AI Article Synopsis

  • O6-Benzylguanine (BG) inhibits the DNA repair protein AGT, enhancing tumor sensitivity to BCNU and is currently in phase I clinical trials as a combined treatment.
  • The study evaluated the infusion of deltaMGMT-transduced marrow cells to increase resistance to BG and BCNU, showing that these cells improved therapeutic tolerance and overall survival in treated mice.
  • After multiple treatments, mice with deltaMGMT showed significantly better blood health, bone marrow content, and delayed tumor growth compared to those receiving just lacZ-transduced cells.

Article Abstract

O6-Benzylguanine (BG) is a potent inhibitor of the DNA repair protein 06-alkylguanine DNA alkyltransferase (AGT), and sensitizes tumors to BCNU in vitro and in xenografts. The combination of BG and BCNU is now undergoing phase I clinical testing. The maximally tolerated dose of BCNU given after BG is expected to be lower then the doses tolerated as a single agent owing to BG sensitization of hematopoietic progenitors. We have previously shown that retroviral expression of G156A mutant MGMT (deltaMGMT) in mouse and human marrow cells results in significant BG and BCNU resistance. In this study we evaluated the effect of deltaMGMT-transduced marrow infusion on the therapeutic index of multiple BG and BCNU treatments in tumor-bearing nude (nu/nu athymic) mice. Prior to subcutaneous implantation of BCNU-resistant SW480 human colon cancer cells, cohorts of mice were given intraperitoneal injections of nonablative doses of BG (30 mg/kg) and BCNU (10 mg/kg, one-half of the LD10) and then infused with 1-2 x 10(6) isogeneic deltaMGMT (n = 29 mice) or lacZ-transduced (n = 20 mice) marrow cells. The xenograft-bearing mice were treated with multiple cycles of BG (30 mg/kg) and BCNU (10-25 mg/kg). After three cycles, deltaMGMT mouse bone marrow was repopulated with CFU containing the provirus, and demonstrated a 2.7-fold increase in AGT activity and a 5.5-fold increase in BCNU IC90 compared with LacZ mice. After five cycles, the BCNU IC90 of CFU cells increased nine-fold over control cells, indicating selective enrichment of CFU precursor cells expressing high levels of deltaMGMT. Starting with the third cycle of therapy, tolerance to BG and BCNU was significantly improved in deltaMGMT mice compared with LacZ mice, as evidenced by preserved peripheral blood counts, bone marrow cellularity, and CFU content 1 and 2 weeks posttreatment and a significantly higher survival rate. Xenograft growth was significantly delayed in mice tolerating multiple cycles and higher dose intensity of BG and BCNU as compared with mice receiving less intensive therapy. We conclude that deltaMGMT-transduced marrow cells can improve the therapeutic index of BG and BCNU by selectively repopulating the marrow and providing significant marrow tolerance to this combination, allowing intensive therapy of a BCNU-resistant tumor.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/10430349950018418DOI Listing

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