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Vol. 297, Issue 2, 524-530, May 2001
Indiana University Cancer Center (E.L.K., N.L., K.C., L.C.E.),
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology (E.L.K., N.L., L.C.E.),
Herman B Wells Center for Pediatric Research, Department of Pediatrics
(Z.L.), and Department of Medicine (K.C.), Indiana
University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana
Previous studies have demonstrated that optimal reversal of
1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea (BCNU) resistance requires complete inactivation of the DNA repair protein
O6-methylguanine DNA methyltransferase
(MGMT) for at least 24 h following BCNU administration. In
preparation for clinical trials at this institution, this study was
undertaken to compare the efficacy of a conventional single-bolus dose
versus double-bolus dose treatments with
O6-benzylguanine (BG) in depleting MGMT
activity in vivo. In xenograft human glioma SF767 tumors, a single
30-mg/kg bolus dose of BG completely inhibited MGMT activity for at
least 8 h, but approximately 50% of the basal MGMT activity
recovered within 24 h. To sustain the MGMT depletion for 24 h, a second bolus injection of BG at escalating doses was administered
8 h after the first dose. Second bolus doses of 5, 10, and 15 mg/kg BG attenuated the MGMT recovery in a dose-dependent manner
compared with the single 30-mg/kg BG dose alone. When the 15-mg/kg BG
dose was administered 8 h after the 30-mg/kg initial dose, MGMT
activity was completely inactivated in the tumor xenografts for 24 h. This double-bolus BG treatment also depleted MGMT activity in normal
murine tissues, including the liver, kidney, lung, brain, spleen, and
bone marrow; and the kinetics of MGMT recovery varied among these
tissues. When combined with BCNU treatment, the double-bolus BG
treatment would be expected to produce greater antitumor activity in
future trials than the conventional single-bolus BG treatment.
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