
Clinical Cancer Research Vol. 7, 343-349, February 2001
© 2001 American Association for Cancer Research
Experimental Therapeutics, Preclinical Pharmacology |
Possible Mechanisms of Diarrheal Side Effects Associated with the Use of a Novel Chemotherapeutic Agent, Flavopiridol1
Melissa E. S. Kahn,
Adrian Senderowicz,
Edward A. Sausville and
Kim E. Barrett2
Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Medicine, University of California, San Diego, School of Medicine, San Diego, California 92103 [M. E. S. K., K. E. B.], and Developmental Therapeutics Program Clinical Trials Unit, Medicine Branch, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland 20892 [A. S., E. A. S.]
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ABSTRACT
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The novel cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor flavopiridol has recently
completed Phase I trials for the treatment of refractory neoplasms. The
dose-limiting toxicity observed with this agent was severe diarrhea.
Because the compound otherwise showed promise, the present study sought
to determine possible mechanisms underlying the diarrheal side effects.
Flavopiridol was tested for its ability to modify chloride secretory
responses of the human colonic epithelial cell line, T84.
Studies were conducted in vitro in modified Ussing
chambers. High concentrations of flavopiridol (10-4
M), above those likely to be clinically relevant, had a
direct stimulatory effect on chloride secretion, probably ascribable to
an increase in cyclic AMP. Lower, clinically relevant concentrations of
flavopiridol (10-6 M) had no effect on
chloride secretion by themselves but potentiated responses to the
calcium-dependent secretagogue, carbachol. The drug also potentiated
responses to thapsigargin and taurodeoxycholate and reversed the
inhibitory effects of carbachol and epidermal growth factor on
calcium-dependent chloride secretion. Pretreatment with the cyclic
AMP-dependent secretagogue, forskolin, potentiated responses to
flavopiridol, but not vice versa. Thus, diarrheal side
effects induced by flavopiridol are likely multifactorial in origin and
may involve interactions with endogenous secretagogues such as
acetylcholine and bile acids. A better understanding of the diarrhea
induced by flavopiridol should allow optimization of therapy with this
otherwise promising drug and/or the development of related agents with
improved toxicity profiles.
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INTRODUCTION
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The external environment manipulates cellular proliferation and
differentiation by stimulating or inhibiting certain signal
transduction pathways that impinge on the cell cycle
(1, 2, 3)
. Each component of the cell cycle machinery, as a
final executor in cell division, has the potential to elicit or to
contribute to a neoplastic phenotype (4)
. When normal
cells sense external stimuli, such as contact inhibition, they stop
proliferating. However, in transformed cells, some of the controls
exerted on progression through the cell cycle are lost. Checkpoints at
the G1-S and G2-M
transitions are surveillance mechanisms that monitor the completion of
critical cell cycle transitions (5)
. In transformed cells,
these checkpoints are less stringent or even absent (6)
.
Because transformed cells have handicapped checkpoints, cancer has been
described as a cell cycle disease (6)
.
Cell division involves the recruitment of a group of serine/threonine
kinases, called
CDKs.3
These are activated and inactivated in an orderly manner at specific
time points throughout the cell cycle (6)
. The kinase
activity of CDKs is controlled by their association with cyclins,
proteins that are present at particular times in the cell cycle, as
well as by posttranslational modifications (4)
. To date,
nine CDKs have been discovered, each correlating with specific cyclins
during different stages of the cell cycle. Most of the cyclin-CDKs
complexes remain well-regulated in transformed cells, in terms of their
coordination with DNA replication and mitosis. What is lacking is the
ability to modulate the complexes in response to external factors and
to DNA damage, most obviously at the G1-S and
G2-M checkpoints. Approximately 90% of human
tumors are associated with aberrations in cell cycle signaling pathways
such as deletion of the retinoblastoma gene product (a tumor suppressor
that normally blocks cell cycle progression), deletion of CDK
inhibitors (such as p15 or p16), overexpression of cyclin D, or
amplification of cdk4 or cdk6 with consequent activation of the G1
kinase and retinoblastoma inactivation (1
, 2)
. Thus, CDKs
are attractive chemotherapeutic targets, and drugs that could act as
CDK inhibitors might be expected to be effective cytostatic drugs
(7)
.
Flavopiridol is a recently discovered agent that, at doses attained in
clinical settings, acts as a specific inhibitor of several CDKs
including cdk1, cdk2, cdk4, and cdk7 (8)
. As such, the
drug inhibits cell cycle progression in G1 and
G2 (8)
. Recent studies have also
revealed that flavopiridol also inhibits expression of cyclin D1, an
effect which would also contribute to the ability of the drug to cause
cell cycle arrest (9)
. At low concentrations, flavopiridol
is not toxic to resting or confluent cells in vitro.
However, at higher concentrations (
1 µM)
toxicity can occur in resting as well as cycling cells
(10)
. Initial clinical trials have suggested
antineoplastic effects of this agent against refractory cancers, in
particular prostate, renal, and colon cancers, as well as lymphoma
(11
, 12)
. The major dose-limiting toxicity of the drug was
severe diarrhea, which necessitated the cessation of treatment in some
cases (11
, 12)
. However, unlike diarrhea associated with
the use of more classical chemotherapeutic agents, the diarrheal side
effects of flavopiridol were associated with little or no apparent
damage to the intestinal epithelium and instead had "secretory"
electrolyte features (11)
. We therefore hypothesized that
flavopiridol might have direct effects on the chloride secretory
properties of epithelial cells, and that these effects might result in
diarrhea in vivo. The present study represents an in
vitro approach, using the human colonic epithelial cell line
T84, to test this hypothesis.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Materials.
Carbachol and forskolin (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, MO), EGF
(Genzyme, Cambridge, MA), genistein, and thapsigargin (LC Laboratories,
Woburn, MA) were purchased from the sources indicated. Taurodeoxycholic
acid was the generous gift of Dr. Alan Hofmann (University of
California, San Diego, CA). Flavopiridol was supplied by Dr. Jennifer
Dumont (Hoechst Marion Roussel, Bridgewater, NJ). All other reagents
used were of at least analytical grade and were obtained commercially.
Cells.
The human colonic epithelial cell line T84 was
used for all experiments in this study. Cells were maintained in
DME/F12 media with 5% newborn calf serum and in a humidified
atmosphere of 95% air, 5% CO2. For chloride
secretion experiments and cAMP assays, T84 cells
were seeded onto 12-mm Millicell-HA culture plate inserts (permeable
supports) and grown for 812 days. At the time of study, cell
monolayers had stable values of transepithelial resistance in excess of
1000
.cm2.
Measurement of Chloride Secretion.
Chloride secretory responses of T84 cell
monolayers grown on permeable supports were measured by mounting the
cells in modified Ussing chambers, as described previously
(13)
, and quantitated as changes in short circuit current
(Isc). Previous studies have shown that
Isc is wholly reflective of changes in
transepithelial chloride secretion in response to a variety of agonists
in this model (14
, 15)
. Studies were conducted under
short-circuited conditions except during brief intervals (35 s at
each time point) when the open circuit potential difference across the
monolayer was assessed. All studies were conducted in Ringers
solution (140 mM Na+, 5.2
mM K+, 1.2
mM Ca2+, 0.8
mM Mg2+, 119.8
mM Cl-, 25
mM HCO3-,
2.4 mM
H2PO4-, 0.4
mM HPO4-, and 10
mM glucose).
cAMP Assay.
cAMP was measured in lysates of stimulated or control cell monolayers
using a commercially available cAMP enzyme immunoassay kit (Amersham,
Arlington Heights, IL). Cells grown on Millipore inserts were rinsed
thoroughly with Ringers solution and allowed to equilibrate in this
solution at 37°C for 15 min. Cells were then stimulated with
flavopiridol (10-4 M) on the apical
side or forskolin (10-5 M) on the
apical and basolateral sides as a positive control for various times as
indicated by the experimental design. Ice-cold ethanol/Ringers (2:1,
v/v) solution was added to stop the reaction, and the lysates were kept
at -70°C for no longer than 24 h before completing the assay.
Statistical Analysis.
All data are expressed as means ± SE for a series of
experiments. Statistically significant differences between mean values
were analyzed by Students t test or ANOVA with Bonferroni
post-hoc tests, as appropriate.
 |
RESULTS
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Effect of Flavopiridol on Chloride Secretion.
We first examined whether flavopiridol alone could stimulate chloride
secretion across T84 cell monolayers. Various
doses of the drug were applied to either the apical or basolateral side
and any change in Isc noted. Flavopiridol
stimulated a slow but sustained chloride secretory response when
applied apically to T84 monolayers (Fig. 1)
. The maximal Isc response of 17.9 ±
1.6 µA/cm2 (n = 27) was
recorded at a dose of 10-4
M. Flavopiridol stimulated dose-dependent
increases in Isc when added to either the
apical or basolateral side of T84 cells, but the
apical response was more pronounced (data not shown). To determine the
mechanism of this direct effect on chloride secretion, cAMP levels were
measured. As shown in Fig. 2
, flavopiridol (10-4 M)
caused a significant increase in intracellular cAMP levels that was
similar to the increase in cAMP induced by forskolin, used as the
positive control. However, this dose of flavopiridol has a smaller
effect on Isc than does forskolin,
underscoring the complexity inherent in the regulation of chloride
secretion, and the fact that simple correlations between second
messenger levels and transport responses are not possible. Moreover,
the concentration of flavopiridol (10-4
M) that caused increases in
Isc and cAMP is considerably in excess of
blood levels of the drug measured in clinical settings (11
, 12)
; therefore, the significance of these findings is somewhat
unclear. At lower doses of flavopiridol (
10-6
M) that might be seen in patients treated with
the drug (11
, 12)
, flavopiridol had no direct effect on
chloride secretion (Isc < 1
µA/cm2) and no measurable effect on cAMP levels
(data not shown).

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Fig. 1. Effect of flavopiridol (10-4
M) on chloride secretion across monolayers of
T84 cells. Flavopiridol was added apically at 10 min
(arrow), and changes in chloride secretion were
monitored as short circuit current (Isc). Values are means
for 27 experiments; bars, SE.
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Fig. 2. Effect of flavopiridol (10-4
M) on cAMP levels in T84 cell monolayers. Cells
were either left untreated or treated with flavopiridol or forskolin
(10-5 M) as a positive control for 15 min.
cAMP levels in cell lysates were measured by ELISA, and are means for
six experiments; bars, SE. ***, significant
elevations compared with baseline values in untreated control cells,
P < 0.001 by ANOVA with Bonferroni post-hoc
test.
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Effect of Flavopiridol on Chloride Secretion Induced by
Calcium-dependent Agonists.
Because flavopiridol had little independent effect on chloride
secretion at clinically achievable doses, it was unlikely that its
direct effect on secretion could account for its diarrheal side
effects. We therefore tested whether flavopiridol might instead
potentiate responses to other known chloride secretagogues. Initial
studies focused on calcium-dependent agonists, such as the muscarinic
agonist carbachol (14)
. Pretreatment with flavopiridol led
to a significant potentiation of the secretory response to carbachol,
in that the response was both increased in magnitude and prolonged. As
shown in Fig. 3
, potentiation was seen at 10-4 M
flavopiridol, as well as at doses of the drug
(
10-6 M) that do not, by
themselves, cause significant chloride secretion. In fact, doses of
flavopiridol
10-9 M caused
significant potentiation of the response to carbachol (Fig. 3B)
.

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Fig. 3. Effect of flavopiridol on chloride secretion
induced by carbachol (CCh, 10-4
M). A, time course of chloride secretory
responses to carbachol in the absence ( ) or presence () of
flavopiridol (Flavo, 10-4 M).
Values are means for four experiments; bars, SE.
B, effect of various nonsecretory doses of flavopiridol
on chloride secretory responses to carbachol (10-4
M). Values are expressed as a percentage of the response
obtained in the absence of flavopiridol pretreatment and are means for
two to five experiments; bars, SE. *, values that
represent significant potentiation of the response to carbachol,
P < 0.05 by ANOVA with Bonferroni post-hoc test.
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To determine whether the ability of flavopiridol to potentiate
calcium-dependent secretory responses was specific for carbachol, other
secretagogues were also tested. Thus, cells were pretreated with
flavopiridol then stimulated with thapsigargin, an agent that elevates
intracellular calcium levels in a receptor-independent fashion
(15
, 16)
. As seen for carbachol, flavopiridol also
potentiated the chloride secretory response to thapsigargin (Fig. 4)
. This effect was also seen using lower doses of flavopiridol
(
10-9 M; data not shown).
Furthermore, the synergistic interaction between flavopiridol and
thapsigargin was still evident if the sequence of agonist addition was
reversed. Thus, pretreatment with thapsigargin also potentiated the
secretory response to flavopiridol (data not shown). We also questioned
whether flavopiridol might alter responses to bile acids, which are
endogenous calcium-dependent chloride secretagogues (17
, 18)
. As shown in Fig. 5
, flavopiridol significantly potentiated the secretory response to one
such bile acid, taurodeoxycholate, in T84 cells.
Again, the effect could also be reproduced with lower doses of
flavopiridol (data not shown).
Effect of Flavopiridol on Inhibition of Chloride Secretion Induced
by Carbachol or EGF.
Recent studies from our laboratory have shown that calcium-dependent
chloride secretory responses are also subject to a number of inhibitory
mechanisms that limit their duration and/or magnitude (19
, 20)
. Carbachol initially stimulates a secretory response, as
noted above, but then renders the cells refractory to further
stimulation by calcium-dependent agonists (16
, 21)
. In
contrast, EGF inhibits calcium-dependent chloride secretion without
itself acting as a stimulus of this process (22)
. At least
in theory, a drug such as flavopiridol might cause diarrhea not only by
stimulating or potentiating positive signals for chloride secretion but
also by attenuating negative influences on this process.
We therefore tested whether flavopiridol had any effect on muscarinic
receptor-mediated inhibition of calcium-dependent chloride secretion.
As expected (16)
, carbachol pretreatment inhibited the
subsequent chloride secretory response of T84
cells to a second calcium-dependent secretagogue, thapsigargin (Fig. 6)
. However, in the presence of flavopiridol, carbachol no longer
inhibited thapsigargin-induced chloride secretion (Fig. 6)
. Indeed, the
response to thapsigargin was increased to a comparable extent by
flavopiridol pretreatment whether or not carbachol was present. These
data suggest that flavopiridol is able to reverse completely the
inhibitory effect of carbachol on subsequent thapsigargin-induced
chloride secretion.

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Fig. 6. Increases in chloride secretion
( Isc) induced by thapsigargin
(TG) alone or after pretreatment with carbachol
(CCh, 10-4 M), flavopiridol
(Flavo, 10-4 M), or the
combination of carbachol plus flavopiridol. Values are means for 310
experiments; bars, SE. *, responses to TG that
differed from the response obtained with TG alone (*,
P < 0.05; **, P < 0.01 by
ANOVA with Bonferroni post-hoc test). The response to TG in the
presence of flavopiridol plus carbachol did not differ significantly
from that obtained in the presence of flavopiridol alone
(P > 0.05).
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Similarly, when EGF was added to T84 cells prior
to the addition of thapsigargin, there was no immediate effect of the
growth factor alone on basal chloride secretion, but the response to
thapsigargin was inhibited (Fig. 7)
. In the presence of flavopiridol, the response to thapsigargin in
cells pretreated with EGF did not differ significantly from that
obtained in cells treated with thapsigargin alone (Fig. 7)
. Thus, the
ability of flavopiridol to reverse the inhibitory effect of EGF on
chloride secretion could also contribute to excess chloride secretion
in vivo.

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Fig. 7. Increases in chloride secretion
( Isc) induced by thapsigargin
(TG) alone or after pretreatment with EGF (100 ng/ml),
flavopiridol (Flavo, 10-4 M),
or the combination of EGF plus flavopiridol. Values are means for three
to five experiments; bars, SE. *, responses to TG that
differed from the response obtained with TG alone (*,
P < 0.05; ***, P <
0.001 by ANOVA with Bonferroni post-hoc test). The response to TG in
the presence of flavopiridol plus EGF did not differ significantly from
that obtained in the presence of flavopiridol alone
(P > 0.05).
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Interaction of Flavopiridol with the cAMP-dependent Agonist,
Forskolin.
Finally, we tested the effect of flavopiridol on chloride secretory
responses to the cAMP-dependent agonist, forskolin. In contrast to
findings obtained with calcium-dependent stimuli of chloride secretion,
pretreatment with flavopiridol did not potentiate the secretory
response to forskolin; in this case, the response to forskolin was not
statistically different from that obtained with forskolin alone (data
not shown). Interestingly, however, pretreatment with forskolin
significantly potentiated a subsequent response to flavopiridol
(Fig. 8)
.

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Fig. 8. Chloride secretion induced by flavopiridol
(10-4 M) in the presence ( ) or absence
() of pretreatment with forskolin (Fsk,
10-5 M). Forskolin and flavopiridol were added
at the times illustrated by the arrows. Values are means
for four experiments; bars, SE. Where
bars are not shown, SEs are contained within the
symbols.
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DISCUSSION
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The experiments described in this report were designed to examine
the possibility that diarrheal side effects experienced by patients
taking flavopiridol could be related to alterations in chloride
secretion. In keeping with this hypothesis, flavopiridol was shown to
modify various aspects of chloride secretion in an in vitro
model, although some of the effects that were seen occurred at
concentrations of the drug that are likely to be in excess of any that
can be obtained clinically (11
, 12)
.
Flavopiridol is a flavonoid, and other known flavonoids such as
genistein are either direct chloride secretagogues at high doses or
potentiate responses to other stimuli at low doses
(23, 24, 25)
. In general, the ability of flavonoids to modify
chloride secretion in T84 cells as well as in
other systems has been ascribed to their ability to act as tyrosine
kinase inhibitors. Some studies, however, also suggest a direct effect
of the flavonoid genistein, at least, on CFTR chloride channels
localized to the apical membrane of epithelial cells (23)
.
Furthermore, we and others have determined that tyrosine kinase
activity, including that induced by binding of EGF to its receptor,
serves to limit calcium-dependent chloride secretion (22
, 26
, 27)
. The mechanism of this effect is still the subject of
investigation, although it appears likely to involve the tyrosine
kinase-dependent generation of inhibitory intracellular messengers such
as inositol 3,4,5,6-tetrakisphosphate and the products of
phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (20
, 25
, 27)
. In turn, these
intracellular mediators directly or indirectly inhibit the activity of
membrane chloride and potassium channels required for the overall
process of chloride secretion (20
, 28
, 29)
. It is
possible, therefore, that the ability of flavopiridol to potentiate
responses to calcium-dependent secretagogues and to reverse inhibitory
effects on chloride secretion might be related to some activity of the
compound as a tyrosine kinase inhibitor. However, previous studies on
this agent suggest that although flavopiridol can inhibit EGF receptor
tyrosine kinase activity, this effect occurs at concentrations of the
drug that do not correspond to the lower range of doses examined here
(IC50, 21 µM; Ref. 8
).
Similarly, flavopiridol does not inhibit binding of EGF to its
receptor, even at concentrations in excess of 2 mM
(8)
. In contrast, effects of flavopiridol on ErbB2 could
conceivably be involved in its diarrheal effects, because we have shown
that this receptor tyrosine kinase is pivotally involved in the
inhibitory effects of EGF on epithelial chloride secretion (30
, 31)
.
Alternative mechanisms of the effect of flavopiridol on chloride
secretion can be considered. The drug is a weak inhibitor of protein
kinase A (IC50, 122 µM; Ref.
8
), although this activity would be expected to decrease
chloride secretion rather than increase it (19)
. This
activity might, however, account for the intriguing observation that
pretreatment with forskolin potentiated responses to flavopiridol, but
not vice versa. However, at present, we do not have a
mechanistic understanding of this phenomenon. Alternatively, the
effects of flavopiridol may relate to its ability to inhibit protein
kinase C (IC50, 6 µM;
Ref. 8
) because we and others have shown that protein
kinase C activation also appears to limit calcium-dependent chloride
secretion via various mechanisms, including the generation of inositol
3,4,5,6-tetrakisphosphate and the inhibition of potassium channels
(29
, 32, 33, 34)
. However, an inhibitory effect of
flavopiridol on protein kinase C activity is unlikely to account for
the ability of the drug to reverse the inhibitory effect of carbachol
on chloride secretion, because prior studies have shown that this
effect is not reversed by the far more potent protein kinase C
inhibitor, staurosporine (32)
.
It is also possible that the actions of flavopiridol on chloride
secretion are somehow related to its relatively selective activity as
an inhibitor of cyclin-dependent kinases (8)
. The drug
inhibits cdk1 cdk2, cdk4, and cdk7 with IC50s in
the submicromolar range (8)
, certainly concentrations that
are comparable with the lower doses of flavopiridol that were studied
here. These kinases have been studied almost exclusively to date with
respect to their roles in controlling the cell cycle, and limited
information is available regarding other substrates for these kinases
that might participate in the control of alternate cellular functions.
However, cdk5, at least, has been shown to phosphorylate components of
the actin cytoskeleton (35)
. If this activity is shared by
other CDKs, it conceivably could alter chloride secretion in turn by
regulating the insertion of pumps, channels, and cotransporters into
the membrane (36, 37, 38, 39)
.
The ability of flavopiridol to potentiate the chloride secretory
response to taurodeoxycholate has an interesting clinical correlate. In
preliminary clinical studies with flavopiridol, it was discovered that
the administration of cholestyramine reduced the intensity of
patients diarrhea and in some cases, permitted escalation of the dose
of flavopiridol that could be given (11
, 12)
. In fact,
this therapeutic strategy was prompted, in part, by the in
vitro studies reported here, attesting to the validity of this
approach to understand the adverse effects encountered
(12)
. The clinical efficacy of cholestyramine might
reflect an ability of the resin to bind flavopiridol and its known
biliary metabolite, which would decrease the exposure of intestinal
epithelial cells to flavopiridol (11)
. However, it is also
tempting to speculate that at least part of the efficacy of
cholestyramine in this setting relates to removal of endogenous
secretagogues (i.e., secretory bile acids) that might
otherwise synergize with, and thereby uncover, a prosecretory action of
flavopiridol. Similarly, anecdotal evidence suggests that
flavopiridol-induced diarrhea could be diminished in some patients by
administration of anticholinergic drugs (11)
.
In summary, flavopiridol, a cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, has
demonstrated promising antineoplastic effects toward certain
malignancies (11
, 12)
. However, patients administered
flavopiridol experience severe diarrheal side effects (11
, 12)
. The current studies have shown that high doses of
flavopiridol directly stimulate chloride secretion across monolayers of
human colonocytes in modified Ussing chambers. This may be a result, at
least in part, of the ability of flavopiridol to raise intracellular
cAMP levels. Additionally, flavopiridol potentiates chloride secretory
responses to calcium-dependent agonists and reverses cellular
inhibitory mechanisms that normally limit the extent of
calcium-dependent chloride secretion. Because these latter actions of
flavopiridol can occur at doses that are clinically relevant (11
, 12)
, they may well contribute to the side effects seen in
patients treated with the drug. Whatever the intracellular/biochemical
mechanism(s) of these effects, they could certainly provide an
explanation as to why this medication causes severe diarrhea. A better
understanding of the diarrhea induced by flavopiridol should allow
optimization of therapy with this promising drug and/or the development
of related agents with improved toxicity profiles
(40)
.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
|
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We thank Anusha Sinha for expert technical assistance, Glenda
Wheeler for help with manuscript preparation, and Dr. Alan Hofmann
(University of California San Diego, San Diego, CA) and Dr. Jennifer
Dumont (Hoechst Marion Roussel, Bridgewater, NJ) for their gifts of
reagents used in these studies.
 |
FOOTNOTES
|
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
1 Supported by NIH Grant DK28305 (to K. E. B.),
with a supplement also provided by the National Cancer Institute and a
grant from Hoechst Marion Roussel. A portion of this work was presented
at an annual meeting of the American Gastroenterological Association
and has appeared in abstract form (Gastroenterology,
112: A404, 1997). 
2 To whom requests for reprints should be
addressed, at University of California San Diego Medical Center 8414,
200 West Arbor Drive, San Diego, CA 92103. Phone: (619) 543-3726; Fax:
(619) 543-6969; E-mail: kbarrett{at}ucsd.edu 
3 The abbreviations used are: CDK,
cyclin-dependent kinase; EGF, epidermal growth factor; cAMP, cyclic
AMP. 
Received 8/ 8/00;
revised 11/17/00;
accepted 11/21/00.
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