55 research outputs found

    Intracellular Cytidine Deaminase Regulates Gemcitabine Metabolism in Pancreatic Cancer Cell Lines

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    Cytidine deaminase (CDA) is a determinant of in vivo gemcitabine elimination kinetics and cellular toxicity. The impact of CDA activity in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) cell lines has not been elucidated. We hypothesized that CDA regulates gemcitabine flux through its inactivation and activation pathways in PDAC cell lines. Three PDAC cell lines (BxPC-3, MIA PaCa-2, and PANC-1) were incubated with 10 or 100 µM gemcitabine for 60 minutes or 24 hours, with or without tetrahydrouridine, a CDA inhibitor. Extracellular inactive gemcitabine metabolite (dFdU) and intracellular active metabolite (dFdCTP) were quantified with liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry. Cellular expression of CDA was assessed with real-time PCR and Western blot. Gemcitabine conversion to dFdU was extensive in BxPC-3 and low in MIA PaCa-2 and PANC-1, in accordance with their respective CDA expression levels. CDA inhibition was associated with low or undetectable dFdU in all three cell lines. After 24 hours gemcitabine incubation, dFdCTP was highest in MIA PaCa-2 and lowest in BxPC-3. CDA inhibition resulted in a profound dFdCTP increase in BxPC-3 but not in MIA PaCa-2 or PANC-1. dFdCTP concentrations were not higher after exposure to 100 versus 10 µM gemcitabine when CDA activities were low (MIA PaCa-2 and PANC-1) or inhibited (BxPC-3). The results suggest a regulatory role of CDA for gemcitabine activation in PDAC cells but within limits related to the capacity in the activation pathway in the cell lines. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The importance of cytidine deaminase (CDA) for cellular gemcitabine toxicity, linking a lower activity to higher toxicity, is well described. An underlying assumption is that CDA, by inactivating gemcitabine, limits the amount available for the intracellular activation pathway. Our study is the first to illustrate this regulatory role of CDA in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma cell lines by quantifying intracellular and extracellular gemcitabine metabolite concentrations.publishedVersio

    Exome sequencing identifies germline variants in DIS3 in familial multiple myeloma

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    [Excerpt] Multiple myeloma (MM) is the third most common hematological malignancy, after Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma and Leukemia. MM is generally preceded by Monoclonal Gammopathy of Undetermined Significance (MGUS) [1], and epidemiological studies have identified older age, male gender, family history, and MGUS as risk factors for developing MM [2]. The somatic mutational landscape of sporadic MM has been increasingly investigated, aiming to identify recurrent genetic events involved in myelomagenesis. Whole exome and whole genome sequencing studies have shown that MM is a genetically heterogeneous disease that evolves through accumulation of both clonal and subclonal driver mutations [3] and identified recurrently somatically mutated genes, including KRAS, NRAS, FAM46C, TP53, DIS3, BRAF, TRAF3, CYLD, RB1 and PRDM1 [3,4,5]. Despite the fact that family-based studies have provided data consistent with an inherited genetic susceptibility to MM compatible with Mendelian transmission [6], the molecular basis of inherited MM predisposition is only partly understood. Genome-Wide Association (GWAS) studies have identified and validated 23 loci significantly associated with an increased risk of developing MM that explain ~16% of heritability [7] and only a subset of familial cases are thought to have a polygenic background [8]. Recent studies have identified rare germline variants predisposing to MM in KDM1A [9], ARID1A and USP45 [10], and the implementation of next-generation sequencing technology will allow the characterization of more such rare variants. [...]French National Cancer Institute (INCA) and the Fondation Française pour la Recherche contre le Myélome et les Gammapathies (FFMRG), the Intergroupe Francophone du Myélome (IFM), NCI R01 NCI CA167824 and a generous donation from Matthew Bell. This work was supported in part through the computational resources and staff expertise provided by Scientific Computing at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. Research reported in this paper was supported by the Office of Research Infrastructure of the National Institutes of Health under award number S10OD018522. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health. The authors thank the Association des Malades du Myélome Multiple (AF3M) for their continued support and participation. Where authors are identified as personnel of the International Agency for Research on Cancer / World Health Organization, the authors alone are responsible for the views expressed in this article and they do not necessarily represent the decisions, policy or views of the International Agency for Research on Cancer / World Health Organizatio

    Targeting the Nucleotide Metabolism Proteins of the NUDIX Family and SAMHD1 in Cancer

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    International audienceNucleotide metabolism has been targeted for many years and in various clinical settings, including cancer. The increased knowledge of certain enzymes involved in this metabolism and associated cellular processes accumulated over the last few years, gives important information related to the druggability of certain proteins and the use of inhibitors for others. Here, we review recent data on such enzymes with a major interest in drug development, i.e. SAMHD1 and the proteins of the NUDIX family. These include information on their roles in cancer progression, correlations with clinical outcomes in cancer patients, and the development and study of enzymatic inhibitors

    Regulation of tumor infiltrated innate immune cells by adenosine

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    Cancer has the ability to escape the immune system using different molecular actors. Adenosine is known to be involved in mechanisms which control inflammatory reactions and prevent excessive immune response. This purine nucleoside can be translocated from the cell or produced in the extracellular space by 5'-ectonucleotidases. Once bound to its receptors on the surface of immune effector cells, adenosine activates various molecular pathways, which lead to functional inhibition of the cell or its death. Some tumors are infiltrated by the different cells of immune system but are able to use adenosine as an immunosuppressive molecule and thus inhibit immune anticancer response. This mechanism is well described on adaptive cells, but much less on innate cells. This review outlines major effects of adenosine on innate immune cells, its consequences on cancer progression, and possible ways to block the adenosine-dependent immunosuppressive effect

    A Proposed Methodology to Deal with the Impact of In Vitro Cellular Matrix on the Analytical Performances of a Targeted Metabolomic LC-HRMS Method

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    Performances of metabolomic methods have been widely studied on biological matrices such as serum, plasma, and urine; but much less on in vitro cell extracts. While the impact of cell culture and sample preparation on results are well-described, the specific effect of the in vitro cellular matrix on the analytical performance remains uncertain. The aim of the present work was to study the impact of this matrix on the analytical performance of an LC-HRMS metabolomic method. For this purpose, experiments were performed on total extracts from two cell lines (MDA-MB-231 and HepaRG) using different cell numbers. Matrix effects, carryover, linearity, and variability of the method were studied. Results showed that the performances of the method depend on the nature of the endogenous metabolite, the cell number, and the nature of the cell line. These three parameters should, therefore, be considered for the processing of experiments and the interpretation of results depending on whether the study focuses on a limited number of metabolites or aims to establish a metabolic signature

    Monodisperse Polysarcosine-based Highly-loaded Antibody-Drug Conjugates

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    We report the synthesis of monodisperse (i.e. discrete) polysarcosine compounds and their use as a hydrophobicity masking entity for the construction of highly-loaded homogeneous β- glucuronidase-responsive antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs). The highly hydrophilic drug-linker platform described herein improves drug-loading, physicochemical properties, pharmacokinetics and in vivo antitumor efficacy of the resulting conjugates. </div

    Use of designed experiments for the improvement of pre-analytical workflow for the quantification of intracellular nucleotides in cultured cell lines

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    International audienceThe present study is focused on the development of a pre-analytical strategy for the quantification of intracellular nucleotides from cultured cell lines. Different protocols, including cell recovery, nucleotide extraction and purification, were compared on a panel of nucleoside mono-, di- and triphosphates from four cell lines (adherent and suspension cells). The quantification of nucleotides was performed using a validated technique with on-line solid-phase extraction coupled with liquid chromatography-triple quadrupole tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). Designed experiments were implemented to investigate, in a rigorous and limited-testing experimental approach, the influence of several operating parameters. Results showed that the technique used to harvest adherent cells drastically affected the amounts of intracellular nucleotides. Scraping cells was deleterious because of a major leakage (more than 70%) of intracellular nucleotides during scraping. Moreover, some other tested conditions should be avoided, such as using pure methanol as extraction solvent (decrease over 50% of intracellular nucleotides extracted from NCI-H292 cells) or adding a purification step with chloroform. Designed experiments allowed identifying an interaction between the percentage of methanol and the presence of chloroform. The mixture methanol/water (70/30, v/v) was considered as the best compromise according to the nucleoside mono-, di-, or triphosphates and the four cell lines studied. This work highlights the importance of pre-analytical step combined with the cell lines studied associated to sensitive and validated assay for the quantification of nucleotides in biological matrices

    Bacterial Deoxyribonucleoside Kinases Are Poor Suicide Genes in Mammalian Cells

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    Transfer of deoxyribonucleoside kinases (dNKs) into cancer cells increases the activity of cytotoxic nucleoside analogues. It has been shown that bacterial dNKs, when introduced into Escherichia coli, sensitize this bacterium toward nucleoside analogues. We studied the possibility of using bacterial dNKs, for example deoxyadenosine kinases (dAKs), to sensitize human cancer cells to gemcitabine. Stable and transient transfections of bacterial dNKs into human cells showed that these were much less active than human and fruitfly dNKs. The fusion of dAK from Bacillus cereus to the green fluorescent protein induced a modest sensitization. Apparently, bacterial dNKs did not get properly expressed or are unstable in the mammalian cell
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