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Published in: Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology 2/2019

01-08-2019 | Epigenetics | Original Article

Exposure time versus cytotoxicity for anticancer agents

Authors: David M. Evans, Jianwen Fang, Thomas Silvers, Rene Delosh, Julie Laudeman, Chad Ogle, Russell Reinhart, Michael Selby, Lori Bowles, John Connelly, Erik Harris, Julia Krushkal, Larry Rubinstein, James H. Doroshow, Beverly A. Teicher

Published in: Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology | Issue 2/2019

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Abstract

Purpose

Time is a critical factor in drug action. The duration of inhibition of the target or residence time of the drug molecule on the target often guides drug scheduling.

Methods

The effects of time on the concentration-dependent cytotoxicity of approved and investigational agents [300 compounds] were examined in the NCI60 cell line panel in 2D at 2, 3, 7 and in 3D 11 days.

Results

There was a moderate positive linear relationship between data from the 2-day NCI60 screen and the 3-, 7- and 11-day and a strong positive linear relationship between 3-, 7- and 11-day luminescence screen IC50s by Pearson correlation analysis. Cell growth inhibition by agents selective for a specific cell cycle phase plateaued when susceptible cells were growth inhibited or killed. As time increased the depth of cell growth inhibition increased without change in the IC50. DNA interactive agents had decreasing IC50s with increasing exposure time. Epigenetic agents required longer exposure times; several were only cytotoxic after 11 days’ exposure. For HDAC inhibitors, time had little or no effect on concentration response. There were potency differences amongst the three BET bromodomain inhibitors tested, and an exposure duration effect. The PARP inhibitors, rucaparib, niraparib, and veliparib reached IC50s < 10 μM in some cell lines after 11 days.

Conclusions

The results suggest that variations in compound exposure time may reflect either mechanism of action or compound chemical half-life. The activity of slow-acting compounds may optimally be assessed in spheroid models that can be monitored over prolonged incubation times.
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Metadata
Title
Exposure time versus cytotoxicity for anticancer agents
Authors
David M. Evans
Jianwen Fang
Thomas Silvers
Rene Delosh
Julie Laudeman
Chad Ogle
Russell Reinhart
Michael Selby
Lori Bowles
John Connelly
Erik Harris
Julia Krushkal
Larry Rubinstein
James H. Doroshow
Beverly A. Teicher
Publication date
01-08-2019
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Keyword
Epigenetics
Published in
Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology / Issue 2/2019
Print ISSN: 0344-5704
Electronic ISSN: 1432-0843
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00280-019-03863-w

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