Effects of alkylating metabolites of ifosfamide and its bromo analogues on DNA of HeLa cells
Autor: | Ryszard Kinas, Ewa Ciesielska, Kazimierz Studzian, Leszek Szmigiero |
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Rok vydání: | 1992 |
Předmět: |
Stereochemistry
Cell Survival Metabolite Biochemistry HeLa chemistry.chemical_compound DNA Interstrand Crosslinking medicine Humans Ifosfamide Cytotoxicity Pharmacology biology Dose-Response Relationship Drug Chemistry DNA Neoplasm biology.organism_classification In vitro Cross-Linking Reagents Mechanism of action Cell culture Phosphoramide Mustards medicine.symptom DNA Cell Division HeLa Cells |
Zdroj: | Biochemical pharmacology. 43(5) |
ISSN: | 0006-2952 |
Popis: | The in vitro cytotoxicity and mechanism of action of three alkylating compounds: an active metabolite of ifosfamide (1, isophosphoramide mustard, N,N'-bis(2-chloroethyl)phosphorodiamidic acid) and its bromo substituted analogues, 2 (one chlorine atom replaced by bromine atom) and 3 (two chlorine atoms replaced by bromine atoms), were studied in cultured HeLa cells. Alkaline elution analysis of cellular DNA demonstrated the presence of concentration- and time-dependent interstrand crosslinks, DNA-protein crosslinks and alkali-labile sites (ALSs) in HeLa cells following a 1 hr exposure to the compounds. The bromo analogues were more cytotoxic than 1 and exhibited higher crosslinking potency. The time-course of crosslink formation and removal for the three compounds was similar. ALSs in DNA were produced by all tested drugs but 3 exhibited exceptionally high activity and was able to induce two kinds of alkali-labile lesion (fast- and slow-appearing) whereas 1 and 2 generated only slow-appearing ones. The results suggest that 1 and 2 are more specific in their reaction with DNA in that they produced a lesser variety of lesions than 3. A potential advantage of 2 over 1 seems to be its higher DNA interstrand crosslinking activity. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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