Abstract

P-1894B inhibits prolyl hydroxylase in vitro and has been proposed as a topical treatment for dermal fibrosis. The drug had similar effects on two fibroblast lines from normal human skin and one line from a patient with lichen sclerosus et atrophicus. Exposure of logarithmically-growing cell monolayers for 72 h caused dose-dependent inhibition of proliferation at 0.05-0.5 microgram/ml but time-dependent cell death at 1-50 micrograms/ml. The epithelial cell line NCTC 2544 gave a similar result. Collagen lattices containing normal fibroblasts contracted more slowly in the presence of the drug at 0.1-0.5 microgram/ml, but this was clearly related to loss of viability. Collagen synthesis by monolayer cultures was unaffected at 0.05 and 0.1 microgram/ml P-1894B in one line of normal fibroblasts, but was reduced by 40% and 15%, respectively, in the other. The concentrations of P-1894B reported to be active against prolyl hydroxylase are therefore lethal to cultured skin cells. Although the effective use of dithranol as a topical anti-psoriatic agent, despite its cytotoxicity in vitro, is encouraging for P-1894B, further toxicological studies are imperative.

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