Asselin B L, Ryan D, Frantz C N, Bernal S D, Leavitt P, Sallan S E, Cohen H J
Department of Pediatrics, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, New York 14642.
Cancer Res. 1989 Aug 1;49(15):4363-8.
L-Asparaginase (ASNase) is a potent antileukemic enzyme routinely used in the treatment of children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. As part of investigations of the biological activity of ASNase, we have developed techniques which measure the in vitro and in vivo cell killing ability of ASNase. To study the effect of ASNase on in vitro survival of primary lymphoblasts, bone marrow mononuclear cells obtained from untreated patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia were cultured with and without ASNase. After 5 days, viable cells were counted using trypan blue exclusion to calculate total cell kill due to ASNase. Propidium iodide exclusion, leukemia cell surface antigens, and flow cytometry were used to determine leukemia cell kill due to ASNase. Comparison of leukemia cell kill and total cell kill showed a direct linear relationship (n = 24, r = 0.7), preferential killing of leukemia cells by ASNase (slope = 0.66), and that use of leukemia cell surface markers yielded a more accurate measurement of leukemia cell killing. ASNase at concentrations from 0.0001 to 0.1 IU/ml had equal effects on extent of leukemia cell killing (P = 0.3 to 0.7), suggesting the absence of a dose response at the ASNase concentrations tested. As a measure of the in vivo response to ASNase treatment, the number of viable bone marrow leukemia cells in the patient prior to and 5 days after treatment with ASNase was measured as the product of (% of rhodamine 123 fluorescent [viable] cells) x (absolute leukemic infiltrate). The change which occurred in the viable leukemic infiltrate was the same for patients whether they received 25,000 or 2,500 IU/m2 of ASNase as a single drug. There was a linear correlation (n = 8, r = 0.9) between in vivo and in vitro leukemia cell killing by ASNase. Thus, the in vitro assay described here can be used to predict in vivo sensitivity to ASNase in acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
L-天冬酰胺酶(ASNase)是一种强效抗白血病酶,常用于治疗急性淋巴细胞白血病患儿。作为对ASNase生物活性研究的一部分,我们开发了一些技术来测量ASNase在体外和体内的细胞杀伤能力。为了研究ASNase对原代淋巴细胞体外存活的影响,将从未经治疗的急性淋巴细胞白血病患者获取的骨髓单个核细胞分别在有和没有ASNase的情况下进行培养。5天后,使用台盼蓝拒染法对活细胞进行计数,以计算ASNase导致的总细胞杀伤率。使用碘化丙啶拒染法、白血病细胞表面抗原和流式细胞术来确定ASNase导致的白血病细胞杀伤率。白血病细胞杀伤率与总细胞杀伤率的比较显示出直接的线性关系(n = 24,r = 0.7),ASNase对白血病细胞有优先杀伤作用(斜率 = 0.66),并且使用白血病细胞表面标志物能更准确地测量白血病细胞杀伤情况。浓度为0.0001至0.1 IU/ml的ASNase对白血病细胞杀伤程度的影响相同(P = 0.3至0.7),这表明在所测试的ASNase浓度下不存在剂量反应。作为对ASNase治疗体内反应的一种衡量方法,在患者接受ASNase治疗前和治疗5天后,测量其骨髓中存活白血病细胞的数量,计算方法为(若丹明123荧光[存活]细胞的百分比)×(绝对白血病浸润)。无论患者接受25,000还是2,500 IU/m2的ASNase单药治疗,其存活白血病浸润的变化情况相同。ASNase在体内和体外对白血病细胞的杀伤之间存在线性相关性(n = 8,r = 0.9)。因此,本文所述的体外试验可用于预测急性淋巴细胞白血病患者对ASNase的体内敏感性。