V. Holl, D. Coelho, D. Weltin
Sep 1, 2000
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Influential Citations
22
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Journal
Anticancer research
Abstract
Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) is involved in the cellular responses to genotoxic damage and its inhibition has been proposed as potentiating anticancer drug activity. Here, we evaluated the ability of the PARP inhibitor, 6(5H)-phenanthridinone, to modulate the antiproliferative activity of bleomycin, carmustin and doxorubicin in a murine (RDM4) and a human (U937) lymphoma cell lines. 6(5H)-phenanthridinone was shown to suppress PARP activity with the same potency in both cell lines. At 25 microM, this compound potentiated the activity of carmustin in RDM4 but not in U937 cells. In contrast, 6(5H)-phenanthridinone failed to affect the doxorubicin toxicity in murine lymphoma cells, whereas it prevented the cytotoxicity of this drug in the human cell line. Altogether, these findings indicated that 6(5H)-phenanthridinone modulates the cytotoxicity of anticancer agents differently according to the cell type and the drug. Therefore, this PARP inhibitor could be considered as the prototype of a new class of adjuncts in cancer chemotherapy.