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Anti-Neoplastic Cytotoxicity of Gemcitabine-(C(4)-amide)-[anti-EGFR] in Dual-combination with Epirubicin-(C(3)-amide)-[anti-HER2/neu] against Chemotherapeutic-Resistant Mammary Adenocarcinoma (SKBr-3) and the Complementary Effect of Mebendazole

AIMS: Delineate the feasibility of simultaneous, dual selective “targeted” chemotherapeutic delivery and determine if this molecular strategy can promote higher levels anti-neoplastic cytotoxicity than if only one covalent immunochemotherapeutic is selectively “targeted” for delivery at a single mem...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Coyne, CP, Jones, Toni, Bear, Ryan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4381351/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25844392
http://dx.doi.org/10.17303/jcrto.2014.203
Descripción
Sumario:AIMS: Delineate the feasibility of simultaneous, dual selective “targeted” chemotherapeutic delivery and determine if this molecular strategy can promote higher levels anti-neoplastic cytotoxicity than if only one covalent immunochemotherapeutic is selectively “targeted” for delivery at a single membrane associated receptor over-expressed by chemotherapeutic-resistant mammary adenocarcinoma. METHODOLOGY: Gemcitabine and epirubicin were covalently bond to anti-EGFR and anti-HER2/neu utilizing a rapid multi-phase synthetic organic chemistry reaction scheme. Determination that 96% or greater gemcitabine or epirubicin content was covalently bond to immunoglobulin fractions following size separation by micro-scale column chromatography was established by methanol precipitation analysis. Residual binding-avidity of gemcitabine-(C(4)-amide)-[anti-EG-FR] applied in dual-combination with epirubicin-(C(3)-amide)-[anti-HER2/neu] was determined by cell-ELIZA utilizing chemotherapeutic-resistant mammary adenocarcinoma (SKBr-3) populations. Lack of fragmentation or polymerization was validated by SDS-PAGE/immunodetection/chemiluminescent autoradiography. Anti-neoplastic cytotoxic potency was determined by vitality stain analysis of chemotherapeutic-resistant mammary adenocarcinoma (SKBr-3) monolayers known to uniquely over-express EGFR (2 × 10(5)/cell) and HER2/neu (1 × 10(6)/cell) receptor complexes. The covalent immunochemotherapeutics gemcitabine-(C(4)-amide)-[anti-EGFR] and epirubicin-(C(3)-amide)-[anti-HER2/neu] were applied simultaneously in dual-combination to determine their capacity to collectively evoke elevated levels of anti-neoplastic cytotoxicity. Lastly, the tubulin/microtubule inhibitor mebendazole evaluated to determine if it’s potential to complemented the anti-neoplastic cytotoxic properties of gemcitabine-(C4-amide)-[anti-EGFR] in dual-combination with epirubicin-(C(3)-amide)-[anti-HER2/neu]. RESULTS: Dual-combination of gemcitabine-(C(4)-amide)-[anti-EGFR] with epirubicin-(C(3)-amide)-[anti-HER2/neu] produced greater levels of anti-neoplastic cytotoxicity than either of the covalent immunochemotherapeutics alone. The benzimidazole microtubule/tubulin inhibitor, mebendazole complemented the anti-neoplastic cytotoxicity of gemcitabine-(C(4)-amide)-[anti-EGFR] in dual-combination with epirubicin-(C(3)-amide)-[anti-HER2/neu]. CONCLUSIONS: The dual-combination of gemcitabine-(C(4)-amide)-[anti-EGFR] with epirubicin-(C(3)-amide)-[anti-HER2/neu] produced higher levels of selectively “targeted” anti-neoplastic cytotoxicity against chemotherapeutic-resistant mammary adenocarcinoma (SKBr-3) than either covalent immunochemotherapeutic alone. The benzimidazole tubulin/microtubule inhibitor, mebendazole also possessed anti-neoplastic cytotoxicity against chemotherapeutic-resistant mammary adenocarcinoma (SKBr-3) and complemented the potency and efficacy of gemcitabine-(C(4)-amide)-[anti-EGFR] in dual-combination with epirubicin-(C(3)-amide)-[anti-HER2/neu].