Abstract
By means of flow cytometric recording of DNA histograms and counting of cells in synchronized populations, we have found that misonidazole (MIS) in clinically relevant concentrations induces cell-kinetic changes in human cells (NHIK 3025) cultivated in vitro under aerobic conditions. The effect seems to be a general lengthening of the cell cycle, affecting all phases. However, induction of this effect is phase-dependent, since only cells exposed to MIS during mitosis and/or early G1 will suffer significant cell-cycle prolongation. In exponentially growing populations this effect of MIS leads to a transient increase in the fraction of G1 cells and a corresponding decrease in the fraction of S cells. The possible significance of this effect for the clinical use of MIS is discussed.
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Lindmo, T., Pettersen, E. & Wibe, E. Cell-cycle inhibition by misonidazole of human cells cultivated in vitro under aerobic conditions. Br J Cancer 40, 755–760 (1979). https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1979.257
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1979.257