Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:5.99.1.2 (topoisomerase)
9,166 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Four second-generation Illudin analogues were synthesized and tested for antitumor activity using a metastatic lung carcinoma xenograft model resistant to conventional antitumor agents. One analogue, the parent illudofulvene-derivative called Acylfulvene, inhibited xenograft primary tumor growth and prolonged life span of tumor-bearing animals when administered i.p. or i.v. The efficacy of Acylfulvene exceeded that of mitomycin C, cisplatin, paclitaxol, the parent compound Illudin S, and an earlier analogue, dehydroilludin M. Promising features of this new analogue are: (a) the retention of in vitro activity against a variety of mdr tumor phenotypes including gp170+, gp150+, GSHTR-Pi, topoisomerase I, and topoisomerase II mutants; and (b) an apparent selective cytotoxicity toward cells deficient in either ERCC2 or ERCC3 DNA helicase activity.
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PMID:Efficacy of Acylfulvene Illudin analogues against a metastatic lung carcinoma MV522 xenograft nonresponsive to traditional anticancer agents: retention of activity against various mdr phenotypes and unusual cytotoxicity against ERCC2 and ERCC3 DNA helicase-deficient cells. 758 33

Illudins are novel low molecular weight natural products cytotoxic to human tumor cells in vitro. Illudin-derived analogs are effective against experimental human cancers nonresponsive to conventional anticancer agents. It is not known why some illudin analogs are more efficacious in vitro and in vivo than other analogs. Therefore, the in vitro cytotoxicity of the parent compound illudin S towards tumor cells was characterized using radiolabeled drug. Two cell lines sensitive at nanomolar concentrations using only a 15-min exposure period displayed a saturable, energy-dependent accumulation of illudins with relatively low K(m) and high Vmax values. A nonsensitive cell line, requiring millimolar concentrations to achieve in vitro toxicity, showed minimal illudin uptake with higher K(m) and lower Vmax values. No release of radioactivity could be demonstrated from tumor cells, indicating that there was no efflux of illudin S (or metabolites) from these cells. The number of intracellular illudin S molecules required to kill 50% of cells of different tumor cell lines varied from 78000 to 1114000 molecules per cell and was correlated with the 2-h IC50 value determined using a colony-forming assay. Illudin S was cytotoxic to a variety of multidrug-resistant tumor cell lines regardless of whether resistance was mediated by gp170/mdrl, gp180/MRP, GSHTR-pi, topoisomerase I, topoisomerase II, increased DNA repair capacity, or alterations in intracellular thiol content. Information obtained in this study could be used to design clinical phase I trials and to develop analogs with improved therapeutic indexes.
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PMID:Characterization of cellular accumulation and toxicity of illudin S in sensitive and nonsensitive tumor cells. 913 32