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Experimental Oncology Group, School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom (E.C.C., R.L.C., S.P.S., N.S.W., I.J.S.); Chengdu University of Traditional Medicine, Chengdu, Sichuan Province, People's Republic of China (J.F.); and Cancer Research UK, Medical Oncology Unit, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom (A.L.H.).
Tirapazamine (TPZ) is the lead member of a class of bioreductive drugs
currently in phase II and III clinical trials. TPZ requires metabolic
activation to give a cytotoxic free radical species, and this hypoxia-mediated
process is carried out by a variety of cellular reductases, including NADPH
cytochrome c (P450) reductase (P540R). Nitric-oxide synthase (NOS) is
widely expressed in human tumors, and this enzyme consists of an oxidase and a
reductase domain, the latter showing striking homology to P450R. Thus, in this
article, we have investigated the role of one of the cytosolic isoforms of NOS
[inducible NOS (NOSII)] in the bioactivation of this DNA-damaging antitumor
agent. To achieve this, we have constitutively overexpressed NOSII in human
breast tumor MDA231 cells by employing an optimized expression vector in which
the strong human polypeptide chain elongation factor 1
promoter drives
a bicistronic message encoding the genes for human NOSII and the
puromycin-resistant gene (pac). Subcellular localization of NOSII in
the stably transfected clones was determined after differential centrifugation
and showed that NOSII catalytic activity was exclusively cytosolic as
determined by conventional activity assay. This was confirmed by
immunostaining followed by fluorescent microscopy studies. The increase in
NOSII activity in a series of transfected clones was associated with an
increase in TPZ metabolism and toxicity under hypoxic conditions. There was no
similar increase in aerobic toxicity. These findings are of significance for
two reasons. First, cellular NOSII activity, similar to that seen in human
breast cancer, could contribute to TPZ toxicity; second, this will be a result
of NOS-derived/cytosol-associated TPZ radicals.
Address correspondence to: Edwin C. Chinje, Ph.D., School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester, M13 9PL, UK. E-mail: edwin.chinje{at}man.ac.uk
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