학술논문

Protection of committed murine haemopoietic progenitors against BCNU toxicity does not predict protection of primitive, multipotent spleen colony-forming cells - implications for chemoprotective gene therapy.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Leukemia (08876924). Nov99, Vol. 13 Issue 11, p1776-1783. 8p.
Subject
*IN vivo toxicity testing
*TUMORS
*BONE marrow
*GRANULOCYTES
*RESEARCH
*GENETICS
*CELL culture
*GENETIC mutation
*IMMUNOHISTOCHEMISTRY
*COLONY-forming units assay
*PURINES
*ANIMAL experimentation
*RESEARCH methodology
*MACROPHAGES
*ANTINEOPLASTIC agents
*EVALUATION research
*MEDICAL cooperation
*COMPARATIVE studies
*GENE therapy
*CARMUSTINE
*MUTAGENS
*NUCLEOTIDYLTRANSFERASES
*HEMATOPOIETIC stem cells
*SPLEEN
*ERYTHROCYTES
*MICE
*DRUG resistance in cancer cells
*CHEMICAL inhibitors
Language
ISSN
0887-6924
Abstract
The effect of expression of an O6-benzylguanine (O6-beG)-resistant mutant (hATPA/GA) of human O6-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase (ATase) on the in vivo toxicity and clastogenicity of the anti-tumour agent N,N'-bis(2-chloroethyl)-N-nitrosourea (BCNU) to murine bone marrow has been investigated. When compared with control animals, the bipotent granulocyte-macrophage colony-forming (GM-CFC) progenitor population of the hATPA/GA transduced mice were somewhat more resistant to BCNU (1.4-fold, P = 0.047) and this effect was more significant in the presence of the ATase inactivator O6-beG (3. 5-fold, P = 0.001). The polychromatic erythrocytes were also significantly protected against BCNU-induced clastogenicity both in the presence (P < 0.001) and absence of O6-beG (P < 0.05). The primitive, multipotent spleen colony-forming cells (CFU-S) in these animals also showed moderate (1.6-fold, P = 0.034) protection in the absence of O6-beG but in the presence of the inactivator they remained as sensitive to BCNU toxicity as those in the control animals (P = 0.133). This result contrasts with previous findings demonstrating significant hATPA/GA-mediated, O6-beG-resistant protection against the toxicity and clastogenicity of a number of O6-alkylating agents, including temozolomide, fotemustine and chlorozotocin. The possibility that our strategy for protective gene therapy may be highly agent and cell-type specific is unexpected and has possible implications for clinical trials of this approach using BCNU or related agents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]