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Vol. 297, Issue 3, 1088-1098, June 2001
Auckland Cancer Society Research Centre, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand
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Abstract |
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There is considerable evidence that DNA intercalating drugs fail to penetrate tumor tissue efficiently. This study used the multicellular layer (MCL) experimental model, in conjunction with computational modeling, to test the hypothesis that a DNA intercalator in phase II clinical trial, N-[2-(dimethylamino)-ethyl]acridine-4-carboxamide (DACA), has favorable extravascular transport properties. Single cell uptake and metabolism of DACA and the related but more basic aminoacridine 9-[3-(dimethylamino)propylamino]acridine (DAPA), and penetration through V79 and EMT6 MCL, were investigated by high-performance liquid chromatography. DACA was accumulated by cells to a lesser extent than DAPA and was metabolized to the previously unreported acridan by V79 but not EMT6 cells. Despite this metabolism, flux of DACA through MCL was much faster than that of DAPA. Modeling MCL transport as diffusion with reaction (metabolism and reversible binding) showed that the faster flux of DACA was due to a 3-fold higher free drug diffusion coefficient and 10-fold lower binding site density. The MCL transport parameters were used to develop a spatially resolved pharmacokinetic model for the extravascular compartment in tumors, which provided a reasonable prediction of measured average tumor concentrations from plasma pharmacokinetics in mice. Area under the curve was essentially independent of distance from blood vessels, although the combined pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic model predicted a modest decrease in cytotoxicity (from 1.8 to 1.1 logs of cell kill) across a 125-µm region. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that it is possible to design DNA intercalators that diffuse efficiently in tumor tissue, and that there is little impediment to DACA transport over distances required for its antitumor action.
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Introduction |
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It
is widely accepted that the inefficient microvascular system in solid
tumors limits delivery of some anticancer drugs to their target cells,
and that this may contribute to treatment failure in cancer
chemotherapy (Jain, 1998
; Tannock, 1998
). This problem is likely to be
particularly severe for basic DNA binding drugs such as doxorubicin and
mitoxantrone since, in addition to reversible DNA binding, many of
these compounds are trapped by pH-dependent partitioning into acidic
vesicles (Denny and Wilson, 1986
). These reversible binding/uptake
processes have a high capacity for sequestering drug in cells; the
difficulty of saturating these sites can be expected to retard delivery
of drug to cells distal from blood vessels (Durand, 1990
; Wilson and
Denny, 1992
).
Fluorescence intensity gradients in multicellular spheroids and tumors
confirm that doxorubicin diffuses poorly in tissue (Ozols et al., 1979
;
Durand, 1989
), but the difficulty in determining drug concentrations
from fluorescence in tissue has limited quantitative investigation. A
recently developed three-dimensional cell culture system (Cowan et al.,
1996
; Hicks et al., 1997
; Minchinton et al., 1997
; Topp et al., 1998
)
provides an in vitro model in which drug transport can be measured more
directly. In this model, tumor cells grown as multicellular layers
(MCLs) are used to separate two compartments containing culture medium,
which makes it possible to quantify drug transport by measuring flux of
compound between the two compartments. A major advantage of this
approach is that compound-specific analytical methods (e.g., HPLC) can
be used to distinguish parent drug and metabolites.
MCLs have been used to investigate tissue diffusion properties of
radiosensitizers (Cowan et al., 1996
), bioreductive drugs (Hicks et
al., 1998
; Phillips et al., 1998
; Kyle and Minchinton, 1999
), antibody
fragments (Topp et al., 1998
), hypoxia markers (Zhang et al., 1998
),
and DNA intercalators (Hicks et al., 1997
; Tunggal et al., 1999
). These
studies provide direct evidence for the slow diffusion of doxorubicin,
mitoxantrone, and a dibasic acridine derivative,
9-[3-(-dimethylamino)propylamino]acridine (DAPA) (Fig.
1). Slow diffusion of the latter was
shown to be largely due to pH-dependent sequestration in lysosomes
rather than DNA binding (Hicks et al., 1997
).
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The acridine DNA intercalator
N-[2-(dimethylamino)ethyl]acridine-4-carboxamide
(DACA, NSC 601 316, Fig. 1) is a dual inhibitor of topoisomerases I and
II (Finlay et al., 1996
), is insensitive to multidrug resistance
(Finlay et al., 1993
; Davey et al., 1997
), and is currently in phase II
clinical trial. DACA and other acridine-4-carboxamide analogs have
greater antitumor activity than related aminoacridine derivatives
(Atwell et al., 1987
; Denny et al., 1987
). The acridine-4-carboxamide chromophore in DACA (ring pKa = 3.5)
is much less basic than the 9-aminoacridine chromophore in DAPA (ring
pKa = 8.8) so that at physiological pH
the former carries a +1 charge, and the latter a +2 charge. DACA is
also a weaker DNA binder than related aminoacridines, with a 6-fold
lower association constant than the corresponding 9-amino compound
(Crenshaw et al., 1995
). Literature values for binding of DACA and DAPA
to calf thymus DNA under equivalent conditions (0.1 M ionic strength,
pH 7.0, 37°C) show a similar differential in association constant,
with values of 5 × 104
M
1 for DACA (Crenshaw et al., 1995
) and 2 × 105 M
1 for DAPA (Siim
et al., 2000
).
The superior antitumor activity of DACA was suggested to be related to
its relatively weak basicity and low DNA binding affinity, features
considered likely to facilitate relatively efficient tissue
distribution (Denny et al., 1987
). DACA thus represents one of the
earliest examples in which extravascular transport characteristics were
considered explicitly in the optimization of a DNA-binding antitumor
drug. However, there is no direct evidence to support this rationale.
In fact the converse argument has also been proposed as a basis for the
tumor selectivity of DACA. Thus, slow clearance of drug from Lewis Lung
tumors, relative to plasma, in mice (Paxton et al., 1993
) has been
interpreted as reflecting slow extravascular transport (efflux),
leading to the suggestion that prolonged exposure of cells distant from
functional blood vessels could contribute to solid tumor selectivity
(Paxton et al., 1993
; Baguley and Finlay, 1995
).
The present study uses the MCL model to measure the parameters
controlling extravascular transport of DACA. Cell uptake and metabolism
is first assessed in single cell suspensions to guide selection of
transport models (Wilson and Hicks, 1999
), and comparison is made with
the more strongly basic acridine DAPA. The derived transport parameters
are used to model pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics (cytotoxicity)
as a function of distance from blood vessels in tumors.
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Materials and Methods |
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Chemicals and Radiochemicals.
[14C]Urea (185 MBq/mmol) was purchased from
PerkinElmer Life Science Products, Boston, MA.
[3H]DAPA (14.9 GBq/mmol) was synthesized and
purified as previously described (Hicks et al., 1997
). DACA and known
DACA metabolites [the corresponding 9(10H)-acridone,
N-monomethyl derivative, side chain N-oxide, and
4-carboxylic acid hydrolysis product (Robertson et al., 1993
; Schofield
et al., 1999
)] were supplied by Professor W. A. Denny of the
Auckland Cancer Society Research Center.
[3H]DACA was prepared from nonradioactive DACA
by Sibtech Corporation, Elmsford, NY (1.75 TBq/mmol, 97.5% purity by
HPLC with radiochemical detection) and was stored in methanol at
20°C and repurified by HPLC before use as described for DAPA (Hicks
et al., 1997
). The acridan derivative of DACA, DACA-2H
{N-[2-(dimethylamino)ethyl]-9,10-dihydroacridine-4-carboxamide; Fig. 1}, was prepared by reduction of an ethanolic solution of the
9(10H)-acridone derivative of DACA with mercury-aluminum amalgam.
Cell Lines and Growth of Multicellular Layers.
V79-171b
Chinese hamster fibroblasts and EMT6/Ak mouse mammary tumor cells were
passaged as monolayer cultures in alpha minimal essential medium
containing 5% fetal calf serum, without antibiotics, by weekly
trypsinization. Multicellular layers were grown on collagen-coated Teflon support membranes in Millicell-CM cell culture inserts (Millipore Corporation, Bedford, MA) in alpha minimal essential medium
containing 10% fetal calf serum with penicillin (100 units/ml) and
streptomycin (100 µg/ml) as previously described (Hicks et al., 1997
)
by seeding at 2 × 105 cells/insert and
growing submerged in stirred medium at 4 days. MCLs were enzymatically
dissociated to single cell suspensions by incubation in 5 ml of 0.07%
trypsin in saline containing trisodium citrate (14 mM, pH 7.6) for 10 min. All experiments were performed at 37°C under aerobic (95%
O2) conditions unless otherwise stated.
Diffusion Chamber Apparatus.
Diffusion chambers (Fig.
2), based on a design described by Kyle
and Minchinton (1999)
were constructed of Perspex (Lucite), and placed
on custom-made variable speed magnetic stirrers in a 37°C water bath.
Gas mixtures (5% CO2 in 95%
O2 or 95% N2) were supplied continuously at a flow rate of 5 ml
min
1 through polyetheretherketone (PEEK)
tubing (0.18 mm i.d.; Alltech Associates, Deerfield, IL) connected to a
stainless steel manifold. The equipment was sterilized in 70% ethanol.
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Diffusion Experiments.
After loading with an MCL, the
diffusion chamber was equilibrated for 1 h with magnetic stirring
at 150 rpm using the same medium as described above, and was maintained
at pH 7.4 ± 0.1 throughout the experiment by gassing. Prior to
addition of drug, 1 ml of medium was sampled from each chamber and the
number of cells determined with an electronic particle counter; MCLs
were not used if there were >103 floating
cells/ml. A further sample (0.5 ml) was taken for determination of
background radioactivity and HPLC baseline. Flux was initiated by
adding 50 µl of medium containing internal standard
([14C]urea) and drug to the donor compartment
using a Hamilton syringe via the stainless steel sampling (gas outflow)
port, and samples (0.5 ml) were taken from both compartments at
intervals thereafter. [14C]Urea was determined
by off-line scintillation counting (50 µl, in 5 ml of Emulsifier-Safe
water-accepting scintillant, Packard Tricarb 1500 liquid scintillation
analyser; Canberra Packard, Meriden, CT) and the balance of the sample
was stored at
80°C for HPLC analysis. MCL were frozen after
completion of some flux experiments for determination of thickness from
frozen sections (Hicks et al., 1997
).
HPLC and LC/MS.
Medium was analyzed by HPLC by direct
injection of up to 200 µl, using a WISP 712 refrigerated autoinjector
and WISP 600 pump (Waters, Milford, MA) and Alltima C8 column (150 × 4.6 mm, 5 µm; Alltech Associates), with monitoring of absorbance
at 254 nm for DACA, 266 nm for DAPA, and 296 nm for DACA-2H
using a diode array detector (Hewlett Packard 1040A). On-line
radiochemical analysis was performed by a Radiomatic 150TR detector
(Canberra Packard) using Utima-Flo AP scintillant (Canberra Packard) at
2.0 ml min
1 and a flow cell volume of 500 µl.
The mobile phase (flow rate 1.0 ml min
1)
comprised a linear gradient of 25 to 65% acetonitrile in 0.45 M
ammonium formate, pH 4.5, for 20 min, returning to 25% acetonitrile between 25 and 30 min. On-line mass spectrometry was performed using a
Hewlett-Packard LC/MS system comprising a HP1100 HPLC with a single
quadrupole mass spectrometer using positive-mode electrospray
ionization (N2 drying gas flow rate 10 l
min
1 at 350°C, nebulizer pressure 25 psi
gauge (psig), capillary voltage 4000 V) in the scan-mode
(m/z 50-800, stepsize 0.05) using variable fragmentor voltages. The column was an Alltima C8 (150 × 3.2 mm, 5 µm), with a flow rate of 0.5 ml min
1 and an
injection volume of 10 µl.
Mathematical Modeling of Drug Flux and Parameter Estimation.
Transport in MCL was modeled as one-dimensional diffusion with reaction
in a series of homogeneous phases (donor chamber, MCL, Teflon support
membrane, and receiving chamber), as described previously (Hicks et
al., 1997
), with appropriate modification for the new diffusion chamber
apparatus (both chambers stirred). For each compartment the diffusion
equation is written with reaction terms to represent spontaneous
hydrolysis, metabolism, and loss of free drug due to intracellular
sequestration (modeled as binding to two classes of sites, one
saturable and one nonsaturable):
|
(1) |
1 are the forward (association) and
reverse (dissociation) rate constants for nonsaturable binding;
k2 and k
2 are the corresponding rate
constants for saturable binding; Bmax
is the total concentration of saturable binding sites;
kmet is the first order metabolic rate
constant; and khydr is the rate constant for hydrolysis. The boundary conditions were for zero flux
into the donor and receiver compartments and the initial conditions
were cf(x,0) = c1,0, the initial concentration in the donor compartment,
cf(x,0) = 0 otherwise,
and cb1(x,0) = cb2(x,0) = 0 in all
compartments. The free fraction of DACA in culture medium containing
10% fetal calf serum has been estimated as 97% (Finlay and Baguley,
2000DACA Uptake by Single Cells.
Cellular uptake of
[3H]DACA was investigated in stirred single
cell suspensions (1-2.2 × 106 cells/ml of
V79 and EMT6 cells, obtained by dissociation of MCL) at pH 7.4 by the
spin-through-oil technique as for [3H]DAPA
(Hicks et al., 1997
). Suspensions were equilibrated under 20%O2, 5%CO2 at 37°C
for 1 h before the addition of drug. Concentrations were
determined by off-line scintillation counting of extracellular medium
and cell pellets as previously described (Hicks et al., 1997
). In
contrast to DAPA, the time course of DACA uptake into cells was too
rapid to measure initial rates by this technique. Thus, only
steady-state values for the extracellular and intracellular concentrations were determined. The binding model fitted to the data is
the steady-state solution of the kinetic model described for DAPA
(Hicks et al., 1997
).
|
(2) |
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(3) |
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(4) |
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(5) |
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(6) |
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(7) |
DACA Metabolism by Single Cells.
Metabolism of
[3H]DACA by V79 cells was examined under the
same conditions as the cell uptake experiments, by adding DACA to 10 µM and the extracellular medium was assayed for DACA by HPLC. The
rate constant (kmet) for metabolic
loss of DACA was estimated by fitting a monoexponential decay function
to the extracellular concentration data
(ce):
|
(8) |
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Results |
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Uptake of DACA in Single Cell Suspensions.
The cellular
pharmacology of DACA was first investigated in stirred single cell
suspensions to identify processes likely to influence extravascular
transport (accumulation in cells and drug metabolism).
[3H]DACA was rapidly taken up by EMT6 and V79
cells under aerobic conditions at 37°C; the ratio
ci/ce was
constant with time (5-15 min for V79, 5-60 min for EMT6; 1 µl/106 cells) within experimental error (data
not shown). The steady-state value of
ci/ce
was ca. 420 to 450 at low DACA concentrations, with partial saturation
of uptake at higher concentration (50% saturation at 2-3 µM DACA;
Fig. 3). These values were based on total
radioactivity, and do not take into account the slight (<10%) metabolic conversion to DACA-2H by V79 cells over this time
(see below). Similar values have recently been reported for DACA uptake in other cell lines (e.g.,
ci/ce
of 550 for the Lewis Lung carcinoma line LLTC; Haldane et al., 1999
).
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i of
10
3 for V79 and EMT6 cells at
106 cells/ml. There was no significant difference
in binding parameters between V79 and EMT6 cells. The lysosomotropic
base NH4Cl (50 mM), added 1 h before DACA,
partially inhibited cellular uptake by V79 cells, resulting in a
ci/ce
ratio of ca. 130, which was independent of DACA concentration (Fig.
3A). Thus, NH4Cl appeared to prevent saturable
binding, and although a lower nonsaturable binding parameter
K1 was obtained (Table 1), this was
not significantly different from that in the absence of
NH4Cl. On this basis, the saturable binding
process is interpreted as accumulation in acidic endosomes.
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Metabolism of DACA in V79 Cells.
In the above-mentioned
experiments, a radiolabeled product with a retention time of 10.1 min
(cf. 6.4 min for DACA) accumulated in the V79 cell suspensions, with a
minor second metabolite (Rt = 12.8 min,
"metabolite 2") at later incubation times (Fig.
4). Loss of DACA in V79 cell suspensions
was first order (data not shown) with a rate constant of (2.5 ± 0.5) × 10
3 min
1
(mean ± S.E. for three experiments) at 106
cells/ml. The major metabolite was partially converted back to DACA
when samples were deproteinized using perchloric acid, or frozen and
thawed, with the recovered DACA having the same specific activity as
the starting [3H]DACA as determined by
comparison of absorbance and radioactivity signals in the chromatogram
(data not shown).
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Internal Standard ([14C]Urea) Flux in Diffusion
Chamber.
DACA transport through MCL was investigated using a
symmetrically stirred diffusion apparatus (Fig. 2), allowing
measurement of drug concentrations on both sides of the MCL. Our
previous experimental system maintained strictly unstirred conditions
in the donor compartment (by adding agar at the same time as drug), permitting measurement in the receiver compartment only. The new apparatus was first characterized by investigating the flux of [14C]urea and [3H]DAPA
through V79 MCL, previously investigated using the agar method (Hicks
et al., 1997
). Representative data for a single MCL are shown in Fig.
5; the lines are fits to the
diffusion-reaction model. Flux of [14C]urea
through collagen-coated Teflon support membranes (thickness 30 µm)
without MCL (Fig. 5, A-C) was fitted to give a urea diffusion coefficient in the collagen-coated Teflon support,
Ds, of (1.84 ± 0.06) × 10
6 cm2
s
1 (mean ± S.E., n = 19).
This is 11.0 ± 0.4% of the value of D for urea in
culture medium (Hicks et al., 1997
), which is similar to the effective
porosity (Ds/D) determined
previously using unstirred donor compartments (9.8 ± 0.7%; Hicks
et al., 1998
). The transport of urea across V79 MCL (Fig. 5, A-C), was
also well modeled as simple diffusion through the support and MCL in
series. The thickness of each MCL was determined from frozen sections
after the flux experiments (thickness 202 ± 20 µm, mean ± S.D. for eight MCL). Fitting the diffusion coefficient of urea in the
V79 multilayers (Dm, urea) gave
(1.72 ± 0.07) × 10
6
cm2 s
1 (n = 8), in good agreement with the value of (1.5 ± 0.1) × 10
6 cm2
s
1 found using the unstirred donor compartment
system (Hicks et al., 1997
).
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DAPA Transport through V79 Multilayers.
Flux of DAPA through
the support membrane without MCL (Fig. 5, D-F) was accompanied by slow
hydrolysis to 9(10H)-acridone (khydr = 1.15 × 10
4 min
1). This
reaction term was included in the diffusion model (eq. 1), giving an
estimate of Ds for DAPA of (0.940 ± 0.002) × 10
6 cm2
s
1 (Table 2).
When a V79 MCL was present, DAPA flux into the receiver compartment was
much slower than for urea (Fig. 5F) and was accompanied by considerable
uptake into the MCL as demonstrated by the lowering of the
concentration averaged over donor and receiver compartments (Fig. 5E).
The concentration-time curves were modeled, with
Dm as the sole fitted parameter, as
diffusion with reversible binding and hydrolysis using the flux of the
urea internal standard to estimate thickness of each MCL and using the
binding parameters determined from single cell uptake studies (Table 1)
after scaling to the cell density in the MCL. When DAPA transport
parameters determined previously (Hicks et al., 1997
) by the agar
method (as in Table 2, except
i = 0.29) were
used, the model predicted the concentration-time curve for the receiver
compartment well (Fig. 5F, dashed line) but substantially
underpredicted the rate of removal of DAPA from the donor compartment
(Fig. 5D). The combined data set could not be fitted simultaneously
except by increasing the intracellular volume fraction
i in the MCL (i.e., the scaling factor for
K1 and
Bmax between intracellular parameters
derived from single cell suspension and MCL) from 0.29 to 0.75, with a compensating 3-fold increase in Dm to
(1.45 ± 0.12) × 10
6
cm2 s
1 (n = 4). With these modifications, the model provided an excellent fit to
the concentration-time profiles in both chambers (Fig. 5, D-F, solid
lines). This value for
i is consistent with
estimates for V79 spheroids (Durand, 1980
; Freyer and Sutherland,
1983
).
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DACA Transport Characteristics.
[3H]DACA was stable in culture medium under the
conditions of the flux experiments (radiochemical purity >99% after
6 h), and no loss was detected during flux through collagen-coated
support membranes (Fig. 6, A-F). Flux
was well modeled as simple diffusion with a fitted
Ds of (1.04 ± 0.10) × 10
6 cm2
s
1 (n = 13). There was no
observable concentration dependence in Ds over the range 0.004 to 10 µM
(data not shown).
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i = 0.5 for EMT6
multilayers. The values of all parameters are shown in Table 2. The
remaining parameter, Dm, was fitted
simultaneously to the donor and receiver concentration data giving a
value of (5.54 ± 0.53) × 10
6
cm2 s
1 (n = 4).
Flux of [3H]DACA through V79 MCL (Fig. 6, D-F)
was slower than through EMT6 multilayers. High concentrations of
DACA-2H (Fig. 6, G-I) and small quantities of metabolite 2 (data not shown) were found in the donor and receiver compartments. The
mass balance for DACA (Fig. 6E) showed extensive and progressive loss
from the medium, consistent with metabolism as well as binding. In fitting the flux of DACA, binding and metabolism were modeled using the
single cell parameters for V79 cells (Table 1) with
i = 0.75 as described above. This provided a
good description of DACA flux in V79 MCL as shown by fitted lines in
Fig. 6, D-F. The estimated value for the fitted parameter, the
diffusion coefficient for free DACA in the MCL
(Dm), was (3.61± 0.29) × 10
6 cm2
s
1 (n = 5), which is similar to
the value for DACA in the nonmetabolizing EMT6 multilayers. Flux under
hypoxic conditions (pO2
0.5 mm Hg
as measured by an Oxylite oxygen probe; Oxford Optronix Ltd., Oxford,
UK) was not appreciably different from that under 95% O2 (Table 2), although a slightly higher
Dm (5.3 ± 0.5 × 10
6 cm2
s
1, n = 3) was obtained. This
change is in the opposite direction to that expected if the rate of
DACA reduction to DACA-2H increased under hypoxia, which
suggests that the reductase involved is oxygen insensitive.
Addition of 50 mM NH4Cl to both media
compartments did not affect the medium pH [7.4, consistent with
previously published data (Siim et al., 1994
6 cm2
s
1 (n = 4) was significantly
lower than in the absence of NH4Cl. The lower
Dm may be due to differences in the pH
gradient across the MCL in the presence of NH4Cl,
which are not taken into account in the model (under
Discussion).
In the above-mentioned investigation the initial DACA concentration in
the donor compartment (c1,0) was 10 µM. The very high specific activity of the
[3H]DACA allowed subsequent investigation of
flux through V79 multilayers over a wide range of initial DACA
concentrations, down to c1,0 = 0.004 µM. No trend was observed in the fitted value of
Dm (data not shown); this supports the
use of a first order rate constant, rather than Michael-Menten
kinetics, to describe DACA metabolism in V79 MCL.
Simulation of DACA Pharmacokinetics (PK) and Pharmacodynamics.
The reaction-diffusion parameters controlling transport of DACA in MCL,
as determined above, were used to simulate PK and pharmacodynamics as a
function of distance from blood vessels in tumors. The input to the
extravascular compartment was provided by fitting a two-compartment
open model to the reported concentration-time data for mouse plasma
(Paxton et al., 1993
):
|
(9) |
1 and the fitted coefficients for the
biexponential decay are A = 86.5 µM,
B = 0.85 µM,
= 0.052 min
1, and
= 0.004 min
1. The data and fitted curve are shown in
Fig. 7A. We then investigated whether the
extravascular transport properties of DACA, as measured in MCL, could
be used to predict the average concentrations measured in Lewis Lung
tumors in the above-mentioned study (Paxton et al., 1993
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|
(10) |
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Discussion |
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All intercalators studied to date with the MCL system have shown
very slow penetration kinetics, including DAPA (Hicks et al., 1997
),
mitoxantrone (Tunggal et al., 1999
), and doxorubicin (Phillips et al.,
1998
; Tunggal et al., 1999
). DACA (mol. wt. 294) appears to be
dramatically different, with trans-MCL flux even faster than
the internal standard urea (mol. wt. 60) in EMT6 MCL (Fig. 6C). Rapid
flux of DACA was also seen in preliminary experiments with MCL grown
from the human colon carcinoma cell line WiDr, with normalized DACA
concentrations in the receiver compartment 3-fold higher than urea at
6 h (data not shown). Even in V79 MCL, which rapidly metabolize
DACA, its net transport was efficient (and much greater than the
nonmetabolized acridine DAPA). No direct comparison has been made
between DACA and doxorubicin in the same experimental system, but
Tunggal et al. (1999)
have demonstrated very slow flux of doxorubicin
through EMT6 multilayers, with a concentration in the receiver
compartment only 3 to 4% of the equilibrium value by 6 h. In
contrast, the measured EMT6 multilayer transport parameters for DACA
(Table 2) lead to a predicted receiver concentration that is 30% of
the equilibrium value by 6 h under these same conditions
(unstirred donor compartment of 0.5 ml with an 8-ml stirred receiver).
The finding that DACA is reduced by some mammalian cell lines (V79,
AA8, SiHa) to the corresponding acridan (DACA-2H, Fig. 1)
was unexpected. This is, to our knowledge, the first demonstration of
metabolic hydrogenation of an acridine ring in mammalian cells. The
failure to detect this metabolite in earlier investigations of the
biotransformation of DACA (Robertson et al., 1993
; Schofield et al.,
1999
) may relate to the potential for reoxidation of the acridan to
DACA during sample preparation. Preliminary data (data not shown)
indicate that DACA-2H is less cytotoxic than DACA, as
expected given the anticipated lowering of DNA binding affinity with
loss of aromaticity of the acridine ring.
The rapid diffusivity of DACA through V79 MCL initially prompted us to
consider whether the DACA-2H metabolite might act as a less
DNA-affinic carrier form of DACA with rapid metabolic interconversion (futile cycling) between the two species. This would have parallels with the reported activity of the acridan of acriflavin as a carrier of
the acridine across microbial cell walls (Adamus et al., 1998
). Investigation of diffusion of DACA-2H
(c1,0 13 µM) through V79 MCL (data
not shown) demonstrated that DACA-2H does indeed diffuse even more readily than DACA (primarily because of its greater metabolic
stability in this line). However, we were not able to demonstrate
reoxidation to DACA in MCL or cells. In addition, comparison of DACA
flux through V79 MCL (Fig. 6F) and EMT6 MCL (Fig. 6C), which do not
metabolize DACA to DACA-2H, showed that this metabolism
impedes rather than assists net DACA transport.
An important objective of the present study was to make a quantitative
comparison between DACA and its more basic (and more DNA affinic)
analog DAPA. The published MCL penetration data for DAPA were obtained
using an experimental system in which only the receiver compartment was
stirred, with an agar gel in the donor compartment to prevent mixing
(Hicks et al., 1997
). When we reevaluated DAPA flux through V79 MCL
using the new dual stirred chamber system (Fig. 2), the kinetics with
which the compound appeared in the receiver compartment was
indistinguishable from that predicted (for the new conditions) using
the transport parameters determined in the previous system (Fig. 5F).
Thus, the MCL flux kinetics is equivalent in the two experimental
systems (as also shown by the similar bare support membrane porosity
estimates, and similar urea diffusion coefficients in V79 MCL).
However, with the ability to measure the concentration profile in the
donor as well as receiver compartment, it became evident that the
previous mathematical model was not optimal. Fitting both compartments simultaneously required an increase in
Dm (i.e., faster diffusion of free
DAPA) and
i (i.e., increased overall binding
in the MCL). This demonstrates the value of measuring concentrations in
both compartments to constrain the mathematical modeling.
The more rapid transport of DACA than DAPA suggests physicochemical
features that may be important to the penetration kinetics of basic DNA
intercalators. The proportion of unionized (lipophilic) free base at pH
7.4 is higher for DACA than DAPA (0.5 versus 0.02%), which may
contribute to the higher Dm for free
DACA than DAPA, and thus to the improved penetration kinetics of the
former. The second advantage of DACA lies in a reduced binding site
barrier relative to DAPA, as shown by lesser sequestration in cells.
This may reflect the higher DNA affinity of DAPA, but is probably more dependent on differing propensities of the two compounds for entrapment in acidic vesicles. The latter are clearly major sites of loss for both
compounds, as demonstrated by effects of NH4Cl on
cellular uptake (Fig. 3) and MCL flux (Fig. 6F), but the effect of
NH4Cl on flux in V79 MCL is greater for DAPA
(Hicks et al., 1997
) than DACA (this study). This indicates that
entrapment of the dication at low pH in endosomes is the major
impediment to penetration, and that the lower binding site barrier of
DACA is related to decreased endosomal entrapment because of the lower
basicity of its chromophore. These factors (higher
Dm for free drug and lower sequestration) combine to allow DACA to penetrate much more rapidly than DAPA. Although this analysis is qualitatively reasonable, some
caution is warranted in that cellular uptake of weak bases is a
function of extracellular pH, and the effects of pH gradients in MCL
have not been incorporated in the current model, which treats the MCL
as a homogeneous phase with binding sites. The justification for this
homogeneous model, and limitations of assuming a constant mean pH, have
been previously discussed (Hicks et al., 1997
).
The implications of the measured transport parameters for DACA were
explored by simulating transport in the extravascular compartment of a
tumor. This required knowledge of the plasma pharmacokinetics of DACA,
determined previously for BDF1 mice with Lewis
Lung tumors (Paxton et al., 1993
). It also required specification of
the geometry and diffusion distances involved, which are not known. To
overcome this problem we assumed a simplified, uniform, planar
geometry, and solved the reaction-diffusion equation (eq. 1) using the
measured MCL transport parameters to predict the average tumor
concentration of DACA. This provided a good fit to the measured average
concentrations in Lewis Lung tumors when we assumed the maximum
diffusion distance (to the center of the planar slab) to be 250 µm.
This gives confidence that the parameters measured in the MCL model are
physiologically relevant. An even better fit would be obtained by
assuming an ensemble of diffusion distances (giving faster efflux at
short times followed by slower efflux from more distant regions), which
would also be more physiologically appropriate.
This micropharmacokinetic model for the extravascular compartment of
tumors demonstrates that DACA distributes relatively well, although the
maximum concentration 125 µm from a vessel is 2.5-fold lower, and
occurs 15 min later, than in plasma (Fig. 7B). The implications of this
delayed and "damped" pharmacokinetics depend on the pharmacodynamic
model assumed. If killing by DACA were linearly proportional to AUC,
which is essentially independent of diffusion distance (at large
distances, slow efflux compensates for slow influx), we would predict
no impediment to cytotoxic activity in cells distant from blood
vessels. However, the model that best describes DACA cytotoxicity in
low cell density cultures (Fig. 8A; Results) leads to the
prediction of a small decrease in killing efficiency with distance as a
result of impeded drug supply (Fig. 8B). Given that the fraction of
cycling cells generally decreases with distance into the extravascular
compartment in tumors (Tannock, 1968
; Kennedy et al., 1997
) an
additional loss of sensitivity due to resistance of noncycling cells to
DACA (Finlay and Baguley, 1989
) is likely to be superimposed on this
micropharmacokinetic effect.
In conclusion, this study demonstrates that relatively small structural
differences between analogs can lead to substantial differences in
extravascular transport characteristics, and that basic DNA
intercalators are not necessarily poor diffusers in tumor tissue. The
demonstration of efficient transport of DACA in this study supports the
earlier hypothesis (Denny et al., 1987
) that one of the reasons for its
superior antitumor activity relative to more basic acridines is that it
distributes relatively well in tumors. It also points to the potential
for using DACA-like chromophores as DNA targeting moieties for
delivering other agents to cells distant from blood vessels in solid tumors.
| |
Acknowledgments |
|---|
We thank Dianne M. Ferry for assistance with HPLC, Susan M. Pullen for culture of multilayers, and Dr. Brian D. Palmer for assistance with synthesis and identification of DACA-2H.
| |
Footnotes |
|---|
Accepted for publication February 1, 2001.
Received for publication November 6, 2000.
This study was supported by Fellowships from the New Zealand Lottery Grants Board (to K.O.H.) the Health Research Council of New Zealand (to W.R.W.), and a grant from the Cancer Society of New Zealand. The LC/MS system was purchased with funds from the Wellcome Trust and New Zealand Lottery Health Grants Board.
Send reprint requests to: Dr. Kevin O. Hicks, Experimental Oncology Group, Auckland Cancer Society Research Center, The University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland, New Zealand. E-mail: k.hicks{at}auckland.ac.nz
| |
Abbreviations |
|---|
MCL, multicellular layer;
HPLC, high-performance liquid chromatography;
DAPA, 9-[3-(dimethylamino)propylamino]acridine;
DACA, N-[2-(dimethylamino)-ethyl]acridine-4-carboxamide;
DACA-2H, N-[2-(dimethylamino)ethyl]-9,10-dihydroacridine-4-carboxamide;
LC/MS, liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry;
PK, pharmacokinetic;
AUC, area under the curve;
Rt, retention time;
Df, the diffusion coefficient of the free
drug;
Dm, Df in
the MCL;
Ds, Df
in the Teflon support membrane;
c1,0, initial concentration in the donor compartment at time 0;
c0, initial concentration in single cell
uptake and metabolism experiments;
ce, extracellular concentration;
ci, intracellular concentration;
cf, cb1,
cb2 are the
concentrations of free, nonsaturably bound and saturably bound drug,
respectively;
k1 and k
1, forward (association) and
reverse (dissociation) rate constants for nonsaturable binding;
k2 and k
2, the forward and reverse rate
constants for saturable binding;
Bmax, the total concentration of saturable binding sites;
kmet, the first order metabolic rate
constant;
khydr, the rate constant for
hydrolysis;
K1, the equilibrium
association constant for nonsaturable binding;
K2, the equilibrium dissociation
constant for saturable binding;
i, intracellular volume fraction;
A and B are the coefficients and
,
and Ka are
the absorption, distribution and elimination rate constants in the DACA
PK model for mouse plasma;
a, K, m,
and n are constants in the model for DACA cytotoxicity in
single cells.
| |
References |
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an in vitro tumour model.
Acta Oncol
36:
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