Abstract

A cultured subline (P388/ADM) of mouse P388 leukemia resistant to doxorubicin, vinblastine, vincristine, dactinomycin, and daunorubicin became sensitive again when treated with noncytotoxic doses of either of two synthetic isoprenoids: N-solanesyl-N,N'-bis(3,4-dimethoxybenzyl)ethylenediamine (SDB-ethylenediamine) and N-(p-methylbenzyl)decaprenylamine X HCI (PMB-decaprenylamine). The isoprenoids also reversed resistance to doxorubicin and vincristine in a cultured vincristine-resistant P388 leukemia subline (P388/VCR). Median lethal doses (LD50) for PMB-decaprenylamine and SDB-ethylenediamine administered ip were 123 and 350 mg/kg against mice, whereas the LD50 for verapamil, another modifier of cellular drug resistance, was about 7.6 mg/kg. In vivo experiments with P388/VCR-bearing mice showed that both SDB-ethylenediamine and verapamil overcame vincristine resistance, but PMB-decaprenylamine showed only slight activity. SDB-ethylenediamine was especially effective, overcoming the vincristine resistance at 1 mg drug/kg. Since the structure of SDB-ethylenediamine resembles that of verapamil, a calcium-blocking agent that overcomes drug resistance, it was checked for calcium-blocking activity. However, calcium channel-blocking activity was not observed with 20 micrograms isoprenoid/ml, whereas calcium channel activity was completely blocked by 1 microgram verapamil/ml.

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