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The FASEB Journal Express Article doi:10.1096/fj.05-4452fje
Published online February 2, 2006

Nitric oxide modulates proapoptotic and antiapoptotic properties of chemotherapy agents: the case of NO-pegylated epirubicin

Luca Santucci, Andrea Mencarelli, Barbara Renga, Gianfranco Pasut, Francesco Veronese, Antonella Zacheo, Antonia Germani, and Stefano Fiorucci

E-mail contact: lsant{at}unipg.it

The use of the anthracycline epirubicin (EPI) is limited by the risk of a dilatory congestive heart failure that develops as a consequence of induction of a mitochondrial-dependent cardiomyocyte and endothelial cell apoptosis. Nitric oxide (NO) increases the antitumoral activity of several chemotherapics, while it provides protection against apoptosis induced by oxidative stress both in endothelial cells and cardiomyocytes. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether the addition of an NO-releasing moiety to a pegylated derivative of EPI (p-EPI-NO) confers to the drug a different cytotoxic profile against tumoral and normal cells. The cytotoxic profile of the drugs was investigated in Caco-2 cell line, in embryonic rat heart-derived myoblasts (H9c2), in adult cardiomyocytes, and in endothelial cells (HUVEC). p-EPI-NO was more efficient than EPI in inducing Caco-2 cell apoptosis, while it spared HUVEC, H9c2 cells and adult cardiomyocytes from EPI-induced toxicity. Exposure of cells to p-EPI-NO resulted in a NO-mediated inhibition of cellular respiration followed by mitochondrial membrane depolarization and cell death in Caco-2 cells but not in HUVEC and H9c2 cells in which mitochondrial membrane polarization was maintained at the expense of glycolytically generated ATP. These findings indicate that addition of an NO-releasing moiety to p-EPI increases the anti-neoplastic activity of the drug, while it reduces its cytotoxicity against nonneoplastic cells.

Key words: anthracycline-induced miocardiopathy • cell apoptosis • HUVEC • mitochondrial membrane depolarization • colon cancer cells




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