Abstract
The cytotoxic mechanism of a conjugate of doxorubicin (DXR) and glutathione (GSH) via glutaraldehyde (GSH-DXR) was investigated using DXR-sensitive (AH66P) and -resistant (AH66DR) rat hepatoma cells. GSH-DXR accumulated in AH66DR cells as well as in AH66P cells without efflux by P-gp and exhibited the potent cytocidal activity against both cells compared with DXR. To examine whether thiol from GSH-DXR affected the expression of cytotoxicity, two conjugates of DXR, with modified peptides containing alanine or serine substituted for cysteine in GSH were prepared and their cytotoxicities determined. Substitution of these amino acids for cysteine resulted in an approximately two- to fourfold reduction in cytotoxic activity against both cell lines compared with the effect of GSH-DXR. Depletion of intracellular GSH by treatment of both cells with buthionine sulphoximine did not change the cytotoxic activity of DXR, BSA-DXR or GSH-DXR. By co-treating the cells with tributyltin acetate, an inhibitor of glutathione S-transferase (GST), and either DXR, BSA-DXR or GSH-DXR, the cytotoxicity was markedly increased. Interestingly, GSH-DXR showed non-competitive inhibition of GST activity and its IC50 value was 1.3 microM. These results suggested that the inhibition of GST activity by GSH-DXR must be an important contribution to the expression of potent cytotoxicity of the drug.
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Asakura, T., Ohkawa, K., Takahashi, N. et al. Glutathione-doxorubicin conjugate expresses potent cytotoxicity by suppression of glutathione S-transferase activity: comparison between doxorubicin-sensitive and -resistant rat hepatoma cells. Br J Cancer 76, 1333–1337 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1997.557
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1997.557
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