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Clinical Cancer Research Vol. 6, 643-653, February 2000
© 2000 American Association for Cancer Research


Experimental Therapeutics, Preclinical Pharmacology

Methionine Depletion Enhances the Antitumoral Efficacy of Cytotoxic Agents in Drug-resistant Human Tumor Xenografts1

F. Poirson-Bichat, R. A. Bras Gonçalves, L. Miccoli, B. Dutrillaux and M. F. Poupon2

Institut Curie, UMR 147 CNRS-Institut Curie, 75231 Paris Cedex 05, France

Efficacy of chemotherapy is limited in numerous tumors by specific cellular mechanisms that inactivate cytotoxic antitumoral drugs, such as ATP-dependent drug efflux and/or drug detoxification by glutathione. In reducing ATP pools and/or glutathione synthesis, it might be possible to enhance the efficacy of drugs affected by such resistance mechanisms. Reduction of the ATP pool and glutathione content is achievable in cancer cells by depleting the exogenous methionine (Met) supply and ethionine. Thus, the rationale for the present study was to use Met depletion to decrease the ATP and glutathione pools so as to sensitize tumors refractory to cytotoxic anticancer drugs. Met depletion was achieved by feeding mice a methionine-free diet supplemented with homocysteine. The effects of Met depletion combined with ethionine and/or chemotherapeutic agents were studied using human solid cancers xenografted into nude mice. TC71-MA (a colon cancer) SCLC6 (a small cell lung cancer), and SNB19 (a glioma) were found to be refractory to cisplatin, doxorubicin, and carmustine, respectively. These three drugs are used to treat such tumors and are dependent for their activity on the lack of cellular ATP- or glutathione-dependent mechanisms of resistance. TC71-MA, SCLC6, and SNB19 were Met dependent because their proliferation in vitro and growth in vivo were reduced by Met depletion. Cisplatin was inactive in the treatment of TC71-MA colon cancer, whereas a methionine-free diet, alone or in combination with ethionine, prolonged the survival of mice by 2-fold and 2.8-fold, respectively. When all three approaches were combined, survival was prolonged by 3.3-fold. Doxorubicin did not affect the growth of SCLC6, a MDR1-MRP-expressing tumor. A Met-deprived diet and ethionine slightly decreased SCLC6 growth and, in combination with doxorubicin, an inhibition of 51% was obtained, with survival prolonged by 1.7-fold. Combined treatment produced greater tumor growth inhibition (74%) in SCLC6-Dox, a SCLC6 tumor pretreated with doxorubicin. Growth of SNB19 glioma was not inhibited by carmustine, but when it was combined with Met depletion, survival duration was prolonged by 2-fold, with a growth inhibition of 80%. These results indicate the potential of Met depletion to enhance the antitumoral effects of chemotherapeutic agents on drug-refractory tumors.




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