Hicks K O, Pruijn F B, Baguley B C, Wilson W R
Auckland Cancer Society Research Centre, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2001 Jun;297(3):1088-98.
There is considerable evidence that DNA intercalating drugs fail to penetrate tumor tissue efficiently. This study used the multicellular layer (MCL) experimental model, in conjunction with computational modeling, to test the hypothesis that a DNA intercalator in phase II clinical trial, N-[2-(dimethylamino)-ethyl]acridine-4-carboxamide (DACA), has favorable extravascular transport properties. Single cell uptake and metabolism of DACA and the related but more basic aminoacridine 9-[3-(dimethylamino)propylamino]acridine (DAPA), and penetration through V79 and EMT6 MCL, were investigated by high-performance liquid chromatography. DACA was accumulated by cells to a lesser extent than DAPA and was metabolized to the previously unreported acridan by V79 but not EMT6 cells. Despite this metabolism, flux of DACA through MCL was much faster than that of DAPA. Modeling MCL transport as diffusion with reaction (metabolism and reversible binding) showed that the faster flux of DACA was due to a 3-fold higher free drug diffusion coefficient and 10-fold lower binding site density. The MCL transport parameters were used to develop a spatially resolved pharmacokinetic model for the extravascular compartment in tumors, which provided a reasonable prediction of measured average tumor concentrations from plasma pharmacokinetics in mice. Area under the curve was essentially independent of distance from blood vessels, although the combined pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic model predicted a modest decrease in cytotoxicity (from 1.8 to 1.1 logs of cell kill) across a 125-microm region. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that it is possible to design DNA intercalators that diffuse efficiently in tumor tissue, and that there is little impediment to DACA transport over distances required for its antitumor action.
有大量证据表明,DNA嵌入药物无法有效穿透肿瘤组织。本研究使用多细胞层(MCL)实验模型,并结合计算建模,来检验以下假设:处于II期临床试验的一种DNA嵌入剂N-[2-(二甲氨基)乙基]吖啶-4-甲酰胺(DACA)具有良好的血管外转运特性。通过高效液相色谱法研究了DACA以及相关但碱性更强的氨基吖啶9-[3-(二甲氨基)丙基氨基]吖啶(DAPA)的单细胞摄取和代谢,以及它们穿透V79和EMT6多细胞层的情况。与DAPA相比,细胞对DACA的摄取程度较低,V79细胞可将DACA代谢为之前未报道的吖啶,但EMT6细胞则不能。尽管有这种代谢情况,但DACA通过多细胞层的通量比DAPA快得多。将多细胞层转运建模为伴有反应(代谢和可逆结合)的扩散过程,结果表明DACA通量更快是由于其游离药物扩散系数高3倍且结合位点密度低10倍。利用多细胞层转运参数建立了肿瘤血管外隔室的空间分辨药代动力学模型,该模型对小鼠血浆药代动力学测得的平均肿瘤浓度提供了合理预测。曲线下面积基本上与距血管的距离无关,尽管联合药代动力学/药效动力学模型预测在125微米区域内细胞毒性会有适度下降(从细胞杀伤的1.8对数降至1.1对数)。总之,本研究表明,有可能设计出能在肿瘤组织中有效扩散的DNA嵌入剂,并且DACA在其抗肿瘤作用所需的距离上的转运几乎没有障碍。