTP was proven. Administration of optimal BHAC therapy may require monitoring of the ara-CTP pharmacokinetics in each individual patient.othe
Monitoring of intracellular 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine 5'-triphosphate in 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine therapy at low and conventional doses.
1-beta-D-Arabinofuranosylcytosine (ara-C) is used empirically at a low, conventional, or high dose. Ara-C therapy may be optimal if it is directed by the clinical pharmacokinetics of the intracellular active metabolite of ara-C, 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine 5'-triphosphate (ara-CTP). However, ara-CTP has seldom been monitored during low- and conventional-dose ara-C therapies because detection methods were insufficiently sensitive. Here, with the use of our newly established method (Cancer Res., 56, 1800 -- 1804 (1996)), ara-CTP was monitored in leukemic cells from acute myelogenous leukemia patients receiving low- or conventional-dose ara-C [subcutaneous ara-C administration (10 mg / m(2) ) (3 patients), continuous ara-C infusion (20 or 70 mg / m(2) / 24 h) (7 patients), 2-h ara-C infusion (70 mg / m(2) ) (4 patients), and 2-h infusion of N(4)-behenoyl-1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine, a deaminase-resistant ara-C derivative (70 mg / m(2) ) (6 patients)]. Ara-CTP could be determined at levels under 1 microM. There was a close correlation between the elimination half-life values of the plasma ara-C and the intracellular ara-CTP. The presence of ara-C in the plasma was important to maintain ara-CTP. The continuous ara-C and the 2-h N(4)-behenoyl-1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine infusions maintained ara-CTP and the plasma ara-C longer than the subcutaneous ara-C or the 2-h ara-C infusion. They also afforded relatively higher ara-CTP concentrations, and consequently produced ara-CTP more efficiently than the 2-h ara-C infusion. Different administration methods produced different quantities of ara-CTP even at the same dose.othe
Prospective clinical study of R-CMD therapy for indolent B cell lymphoma and mantle cell lymphoma from the Hokuriku Hematology Oncology Study Group
Topoisomerase I inhibitors: selectivity and cellular resistance
International audienceTopoisomerase I (top1) inhibitors (camptothecins and other structurally diverse compounds) are effective and promising anticancer agents. Determinants of selectivity toward cancer cells and resistance are multifactorial. These factors can be separated in three groups. The first is related to alterations in drug distribution and metabolism. The second group includes both quantitative and qualitative (mutations) differences in top I. The third group includes resistance and sensitivity factors downstream from the cleavage complexes. They include DNA repair, cell cycle checkpoints and apoptosis, and are probably key to the relative selectivity of camptothecins toward cancer cells and to clinical resistance. Copyright 1999 Harcourt Publishers Ltd
Induction of topoisomerase I cleavage complexes by 1-β- <scp>d</scp> -arabinofuranosylcytosine (ara-C) <i>in vitro</i> and in ara-C-treated cells
1-β-
d
-Arabinofuranosylcytosine (Ara-C) is a nucleoside analog commonly used in the treatment of leukemias. Ara-C inhibits DNA polymerases and can be incorporated into DNA. Its mechanism of cytotoxicity is not fully understood. Using oligonucleotides and purified human topoisomerase I (top1), we found a 4- to 6-fold enhancement of top1 cleavage complexes when ara-C was incorporated at the +1 position (immediately 3′) relative to a unique top1 cleavage site. This enhancement was primarily due to a reversible inhibition of top1-mediated DNA religation. Because ara-C incorporation is known to alter base stacking and sugar puckering at the misincorporation site and at the neighboring base pairs, the observed inhibition of religation at the ara-C site suggests the importance of the alignment of the 5′-hydroxyl end for religation with the phosphate group of the top1 phosphotyrosine bond. This study also demonstrates that ara-C treatment and DNA incorporation trap top1 cleavage complexes in human leukemia cells. Finally, we report that camptothecin-resistant mouse P388/CPT45 cells with no detectable top1 are crossresistant to ara-C, which suggests that top1 poisoning is a potential mechanism for ara-C cytotoxicity.
</jats:p
- …
