Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0242379 (lung cancer)
71,905 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have studied the ability of cyclosporin A (CsA) and a non-immunosuppressive analogue, O-acetyl cyclosporin A (OACsA, B3-243) to inhibit the growth of human lung cancer cells in vitro. Using continuous drug exposure and the MTT colorimetric assay to determine cell growth we found that CsA produced partial growth inhibition at doses ranging from 0.5 to 3.0 micrograms ml-1 (0.4-2.4 microM). At progressively higher doses, complete growth inhibition and in situ cell lysis were seen. The P-glycoprotein expressing multidrug resistant (MDR) variant H69/LX4 of the small cell line H69/P was less sensitive to cyclosporins than the parent line, but this was not true of the non-P-glycoprotein expressing MDR variants of large cell line COR-L23 or adenocarcinoma line MOR. Sensitivity to OACsA was approximately 2-fold higher than that to CsA in most of the lines although not in the most sensitive line, COR-L88. Even in COR-L88, exposed to CsA or OACsA for 24 h, clonogenic cell survival was reduced only to 50%. There was no reduction in polyamine content of COR-L23 or COR-L88 cells following 48 h of exposure to CsA or OACsA. The effects on cell growth could not be inhibited by the addition of exogenous putrescine, nor could they be enhanced by the addition of alpha-difluoromethylorthinine. It does not appear therefore that inhibition of polyamine synthesis is the basis of the observed growth inhibition.
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PMID:Effects of cyclosporin A and a non-immunosuppressive analogue, O-acetyl cyclosporin A, upon the growth of parent and multidrug resistant human lung cancer cells in vitro. 131 90

Because most small-cell lung cancers (SCLC) are initially chemosensitive and express neuroendocrine (NE) cell markers and most non-SCLC tumors (NSCLC) are chemoresistant and do not express NE cell markers, we investigated the association between morphological type and NE cell differentiation with in vitro chemosensitivity. We tested a panel of 55 lung cancer cell lines established from previously untreated patients. These were tested against five cytotoxic drugs commonly used in the therapy of lung cancer, using the MTT assay. For comparative purposes, we also tested cell lines established from previously treated patients with SCLC and from colorectal tumors. The logarithms of the IC50 values of all of the cell lines were normally distributed, permitting the use of Student's t-test for assessment of differences. In general, the in vitro sensitivities of SCLC, NSCLC, and colorectal cell lines mirrored the clinical experience with these tumor types. Cell lines started from previously treated patients with SCLC were more resistant than those from previously untreated patients who responded to initial therapy. For all of the cell lines, the sensitivities to the five drugs tested were highly significantly correlated with each other. Thus, for comparative purposes, each group could be assigned an average standardized mean rank. About 15% of NSCLC tumors express multiple neuroendocrine (NE) cell markers and 4 of 5 lines from these NSCLC-NE tumors were relatively chemosensitive, similar to SCLC lines and significantly different from other NSCLC lines. Other NE cell lines tested included bronchial carcinoids and cell lines from small-cell carcinomas arising in extra-pulmonary locations (ExPuSC).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Association between histological type and neuroendocrine differentiation on drug sensitivity of lung cancer cell lines. 132 32

Three large cell carcinoma cell lines were established from tumors of lung cancer patients. The cell lines were named NUTLC-2, NUTLC-4 and NUTLC-5 and they were found to have the following biological characterization. 1) By chromosomal analysis, the tumor cells of two of the cell lines (NUTLC-2 and NUTLC-5) were human-origin cells. Numbers of chromosomes of these cells ranged from 52 to 59 in NUTLC-2 and from 68 to 75 in NUTLC-5, with the modal numbers of 56 and 71, respectively. 2) Primary tumor resected from the patient with lung cancer was heterotransplanted into the subcutis of a nude mouse. NUTLC-4 cell line was established in vitro from the tumor in nude mouse and the tumor cells were found to be mouse-origin cells by chromosomal analysis. Human DNA was not detected by Alu analysis. 3) The tumor cells of three cell lines could be heterotransplanted subcutaneously into nude mice. However, no natural distant metastasis in nude mouse was observed. 4) Drug sensitivity to NUTLC-2, NUTLC-4 and NUTLC-5 tumor cells differed individually according to MTT colorimetric assay, and characteristic drug sensitivity was not noted in histological types of lung cancer.
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PMID:[Human lung cancer cell lines in our laboratory: establishment of three large cell carcinoma cell lines and their biological characterization]. 133 8

The present study was designed to analyse the cytotoxic effects of the combination of fotemustine with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) plus folinic acid (FA). Two human tumor cell lines were used; one line was derived from colon cancer (WIDR) and the other, from a non-small-cell lung cancer (CAL 12). Cytotoxic effects were assessed using the MTT (tetrazolium bromide) semi-automated test in 96-well incubation plates. The effects of various drug combinations were evaluated by the isobologram method. The drug combinations tested included fotemustine concentrations of 20, 30, 40, 50 and 70 micrograms/ml, 5-FU concentrations of 5, 15 and 30 micrograms/ml, and a constant FA concentration of 10(-5) M. A total of 180 different experimental conditions were tested. When cells were exposed to fotemustine prior to treatment with 5-FU, the final cytotoxic effects on both cell lines were additive or synergistic in the majority of cases (P less than 0.001). The 5-FU concentration was a determinant factor that modified the effects of the drug combination from antagonism (at low 5-FU concentrations) to synergism (high 5-FU concentrations; P less than 0.001). The addition of FA (10(-5) M) resulted in a significant shift towards synergistic associations in both cell lines. Administration of 5-FU prior to treatment with fotemustine caused marked antagonism, which 10(-5) M FA could not significantly shift towards simple additivity.
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PMID:Sequence-dependent cytotoxic effects of the combination of a new nitrosourea, fotemustine, with 5-fluorouracil plus folinic acid. 165 24

The purpose of this study is to assess effects of fibroblasts in the vitro chemosensitivity testing on human lung cancer cells and to remove them. Fourteen lung cancer cell lines and 14 fibroblasts derived from resected specimens of lung cancers were used, whose S.D (succinate dehydrogenase) activities were measured with MTT colorimetric assay. The chemosensitivity of a lung cancer cell alone was compared with that of mixed cancer cell and fibroblast. As results, S.D activities of fibroblasts were less 2-4 fold than those of lung cancer cells. Fibroblasts were as sensitive to CDDP, MMC and 5-FU as lung cancer cells, but more sensitive to ADM and VP-16 than them. When sensitivity testings were performed on mixed cancer cells and fibroblasts, or mixed cancer cells and conditioned media of fibroblasts to CDDP with 3 day's incubation times, the sensitivity was affected in 61%, or 10% of all the pairs, respectively. However, when these tests were done without any incubation times, the sensitivity was not affected. Therefore, it was suggested that anticancer drugs had to be simultaneously added when single cell suspensions were plated if resected specimens were used in a anticancer drug sensitivity test.
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PMID:[A study of fibroblasts in the chemosensitivity testing on human lung cancer cell lines]. 180 80

We have derived sublines of three human lung cancer cell lines with acquired resistance to cisplatin. The cisplatin resistant sublines of NCI-H69 (small cell), COR-L23 (large cell), and MOR (adenocarcinoma) show 5.3 fold, 3.1 fold, and 3.8 fold resistance, respectively, determined in a 6-day MTT assay. Although the parent lines show a wide range of glutathione content per cell, the sublines each show similar values to their corresponding parent line. Radiation response curves have been obtained using a soft agar clonogenic assay. Values obtained for the parent lines (95% CL in parentheses) were: NCI-H69: Do = 0.99 Gy (0.87-1.16), n = 2.9 (1.6-5.2), GSH = 14 ng/10(4) cells; COR-L23: Do = 1.23 Gy (1.05-1.49), n = 1.3 (0.7-2.2), GSH = 47 ng/10(4) cells; MOR: Do = 1.66 Gy (1.48-1.88), n = 3.0 (1.9-4.8), GSH = 86 ng/10(4) cells. The cisplatin resistant variants of NCI-H69 and COR-L23 showed 31% and 63% increases, respectively, in Do compared to their parent lines, whereas no change in radiation response was seen in MOR. In this panel of lines, therefore, although there is a correlation between glutathione content and radiosensitivity of the parent cell lines, acquired resistance to cisplatin is not accompanied by increased glutathione content. However, two of the three cisplatin resistant lines do show a significantly reduced radiosensitivity.
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PMID:Radiation response of human lung cancer cells with inherent and acquired resistance to cisplatin. 184 46

Because of conflicting reports of clinical synergy, we used the tetrazolium-based colorimetric (MTT) assay to test in vitro combination effects of methotrexate (MTX) plus 5-fluorouracil (FUra) in 4 schedules on 2 human non-small-cell lung cancer cell lines (adenocarcinoma, NC1-H23; bronchio-alveolar-cell carcinoma, NC1-H358), and 1 human colorectal adenocarcinoma cell line (SNU-C1). The complete 3 dimensional set of isoboles in the dose range under study was generated by a microcomputer-based method. We found that the combination effects of 8-hr sequential FUra-MTX, simultaneous administration of MTX-FUra, and 8-hr sequential MTX-FUra were clearly antagonistic for all 3 cell lines. In contrast, the combination cytotoxic effects of 24-hr sequential MTX-FUra were much more active. Our in vitro model thus clearly shows that MTX-FUra interactions are highly schedule-dependent. This provides a rational basis for testing sequential MTX-FUra with a longer administration interval than usually employed clinically.
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PMID:Schedule-dependent in vitro combination effects of methotrexate and 5-fluorouracil in human tumor cell lines. 184 23

The effects of human recombinant granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) 1-1000 U/ml on the growth of human lung cancer cell lines have been studied in vitro. A panel of 10 small cell, 1 adenocarcinoma and 1 large cell lines was used with multidrug resistant sublines of 3 of the panel. The MTT assay was used to quantify cell numbers after 6-8 days' growth in the presence of GM-CSF. Neither growth inhibition nor stimulation of any of the cell lines in the presence of GM-CSF was observed. Any effects of this agent on residual tumour cells may not therefore present a problem during its clinical use to stimulate marrow regeneration after high-dose chemotherapy for lung cancer.
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PMID:Failure of GM-CSF to influence the growth of small cell and non-small cell lung cancer cell lines in vitro. 184 14

Reduced folates have been shown to increase the cytotoxicity of 5-fluorouracil (FUra) by stabilizing the fluorodeoxyuridine monophosphate:thymidylate synthase complex, thus increasing the block in the DNA synthetic pathway. Using an in vitro tetrazolium colorimetric (MTT) cytotoxic assay, we tested the effects of FUra and 5-fluorodeoxyuridine (FUdR) with and without leucovorin (LV) on a panel of 7 human lung cancer cell lines. LV at a concentration of 20 microM enhanced the cytotoxicity of FUra and of FUdR in all of the cell lines. Quantitatively, LV had a higher degree of enhancement on FUdR than on FUra cytotoxicity in 6 cell lines. There was equivalent enhancement in the only remaining line. The differential effects of LV on the cytotoxicity of FUra vs. FUdR in these lung carcinoma lines contrasts with a quantitatively similar enhancement of cytotoxicity between FUra and FUdR in colon cancer lines previously reported from our laboratory. This suggests that the metabolism of FUra may be different in these lung cancer cell lines.
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PMID:Enhancement of fluorinated pyrimidine-induced cytotoxicity by leucovorin in human lung cancer cell lines. 216 87

Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF) exhibits cytotoxic activity on some solid tumors and has been reported to be synergistic with topoisomerase-II-targeted antineoplastic agents. A wide range of TNF concentrations (from 10 to 10,000 U/ml) was tested in 9 human lung cancer cell lines (5 small-cell and 4 non-small-cell carcinomas) using a semi-automated MTT assay. TNF was not cytotoxic in 8 cell lines, while an adenocarcinoma cell line was marginally sensitive to the cytokine. Using 125I-TNF we were able to show the presence of specific binding sites for TNF in 4/9 human lung cancer cell lines. Scatchard analysis of the marginally sensitive cell line showed high-affinity, saturable binding. With 5 cell lines we also tested whether TNF affected the cytotoxicity of doxorubicin and etoposide, 2 topoisomerase II-targeted drugs which are widely used in the therapy of lung cancer. No significant increase in cytotoxicity was seen when TNF was added to the 2 anti-neoplastic agents. In contrast to certain other human and mouse lines, human lung cancer cell lines appear to be resistant to TNF, despite the presence of the receptor in some of them; moreover, no synergistic effect of TNF and 2 topoisomerase-II-targeted drugs was evident in these human cell lines.
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PMID:Effects of tumor necrosis factor, alone or in combination with topoisomerase-II-targeted drugs, on human lung cancer cell lines. 216 14


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