Abstract

Squamous carcinoma cells are much more sensitive (greater than 10(4) times) to the cytotoxic effects of methotrexate (MTX) and 5-fluorodeoxyuridine (FUDR) than are normal human keratinocytes as measured by cell growth. Among the drugs tested, this phenomenon was found to be specific for MTX and FUDR, since arabinosylcytidine (ARA-C), 13-bis-chloroethylnitrosourea (BCNU), and daunomycin failed to show differences in inhibition between the normal and malignant cell lines. Drug uptake studies did not reveal a significant difference in MTX intracellular levels between malignant and normal epidermal cell lines at 60 min. Thymidine (TdR) salvage was assessed by examining the effects of the presence of 3 microM TdR on MTX-induced cytotoxicity. On the withdrawal of TdR, normal cells demonstrated an increased level of inhibition amounting to 4 orders of magnitude, whereas the squamous-cell carcinoma cells showed no change in sensitivity. Interestingly, the immortal nontumorigenic keratinocyte line (NM-110) was similarly not rescued by the addition of TdR. The high degree of sensitivity TO MTX shown by squamous-cell carcinoma (SCC) and NM-110 cells is attributable to a significant diminution of their ability to use exogenous TdR as compared with that of normal keratinocytes and might be indicative of a biochemical change associated with cellular immortality.

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