Abstract

The ability of physical and pharmacological modulators to increase the cytotoxicity of melphalan was investigated in Chinese hamster ovary cells using a clonogenic cell survival assay. Hyperthermia has potential for use in cancer treatment, particularly as an adjuvant to chemotherapy or radiotherapy. Ethacrynic acid is a glutathione S-transferase inhibitor and also undergoes conjugation with glutathione. Interactions between hyperthermia (41-43 degrees C), ethacrynic acid and melphalan were evaluated in multidrug-resistant (CH(R)C5) cells with overexpression of P-glycoprotein (33.69-fold), and in drug-sensitive (AuxB1) cells. GST alpha was expressed at a higher level (3.65-fold) in CH(R)C5 cells than in sensitive cells, whereas levels of isoforms pi and mu were the same. GST pi was the most highly expressed isoform in the two cell populations. Ethacrynic acid was cytotoxic at elevated temperatures, while it caused little or no cytotoxicity at 37 degrees C. This effect occurred in drug-resistant and drug-sensitive cells, and attributes thermosensitizing properties to ethacrynic acid. Ethacrynic acid (20 microM) alone did not alter the cytotoxicity of melphalan at 37 degrees C. Hyperthermia potentiated drug cytotoxicity in cells, both with and without ethacrynic acid treatment. Ethacrynic acid could be useful in cancer treatment by acting as a thermosensitizer when combined with heat and by enhancing the cytotoxicity of melphalan at elevated temperatures. A major advantage arising from the use of regional hyperthermia is the ability to target drug cytotoxicity to the tumor volume. A useful finding is that ethacrynic acid, heat and/or melphalan are also effective against multidrug-resistant cells with overexpression of P-glycoprotein.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call