Affiliation:
1. Lady Davis Institute of the Sir Mortimer Jewish General Hospital and McGill Centre for Translational Research in Cancer, Department of Medicine, McGill University, Montreal, Canada H3T 1E2,1 and
2. Laboratoire de Chimie Organique UMR133 CNRS-Rhone Poulenc Rorer, B.P 8 94801 Villejuif Cedex, France2
Abstract
ABSTRACT
We compared the biological activity of a new group of keto-C-glycosides to that of a narrow spectrum of unsaturated ketonucleosides in a panel of non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cells with various levels of intrinsic resistance to standard chemotherapy drugs. Unlike cisplatin, etoposide, adriamycin, or taxol, for which a significant difference in the cytotoxic effect was observed between sensitive cell lines (H460, H125, and MGH4) and drug-resistant cell lines (H661, MGH7, and FADU), nucleoside analogs were equally cytotoxic in NSCLC cell lines, with compound 92 being 10-fold more active than compound 43, 44, 81, or 161, while compound 3 was the least active. Apoptotic measurements with flow cytometric analysis of terminal uridine deoxynucleotide nick end-labeled cells revealed that the cytotoxic activity of these nucleosides correlated with their potency to induce apoptosis. Compound 92 triggered death in cells with wild-type p53, mutated p53, or p53 gene deletion. Our findings suggest that keto-C-glycosides may be promising alternative anticancer agents which merit further studies in in vivo cancer models refractory to standard chemotherapy drugs.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
Cited by
15 articles.
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