1 research outputs found
Two New Faces of Amifostine: Protector from DNA Damage in Normal Cells and Inhibitor of DNA Repair in Cancer Cells
Amifostine protects normal cells
from DNA damage induction by ionizing
radiation or chemotherapeutics, whereas cancer cells typically remain
uninfluenced. While confirming this phenomenon, we have revealed by
comet assay and currently the most sensitive method of DNA double
strand break (DSB) quantification (based on γH2AX/53BP1 high-resolution
immunofluorescence microscopy) that amifostine treatment supports
DSB repair in γ-irradiated normal NHDF fibroblasts but alters
it in MCF7 carcinoma cells. These effects follow from the significantly
lower activity of alkaline phosphatase measured in MCF7 cells and
their supernatants as compared with NHDF fibroblasts. Liquid chromatography–mass
spectrometry confirmed that the amifostine conversion to WR-1065 was
significantly more intensive in normal NHDF cells than in tumor MCF
cells. In conclusion, due to common differences between normal and
cancer cells in their abilities to convert amifostine to its active
metabolite WR-1065, amifostine may not only protect in multiple ways
normal cells from radiation-induced DNA damage but also make cancer
cells suffer from DSB repair alteration