Mass spectrometric measurement of formaldehyde generated in breast cancer cells upon treatment with anthracycline antitumor drugs

被引:43
作者
Kato, S
Burke, PJ
Fenick, DJ
Taatjes, DJ
Bierbaum, VM
Koch, TH
机构
[1] Univ Colorado, Dept Chem & Biochem, Boulder, CO 80309 USA
[2] Univ Colorado, Ctr Canc, Denver, CO 80262 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1021/tx000008m
中图分类号
R914 [药物化学];
学科分类号
100701 ;
摘要
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 (0.5-50 mu M), treatment time (3-24 h), cell density (0.3 x 10(6) to 7 x 10(6) cells/mL), and cell viability (0-100%). Higher levels of formaldehyde were observed in lysates of MCF-7 cells treated at higher drug levels, unless the treatment resulted in low cell viability. Elevated levels were directly related to cell density and were observed even with 0.5 mu M drug. A lower limit for excess formaldehyde in MCF-7 cells treated with 0.5 mu M DAU for 24 h is 0.3 mM. Control experiments showed that formaldehyde was not produced after cell lysis. Lysates of sensitive and resistant cells treated with 0.5 micromolar equiv of the formaldehyde conjugate (DAUF) for 3 h showed only background levels of formaldehyde. The results support a mechanism for drug cytotoxicity which involves drug induction of metabolic processes leading to formaldehyde production followed by drug utilization of formaldehyde to virtually crosslink DNA.
引用
收藏
页码:509 / 516
页数:8
相关论文
共 43 条
[11]   Solution structure of iron(III)-anthracycline complexes [J].
Fiallo, MML ;
Drechsel, H ;
Garnier-Suillerot, A ;
Matzanke, BF ;
Kozlowski, H .
JOURNAL OF MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY, 1999, 42 (15) :2844-2851
[12]  
GELVAN D, 1988, CANCER RES, V48, P5645
[13]   ADVANCES IN FLOW REACTOR TECHNIQUES FOR THE STUDY OF GAS-PHASE ION CHEMISTRY [J].
GRAUL, ST ;
SQUIRES, RR .
MASS SPECTROMETRY REVIEWS, 1988, 7 (03) :263-358
[14]   Energy dependencies of the proton transfer reactions H3O++CH2O↔CH2OH++H2O [J].
Hansel, A ;
Singer, W ;
Wisthaler, A ;
Schwarzmann, M ;
Lindinger, W .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MASS SPECTROMETRY, 1997, 167 :697-703
[15]   THE ROLE OF MITOCHONDRIAL GLUTATHIONE AND CELLULAR PROTEIN SULFHYDRYLS IN FORMALDEHYDE TOXICITY IN GLUTATHIONE-DEPLETED RAT HEPATOCYTES [J].
KU, RH ;
BILLINGS, RE .
ARCHIVES OF BIOCHEMISTRY AND BIOPHYSICS, 1986, 247 (01) :183-189
[16]   Base specific and regioselective chemical cross-linking of daunorubicin to DNA [J].
Leng, FF ;
Savkur, R ;
Fokt, I ;
Przewloka, T ;
Priebe, W ;
Chaires, JB .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 1996, 118 (20) :4731-4738
[17]   On-line monitoring of volatile organic compounds at pptv levels by means of proton-transfer-reaction mass spectrometry (PTR-MS) - Medical applications, food control and environmental research [J].
Lindinger, W ;
Hansel, A ;
Jordan, A .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MASS SPECTROMETRY, 1998, 173 (03) :191-241
[18]   Quantification of formaldehyde-mediated covalent adducts of adriamycin with DNA [J].
Luce, RA ;
Sigurdsson, ST ;
Hopkins, PB .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 1999, 38 (27) :8682-8690
[19]   GAS-PHASE PROTON-TRANSFER REACTIONS OF THE HYDRONIUM ION AT 298-K [J].
MACKAY, GI ;
TANNER, SD ;
HOPKINSON, AC ;
BOHME, DK .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF CHEMISTRY-REVUE CANADIENNE DE CHIMIE, 1979, 57 (12) :1518-1523
[20]   BIOCHEMICAL AND PHARMACOLOGICAL CHARACTERIZATION OF MCF-7 DRUG-SENSITIVE AND ADRR MULTIDRUG-RESISTANT HUMAN BREAST-TUMOR XENOGRAFTS IN ATHYMIC NUDE-MICE [J].
MIMNAUGH, EG ;
FAIRCHILD, CR ;
FRUEHAUF, JP ;
SINHA, BK .
BIOCHEMICAL PHARMACOLOGY, 1991, 42 (02) :391-402