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Porfiromycin as a bioreductive alkylating agent with selective toxicity to hypoxic EMT6 tumor cells in vivo and in vitro.

64

Citations

7

References

1985

Year

Abstract

Hypoxic cells may limit the curability of solid tumors by conventional chemotherapeutic agents and radiotherapy. Agents which are preferentially toxic to cells with low oxygen contents could therefore be useful as adjuncts to the regimens now used to treat these cancers. To date, the best agent of this type that we have tested is porfiromycin. Porfiromycin is similar to mitomycin C in its toxicity to hypoxic EMT6 cells in vitro but has much less toxicity than mitomycin C to well-oxygenated EMT6 cells. EMT6 cell sonicates reduce mitomycin C and porfiromycin to reactive electrophiles at similar rates under hypoxic conditions, a finding that correlates with cytotoxicity, whereas the rate of production of reactive species from both drugs is very slow under aerobic conditions. We also show that porfiromycin is capable of killing hypoxic radiation-resistant cells in solid EMT6 tumors. Appropriate regimens combining porfiromycin (which preferentially kills hypoxic cells) and radiation (which preferentially kills aerated cells) may therefore be especially efficacious for the treatment of solid tumors.

References

YearCitations

1979

904

1974

139

1977

137

1982

59

1985

54

1981

49

1979

46

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