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  • Title: Combination cytotoxic-differentiation therapy of mouse erythroleukemia cells with 5-fluorouracil and hexamethylene bisacetamide.
    Author: Waxman S, Scher BM, Hellinger N, Scher W.
    Journal: Cancer Res; 1990 Jul 01; 50(13):3878-87. PubMed ID: 2354439.
    Abstract:
    The effects of 5-fluorouracil (5-FUra), in combination with various differentiation inducers on the growth and differentiation of mouse erythroleukemia (MEL) cells were investigated. The cells were first treated with 5-FUra, washed, and then treated with various concentrations of differentiation inducers: hexamethylene bisacetamide (HMBA), dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), and N-methylformamide. Pretreatment with 5-FUra, shown here to be a weak inducer of MEL cell differentiation, enhanced the subsequent HMBA induction of differentiation. The three inducers of differentiation markedly inhibited cell growth and increased cell death in a dose- and time-dependent manner if given immediately after cells were exposed to 5-FUra. In contrast, 5-FUra at similar concentrations inhibited cell growth, but only slightly increased cell death, while inducers without 5-FUra had little effect on cell growth or viability. When placed in fresh drug-free medium for 6 days following drug treatments, the cells completely recovered from the growth inhibition of 5-FUra as a single agent, whereas in cells previously treated with only HMBA there was a inhibition of cell growth without loss of viability. In contrast, a profound and prolonged growth inhibition with 98% cell death occurred in cells previously treated with 5-FUra followed by HMBA. The enhancement of 5-FUra cytotoxicity appeared to be directly related to the degree of differentiation and to biochemical events that occur during the commitment to terminal cell division induced by N-methylformamide, DMSO, or HMBA. An increase in Okazaki fragments was found in MEL cells treated with HMBA or DMSO when committed to terminal cell division. DNA breaks also follow 5-FUra treatment (A. Yoshioka et al., J. Biol. Chem., 262: 8235-8241, 1987) and may be the events that lead to cell death. The marked increase in cell death resulting from 5-FUra/HMBA treatment may be, at least partly, a consequence of increased DNA breaks due to 5-FUra followed by inhibition of DNA repair which is known to occur following the HMBA or DMSO induction of differentiation and commitment to terminal cell division. This combined sequential cytotoxic-differentiation therapy resulting in synergistic cytotoxicity and differentiation may be the basis of a new approach to cancer therapy and may aid in reducing the amounts of chemotherapeutic agents required for effective treatment, while maintaining or even increasing their therapeutic effects.
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