Abstract

In this paper, we report that 1-(2-deoxy-2-fluoro-4-thio-β-d-arabinofuranosyl) cytosine (FF-10502), a pyrimidine nucleoside antimetabolite with a chemical structure similar to gemcitabine, shows beneficial anticancer activity via a novel mechanism of action on dormant cells. The growth inhibition of pancreatic cancer cell lines by FF-10502 (IC50, 60-330 nM) was moderately weaker than that by gemcitabine in vitro. In contrast, an in vivo orthotopic implantation model in mice with established human pancreatic cancer cell line, SUIT-2, revealed no mortality with FF-10502 intravenous treatment, which was related to regression of implanted tumor and little metastasis, whereas 75% of the mice treated with gemcitabine died by day 128. Two in vivo patient-derived xenograft models with gemcitabine-resistant pancreatic cancer cells also demonstrated complete tumor growth suppression with FF-10502, but only partial inhibition with gemcitabine. We also investigated the mechanism of action of FF-10502 by using dormant cancer cells, which are reportedly involved in the development of resistance to chemotherapy. In vitro serum starvation-induced dormant SUIT-2 cells developed resistance to gemcitabine even in combination with DNA damage inducers (DDIs; H2O2, cisplatin, and temozolomide). Interestingly, FF-10502 in combination with DDIs significantly induced concentration-dependent cell death in accordance with enhanced DNA damage. FF-10502 was far more potent than gemcitabine in inhibiting DNA polymerase β, which may explain the difference in dormant cell injury, although further investigations for direct evidences are necessary. In conclusion, our study demonstrated the beneficial antitumor effects of FF-10502 in clinically relevant in vivo models, and suggests the importance of preventing DNA repair unlike gemcitabine.

Highlights

  • Gemcitabine, an antitumor chemotherapy drug classified as a pyrimidine nucleoside antimetabolite, was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration in 1996 primarily as a result of an enhanced clinical benefit response

  • The antitumor effect of FF-10502 was evaluated in a mouse xenograft model with the subcutaneously implanted human pancreatic cancer cell line Capan-1

  • We further evaluated FF-10502 in our study using more clinically relevant models in vivo, i.e., orthotopic implantation of human pancreatic cancer SUIT-2 cells and subcutaneous implantation of gemcitabine-resistant patient-derived cells

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Summary

Introduction

Gemcitabine, an antitumor chemotherapy drug classified as a pyrimidine nucleoside antimetabolite, was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration in 1996 primarily as a result of an enhanced clinical benefit response. Citation of meeting abstracts where the work was previously presented: Shinji M, Hiroki N, Shinichi W, Tamami H, Takeaki S, Hiroyuki I, Chihaya K, Takaaki N, and Yasuhiro S (2017) Abstract #5127: In vitro and in vivo evaluation of FF-10502-01, a new pyrimidine nucleoside analogue. American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), Washington, DC. Takeaki S, Linda JP, Jill R, Jonathan N, Yoshihide I, Shinji M, Takayuki Y, Chihaya K, Hiroyuki I, and Shinichi W (2017) Abstract #5112: Evaluation of FF-10502-01, a new pyrimidine nucleoside analogue, in pancreatic (PANC) patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models compared with gemcitabine and in combination with nab-paclitaxel. Falchook GS, Bramwell L, Hannan L, Vishwamitra D, Yamada T, Rosner M, Wages D, Myers T, Paradiso L, and Janku F (2017) Abstract CT100: First-inhuman phase 1 trial of pyrimidine anti-metabolite FF-10502-01 in patients with advanced cancer.

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