Publications by authors named "D J Fenick"

Selected ion flow tube-chemical ionization mass spectrometry was used to measure formaldehyde levels in human breast cancer cells in comparison with levels in cells treated with the antitumor drugs doxorubicin (DOX) and daunorubicin (DAU) and the daunorubicin-formaldehyde conjugate Daunoform (DAUF). The measurement was performed on cell lysates and showed only background levels of formaldehyde in untreated cells and drug-treated resistant cells (MCF-7/Adr cells) but levels above background in DOX- and DAU-treated sensitive cells (MCF-7 cells). The level of formaldehyde above background was a function of drug concentration (0.

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Our previous study showed differential subcellular localization of protein kinase C (PKC) delta by phorbol esters and related ligands, using a green fluorescent protein-tagged construct in living cells. Here we compared the abilities of a series of symmetrically substituted phorbol 12,13-diesters to translocate PKC delta. In vitro, the derivatives bound to PKC with similar potencies but differed in rate of equilibration.

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The anthracycline, antitumor drugs doxorubicin (DOX), daunorubicin (DAU), and epidoxorubicin (EPI) catalyze production of formaldehyde through induction of oxidative stress. The formaldehyde then mediates covalent bonding of the drugs to DNA. Synthetic formaldehyde conjugates of DOX, DAU, and EPI, denoted Doxoform (DOXF), Daunoform (DAUF), and Epidoxoform (EPIF), exhibit enhanced toxicity to anthracycline-sensitive and -resistant tumor cells.

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Doxorubicin has been a constituent of antitumor drug protocols for a broad spectrum of cancers for more than two decades. Side effects and resistance continue to be important limitations. Drug targets responsible for both side effects and anti-tumor activity are cell membrane receptors, cell membrane lipids, nucleic acids and topoisomerase.

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The recent discovery that the formaldehyde conjugates of doxorubicin and daunorubicin, Doxoform and Daunoform, are cytotoxic to resistant human breast cancer cells prompted the search for hydrolytically more stable anthracycline-formaldehyde conjugates. Doxoform and Daunoform consist of two molecules of the parent drug bound together with three methylene groups, two forming oxazolidine rings and one binding the oxazolidines together at their 3'-amino nitrogens. The 4'-epimer of doxorubicin, epidoxorubicin, reacts with formaldehyde at its amino alcohol functionality to produce a conjugate, Epidoxoform, in 59% yield whose structure consists of two molecules of epidoxorubicin bound together with three methylene groups in a 1, 6-diaza-4,9-dioxabicyclo[4.

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