Mechanism of action and preclinical antitumor activity of the novel hypoxia-activated DNA cross-linking agent PR-104

被引:200
作者
Patterson, Adam V. [1 ]
Ferry, Dianne M. [1 ]
Edmunds, Shelley J. [1 ]
Gu, Yongchuan [1 ]
Singleton, Rachelle S. [1 ]
Patel, Kashyap [1 ]
Pullen, Susan M. [1 ]
Hicks, Kevin O. [1 ]
Syddall, Sophie P. [1 ]
Atwell, Graham J. [1 ]
Yang, Shangjin [1 ]
Denny, William A. [1 ]
Wilson, William R. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Auckland, Auckland Canc Soc Res Ctr, Sch Med Sci, Auckland 1, New Zealand
关键词
D O I
10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-07-0478
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Purpose: Hypoxia is a characteristic of solid tumors and a potentially important therapeutic target. Here, we characterize the mechanism of action and preclinical antitumor activity of a novel hypoxia-activated prodrug, the 3,5-dinitrobenzamide nitrogen mustard PR-104, which has recently entered clinical trials. Experimental Design: Cytotoxicity in vitro was evaluated using 10 human tumor cell lines. SiHa cells were used to characterize metabolism under hypoxia, by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry, and DNA damage by comet assay and gamma H2AX formation. Antitumor activity was evaluated in multiple xenograft models (PR-104 +/- radiation or chemotherapy) by clonogenic assay 18 h after treatment or by tumor growth delay. Results: The phosphate ester "pre-prodrug" PR-104 was well tolerated in mice and converted rapidly to the corresponding prodrug PR-104A. The cytotoxicity of PR-104A was increased 10- to 100-fold by hypoxia in vitro. Reduction to the major intracellular metabolite, hydroxylamine PR-104H, resulted in DNA cross-linking selectively under hypoxia. Reaction of PR-104H with chloride ion gave lipophilic cytotoxic metabolites potentially able to provide bystander effects. In tumor excision assays, PR-104 provided greater killing of hypoxic (radioresistant) and aerobic cells in xenografts (HT29, SiHa, and H460) than tirapazamine or conventional mustards at equivalent host toxicity. PR-104 showed single-agent activity in six of eight xenograft models and greater than additive antitumor activity in combination with drugs likely to spare hypoxic cells (gemcitabine with Panc-01 pancreatic tumors and docetaxel with 22RV1 prostate tumors). Conclusions: PR-104 is a novel hypoxia-activated DNA cross-linking agent with marked activity against human tumor xenografts, both as monotherapy and combined with radiotherapy and chemotherapy.
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页码:3922 / 3932
页数:11
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