monensin and palmitoyl-rhizoxin

monensin has been researched along with palmitoyl-rhizoxin* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for monensin and palmitoyl-rhizoxin

ArticleYear
Delivery and cytotoxicity of RS-1541 in St-4 human gastric cancer cells in vitro by the low-density-lipoprotein pathway.
    Cancer chemotherapy and pharmacology, 1995, Volume: 36, Issue:1

    RS-1541 is a 13-O-palmitoyl derivative of rhizoxin, an inhibitor of tubulin polymerization. RS-1541 has been shown to bind preferentially to plasma lipoproteins and to exhibit selective and sustained uptake by tumors in mice. To elucidate a mechanism of RS-1541 cytotoxicity, the cellular uptake and the cytotoxicity of a complex of RS-1541 with human low-density lipoprotein (RS-1541/LDL complex) were investigated in cultured St-4 human gastric cancer cells. Both the cellular uptake and the cytotoxicity of the RS-1541/LDL complex were greater in cells with higher LDL-receptor activities than in control cells. Excess amounts of LDL or 1 microM of monensin, a proton ionophore, significantly inhibited both the uptake and the cytotoxicity of the complex. Chloroquine, an inhibitor of lysosomal enzymes, decreased the intracellular level of rhizoxin liberated from RS-1541 and suppressed the cytotoxicity of the RS-1541/LDL complex. However, a detergent-aided solution of RS-1541 showed very low cellular uptake and cytotoxicity, irrespective of the LDL-receptor activities of these cells. These results demonstrate that the RS-1541/LDL complex is incorporated into the cells via the LDL receptor and that it manifests its cytotoxic activity after forming rhizoxin, the original antitumor agent, in the lysosomes.

    Topics: Antibiotics, Antineoplastic; Chloroquine; Drug Carriers; Drug Interactions; Humans; Lactones; Lipoproteins, LDL; Monensin; Stomach Neoplasms; Tumor Cells, Cultured

1995