Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Minnesota, 1365 Gortner Avenue, St Paul, MN, 55108, USA.
WestVet 24/7 Animal Emergency & Specialty Center, 5024 W Chinden Boulevard, Garden City, ID, 83714, USA.
BMC Vet Res. 2021 Dec 7;17(1):378. doi: 10.1186/s12917-021-03062-x.
Both human and veterinary cancer chemotherapy are undergoing a paradigm shift from a "one size fits all" approach to more personalized, patient-oriented treatment strategies. Personalized chemotherapy is dependent on the identification and validation of biomarkers that can predict treatment outcome and/or risk of toxicity. Many cytotoxic chemotherapy agents, including doxorubicin, base their mechanism of action by interaction with DNA and disruption of normal cellular processes. We developed a high-resolution/accurate-mass liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry DNA screening approach for monitoring doxorubicin-induced DNA modifications (adducts) in vitro and in vivo. We used, for the first time, a new strategy involving the use of isotope-labeled DNA, which greatly facilitates adduct discovery. The overall goal of this work was to identify doxorubicin-DNA adducts to be used as biomarkers to predict drug efficacy for use in veterinary oncology.
We used our novel mass spectrometry approach to screen for adducts in purified DNA exposed to doxorubicin. This initial in vitro screening identified nine potential doxorubicin-DNA adduct masses, as well as an intense signal corresponding to DNA-intercalated doxorubicin. Two of the adduct masses, together with doxorubicin and its metabolite doxorubicinol, were subsequently detected in vivo in liver DNA extracted from mice exposed to doxorubicin. Finally, the presence of these adducts and analytes was explored in the DNA isolated from dogs undergoing treatment with doxorubicin. The previously identified nine DOX-DNA adducts were not detected in these preliminary three samples collected seven days post-treatment, however intercalated doxorubicin and doxorubicinol were detected.
This work sets the stage for future evaluation of doxorubicin-DNA adducts and doxorubicin-related molecules as candidate biomarkers to personalize chemotherapy protocols for canine cancer patients. It demonstrates our ability to combine in one method the analysis of DNA adducts and DNA-intercalated doxorubicin and doxorubicinol. The last two analytes interestingly, were persistent in samples from canine patients undergoing doxorubicin chemotherapy seven days after treatment. The presence of doxorubicin in all samples suggests a role for it as a promising biomarker for use in veterinary chemotherapy. Future studies will involve the analysis of more samples from canine cancer patients to elucidate optimal timepoints for monitoring intercalated doxorubicin and doxorubicin-DNA adducts and the correlation of these markers with therapy outcome.
人类和兽医癌症化疗都正在从“一刀切”的方法向更个性化、以患者为中心的治疗策略转变。个性化化疗依赖于识别和验证能够预测治疗效果和/或毒性风险的生物标志物。许多细胞毒性化疗药物,包括阿霉素,其作用机制是通过与 DNA 相互作用和破坏正常细胞过程。我们开发了一种高分辨率/精确质量液相色谱-质谱 DNA 筛选方法,用于监测体外和体内阿霉素诱导的 DNA 修饰(加合物)。我们首次使用了一种涉及使用同位素标记 DNA 的新策略,这极大地促进了加合物的发现。这项工作的总体目标是确定用作预测兽医肿瘤学中药物疗效的生物标志物的阿霉素-DNA 加合物。
我们使用我们的新型质谱方法筛选暴露于阿霉素的纯化 DNA 中的加合物。这种初始的体外筛选鉴定了九种潜在的阿霉素-DNA 加合物质量,以及与 DNA 插入的阿霉素对应的强烈信号。随后,在暴露于阿霉素的小鼠肝脏 DNA 中检测到两种加合物质量以及阿霉素和其代谢物阿霉素醇。最后,在接受阿霉素治疗的狗的 DNA 中探索了这些加合物和分析物的存在。在这三个初步样本中,在治疗后七天收集的样本中未检测到先前鉴定的九种 DOX-DNA 加合物,但检测到插入的阿霉素和阿霉素醇。
这项工作为未来评估阿霉素-DNA 加合物和与阿霉素相关的分子作为犬癌症患者化疗方案个体化的候选生物标志物奠定了基础。它展示了我们将 DNA 加合物和 DNA 插入的阿霉素和阿霉素醇分析结合在一种方法中的能力。有趣的是,最后两种分析物在接受阿霉素化疗七天后的犬患者样本中仍然存在。所有样本中均存在阿霉素表明其作为兽医化疗中有前途的生物标志物的作用。未来的研究将涉及分析更多来自犬癌症患者的样本,以阐明监测插入的阿霉素和阿霉素-DNA 加合物的最佳时间点以及这些标记物与治疗效果的相关性。