Tumor-targeted cell killing with 8-hydroxyquinolyl-glucuronide.
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Abstrak
Many tumors show elevated levels of hydrolytic enzymes that may be associated with invasive processes. The RIF-1 murine tumor has levels of beta-glucuronidase that are more than four times higher than those in liver. Elevated tumor glucuronidase levels can be used as a basis for tumor-targeted therapy when systemically administered glucuronides of cytotoxic drugs are deconjugated preferentially at the tumor site. In this study we have used 8-hydroxyquinoline (8-OHQ) as a model compound for such a tumor-targeting concept. We showed that RIF tumors and spleen had the highest beta-glucuronidase activity in C3H mice; for example, RIF tumors released approximately seven times more phenolphthalein per gram of tissue from its glucuronide than liver, when compared under identical conditions. In vitro, low concentrations of 8-OHQ that might be achievable in vivo, ranging from 1 to 10 microM reduced cell survival by four orders of magnitude, while 1 mM 8-hydroxyquinolyl-glucuronide (1 h, 37 degrees C) resulted in only modest (S = 54%) cytotoxicity. Combination treatments of 8-OHQ (2.5 or 5 microM) with either hyperthermia or X radiation did not significantly change the slope of survival curves for RIF tumors in vitro, but suggest that targeted 8-OHQ toxicity combined with local hyperthermia and/or irradiation may be useful for significantly increasing therapeutic gains in vivo.