
[Cancer Research 60, 3338-3342, July 1, 2000]
© 2000 American Association for Cancer Research
Exisulind Induction of Apoptosis Involves Guanosine 3',5'-Cyclic Monophosphate Phosphodiesterase Inhibition, Protein Kinase G Activation, and Attenuated ß-Catenin
W. Joseph Thompson1,
Gary A. Piazza,
Han Li,
Li Liu,
John Fetter,
Bing Zhu,
Gerhard Sperl,
Dennis Ahnen and
Rifat Pamukcu
Cell Pathways, Inc., Horsham, Pennsylvania 19044 [W. J. T., G. A. P., H. L., L. L., J. F., G. S., R. P.]; Department of Pharmacology, University of South Alabama College of Medicine, Mobile, Alabama 36688 [W. J. T., B. Z.]; and University of Colorado and the Denver Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Denver, Colorado 80220 [D. A.]
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ABSTRACT
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Sulindac sulfone (exisulind), although a nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory drug derivative, induces apoptosis in tumor cells by
a mechanism that does not involve cyclooxygenase inhibition. SW480
colon tumor cells contain guanosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cGMP)
phosphodiesterase (PDE) isoforms of the PDE5 and
PDE2 gene families that are inhibited by
exisulind and new synthetic analogues. The analogues maintain rank
order of potency for PDE inhibition, apoptosis induction, and growth
inhibition. A novel mechanism for exisulind to induce apoptosis is
studied involving sustained increases in cGMP levels and cGMP-dependent
protein kinase (PKG) induction not found with selective PDE5 or most
other PDE inhibitors. Accumulated ß-catenin, shown to be a substrate
for PKG, is decreased by exisulind, suggesting a mechanism to explain
apoptosis induction in neoplastic cells harboring adenomatous polyposis
coli gene mutations.
 |
Introduction
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Chemotherapeutic and chemopreventive agents such as sulindac
and similar
NSAIDs2
induce apoptosis (1
, 2)
. Exisulind, the oxidative
metabolite of sulindac, induces apoptosis and inhibits growth of tumor
cell lines of diverse origins (3, 4, 5)
, suggesting that an
important survival pathway is modified by the drug. Exisulind is not an
NSAID because it lacks the hallmark cyclooxygenase inhibitory
activities of NSAIDs (6)
. The mechanism of
exisulind-induced apoptosis is independent of p53, Bcl-2, and cell
cycle arrest (4
, 5)
. Exisulind inhibits tumor growth in
rodent models of colon, mammary, prostate, bladder, and lung
carcinogenesis (3
, 6, 7, 8)
. We report here studies
indicating that exisulind induces apoptosis in colon tumor cells by
inhibiting cGMP PDE, causing a persistent increase in cellular cGMP,
and inducing PKG. This approach has led to the development of a novel
new class of chemopreventive and antineoplastic drugs that lack
NSAID-induced gastrointestinal, renal, and hematological toxicities.
However, exisulind did show dose-limiting toxicity of mild to moderate
hepatic enzyme elevations in some FAP patients that was reversible on
dose reduction.
Cyclic nucleotide PDEs consist of 10 gene families, each having
one or more isoforms. These enzymes are being used as pharmaceutical
targets for new drugs designed to manipulate cellular processes
modulated by cAMP and/or cGMP (9, 10, 11, 12)
. PDE inhibitors
influence many pathologies, but their use as anticancer agents has not
been developed (13
, 14)
. The majority of PDE isozyme
inhibitors are not proapoptotic in epithelial-derived tumor cells,
although inhibitors of PDE1 and PDE4 isoforms induce apoptosis in
lymphoid cells (14
, 15)
. We found that like exisulind,
nonselective PDE5 inhibitors MY5445 and dipyridamole induced apoptosis
in HT29, SW480, and T84 human colon tumor cell lines used for these
studies. Therefore, the hypothesis that exisulind may induce apoptosis
via cGMP PDE inhibition was tested.
 |
Materials and Methods
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Cell Growth.
SW480 and HT29 cells were grown in RPMI 1640, 2 mM
glutamine, 1% antibiotic/antimycotic solution, and 5% FBS in
150-cm2 flasks or dishes. SW480 cells were also
grown in Corning 850-cm2 roller bottles with the
addition of 25 mM HEPES for the fast protein liquid
chromatography profile. T84 cells were grown in 47% ATCC Hams F-12
media, 47% Sigma DMEM, 1% antibiotic/antimycotic solution, 8.4
mM sodium bicarbonate, and 5% serum, pH 7.25. Cell lines
were grown using serum from Sigma in 5% CO2 at
37°C. Cells were harvested at 70100% confluence with either
Trypsin/EDTA (Life Technologies, Inc.) or Pancreatin (Life
Technologies, Inc.) and either used fresh or were frozen on liquid
nitrogen and stored at -70°C.
Protein Purification.
SW480 cells were grown in roller bottles at 0.5 rpm. Approximately 600
million cells were manually homogenized in 5 mM
Tris-acetate, 5 mM magnesium acetate, 0.1 mM
EDTA, 0.8% Triton X-100, 10 µM benzamidine, 10
µM
N-
-p-tosyl-L-lysine chloromethyl
ketone (TLCK), 2000 units/ml aprotinin, 2 µM
leupeptin, and 2 µM pepstatin A (pH 7.5). After
ultracentrifugation at 100,000 x g at 4°C
for 1 h, supernatants were diluted 5-fold with the buffer
minus Triton and loaded at 1 ml/min onto an 18-ml DEAE Trisacryl M
column (BioSepra) using Pharmacia AKTA/fast protein liquid
chromatography. The column was washed with 8 mM
TRIS-acetate, 5 mM magnesium acetate, and 0.1
mM EDTA (pH 7.5). Enzymes were eluted with a
gradient of 01 M sodium acetate at a flow rate
of 1 ml/min into 1.5-ml fractions.
Apoptosis and Cell Growth Inhibition.
DNA fragmentation in SW480 cells at 10,000 cells/well in 96-well plates
was measured using a double antibody ELISA kit (Boehringer Mannheim)
that detects DNA/histone complexes. After 24 h, cells were dosed
and grown for an additional 48 h. Growth inhibition was determined
by plating cells at 1000 cells/well in 96-well plates. Cells were dosed
after 24 h and incubated for 6 days. Cells were fixed with 10%
trichloroacetic acid at 4°C for 1 h, rinsed five times with
deionized H2O, and incubated for 10 min with
0.4% sulforhodamine B in 1% acetic acid. Plates were rinsed four
times with 1% acetic acid, dried 30 min, and solubilized in 10
mM Tris. Absorbance was determined at 540 nM
using a Molecular Devices Spectra Max 340 plate reader.
cGMP and cAMP RIA.
cGMP and cAMP levels were measured by RIA. Approximately
5 x 106 cells were used for each
assay. After drug treatment, cells were washed with cold PBS. Cyclic
nucleotides were extracted with 0.2 N HCl/50% methanol and
dried. The dried samples were reconstituted in water and acetylated
before RIA with anti-cGMP and anti-cAMP antibodies. The results were
expressed in fmol of cGMP/cAMP generated per mg protein of the cells.
PKG Activation.
SW480 cells were treated with compounds for 48 h, and PKG activity
was measured using a substrate of cloned GST fusion protein of a
fragment of human PDE5 bound to GSH-Sepharose affinity beads. The PDE5
fragment contains its phosphorylation site (Ser-92) and cGMP binding
domains (residue 35530, relative to bovine PDE5). Cell lysate (100
µg), substrate (20 µg), 0.25 µM protein kinase
inhibitor, 4.5 mM magnesium, and
[
-32P]ATP (10 µCi; 190 µM)
with or without added cGMP (8 µM) were mixed and
incubated at 30°C for 30 min. The phosphorylated GST-cGB-PDE5 was
resolved on 7.5% SDS-PAGE and exposed to X-ray film or quantitated by
phosphorimaging (Packard Cyclone).
Western Blotting.
SW480 cells were treated for 48 h and lysed with modified RIPA
buffer. Fifty µg of lysate were loaded to each lane of 10% precast
Novex gels. The transferred membrane was probed with the primary
antibody and then with the corresponding horseradish
peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibodies. Western blotting results
were quantitated using an AlphaImager 2000 (Alpha Innotech). Anti-PKG
1ß, anti-ß-catenin, and anti-cyclin D1 antibodies were purchased
from StressGen Biotechnologies Corp. (British Columbia, Canada),
Upstate Biotechnology (Lake Placid, NY), and NeoMarkers, Inc. (Fremont,
CA), respectively.
 |
Results and Discussion
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Cyclic nucleotide PDE isoforms in SW480 colon cell lysates
fractionated by anion-exchange chromatography showed expression of
isoforms that were cGMP specific (peak 1), cAMP specific (peak 3), and
cAMP/cGMP hydrolyzing (peak 2; Fig. 1A
). These PDEs showed no calcium/calmodulin stimulation or
cGMP inhibition, indicating little or no PDE1 or PDE3 isoforms. The
cGMP activity of peak 1, but not of peak 2 (Fig. 1B)
, was
inhibited by 100 nM E4021
(IC50, 3 nM), a specific
inhibitor of PDE5, and by sildenafil (IC50, 0.3
nM), dipyridamole (IC50,
0.6 µM), and zaprinast
(IC50, 1.5 µM), also PDE5
inhibitors (11)
. The cAMP activity of peak 2 was
stimulated by cGMP (Fig. 1a)
, cGMP activity of peak 2 showed
positive cooperativity (5 µM versus
0.25 µM cGMP substrate; inset), and
peak 2 was inhibited by trequinsin and EHNA
(IC50s, 1.0 and 3.7 µM),
characteristic of PDE2 (16)
. In contrast to the more
selective PDE inhibitors, exisulind inhibited both cGMP PDE activities
[Fig. 1B
; IC50s, 128 ± 26 µM and 335 ± 67
µM (n = 6),
respectively, at 0.25 µM cGMP substrate]. HT29
and T84 cells showed various expressions of the same isoforms with
comparable inhibitory responses to exisulind. Most of the cAMP activity
of peak 3 was inhibited by rolipram and confirmed by reverse
transcription-PCR as PDE4 (A-D) genes
(data not shown). Despite these enzyme expression patterns, reverse
transcription-PCR analysis of SW480, T84, and HT29 colon tumor cell
lines showed mRNA for all PDE110 families, suggesting important
posttranslational regulation of PDE expression (primers available on
request).

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Fig. 1. DEAE-Trisacryl M chromatography of SW480 cGMP and
cAMP phosphodiesterases. Enzymes were eluted from DEAE with a gradient
of 01 M sodium acetate at a flow rate of 1 ml/min into
1.5-ml fractions. [3H]cAMP or [3H]cGMP
substrate was used to determine PDE activity according to Thompson
et al. (38)
. Two peaks of activity were
present at 0.25 µM (B) or 5
µM cGMP (A) with peak 2 displaying cGMP
activation, determined to be positive cooperativity (inset
B). A, peak 2 also had cAMP activity that was
activated by 5 µM cGMP, indicative of PDE2.
B, peak 1, not peak 2, cGMP PDE was inhibited by 100
nM E4021, indicative of PDE5. Both cGMP peaks were
inhibited by exisulind.
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Inhibition of SW480 PDE5 and PDE2 by exisulind occurred at
concentrations below those required to inhibit tumor cell growth at 6
days of treatment (IC50, 165 ± 25
µM) and induce apoptosis after 2 days of treatment
(EC50, 557 ± 45 µM;
Fig. 2
). Because exisulind blood levels above these
IC50s have been achieved in vivo
(6)
, inhibition of one or both of these enzymes could
account for the antineoplastic activity of exisulind. This possibility
was strongly supported by finding that derivatives of exisulind
screened by structure/PDE5/2 inhibitory activity analyses led to the
identification of a trimethoxy acid (CP78) and benzylamide (CP461 and
CP248) analogues that show a >1000-fold range of inhibitory activity.
The compounds maintained similar rank orders of potency for apoptosis
induction and PDE5 and growth inhibitions as did exisulind (Fig. 2)
.
Isoform selectivity for PDE5 and PDE2 increased in parallel for
exisulind and analogues that were without COX1 or COX2 inhibitory
activity up to 1 mM, indicating that potent
proapoptotic drugs can be identified independently of cyclooxygenase
activity.

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Fig. 2. Correlation between rank order potency of cGMP PDE
inhibition and apoptosis induction. DNA fragmentation in SW480 cells at
10,000 cells/well in 96-well plates was measured using a double
antibody ELISA kit. Upper left, cells were treated for
48 h with increasing concentrations of exisulind, a trimethoxy
acid (CP78), or benzylamide analogues (CP461 and CP248). Apoptosis data
are normalized from 4 to 15 full curves with triplicates of each dose.
Upper right, cyclic GMP PDE inhibition data from 2 to 6
full curves using different batches of DEAE-purified PDE5.
EC50s and IC50s were calculated using sigmoidal
dose-response, variable slope, nonlinear regression in Prizm
(Graph-Pad); bars, SE.
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Exisulind has been shown to cause regression of colorectal polyps
in patients with FAP by a mechanism involving apoptosis
(17)
. In addition, mucus differentiation was stimulated by
the drug in cells of adenomatous glands in biopsies of regressing
polyps. Germ-line mutations in the APC tumor suppressor gene are known
in FAP, and somatic APC mutations occur commonly in sporadic adenomas
(18, 19, 20)
. APC mutations are thought to be carcinogenic in
part because of ß-catenin/Tcf4/Lef transcriptional activation. Normal
APC protein mediates phosphorylation by GSK3-ß and
ubiquitin/proteosomal degradation of ß-catenin (21, 22, 23)
.
APC mutations result in cytoplasmic and nuclear ß-catenin
accumulations, leading to transcription factor complex deregulation and
activation of antiapoptotic and proliferation genes such as
cyclin D1 and c-myc (24
, 25)
. The
efficacy of exisulind in FAP patients and reports that transfection of
a wild-type APC gene into cells with mutations could induce
apoptosis (26)
and ß-catenin degradation
(27)
suggested the possibility that exisulind may induce
apoptosis by circumventing the ß-catenin accumulations. We tested the
hypothesis that exisulind inhibition of cGMP PDE increases cGMP levels
to down-regulate ß-catenin, possibly via PKG phosphorylation to
initiate apoptosis.
Because cGMP PDE inhibition by exisulind and analogues correlated with
apoptosis, cellular cGMP changes after drug treatment were determined.
Representative, selective PDE5 inhibitors, E4021 and zaprinast, that do
not induce apoptosis were also studied. Exisulind and CP461 treatments
require 2448 h to initiate apoptosis measured by DNA fragmentation.
In the short-term (<60 min), cGMP was increased by exisulind (Fig. 3)
and CP461 (139 ± 17 to 316 ± 60
fmol/mg), but only E4021 (139 ± 17 to 327 ± 60) and not zaprinast of the more selective PDE5 inhibitors was
effective. Furthermore, exisulind and CP461, but not E4021, increases
in cGMP persisted to 72 h at doses required for apoptosis (Fig. 3, A and B)
. Cyclic AMP levels remained constant
throughout treatment with exisulind and CP461, indicating a minimal
effect on PDE4 and selectivity for cGMP PDEs in the intact cell (Fig. 3B)
. E4021 and zaprinast showed no significant cGMP or cAMP
changes (Fig. 3C)
, except for an increase in cAMP at 72 h at doses well above their enzyme inhibition constants. T84 colon
tumor cells also responded to exisulind and CP461 with increased cGMP,
absent cAMP changes at concentrations needed to effect apoptosis and
growth. The data may reflect unknown metabolic changes in E4021 or
zaprinast but suggest that exisulind and higher affinity analogues,
unlike the more selective PDE5 drugs, inhibit PDE5/2 to sustain
increased cGMP levels in colon cancer cells to trigger apoptosis.

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Fig. 3. RIA of exisulind-treated colon cancer cells detected
elevated cGMP but not cAMP. SW480 cells (1 x 106) were plated on 100-mm dishes; drugs were added after 2
days of growth for the times and doses indicated, followed by a rapid
wash, 0.2 N HCl/50% methanol extraction, and drying.
Cyclic nucleotides were acetylated and measured by RIA
(39)
. A, time course shows exisulind and
CP461 elevated cGMP at 172 h. Data are means from three to five
experiments with four replicates in each; bars, SE.
B, dose response of CP461 at 72 h shows increased
cGMP but not cAMP. C, E4021 and zaprinast dose responses
at 72 h do not show elevated cGMP or cAMP. B and
C are representative experiments with four replicates at
each dose with the * indicating P < 0.05 by unpaired, two-tailed t tests. D,
guanylate cyclase activator, YC-1, induces apoptosis and growth
inhibition with similar doses (D0.5, 1.4 and 1.9).
Experiments were determined as indicated in the legend to Fig. 2
.
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To determine whether persistent rather than transient cGMP
increases are sufficient for induction of apoptosis, cells were treated
with the GC activator, YC-1 (28)
or cGMP analogues. YC-1
treatment of SW480 cells inhibited growth and induced apoptosis at
doses required to activate guanylate cyclase (Fig. 3D)
.
Furthermore, the analogue 8-bromo-cGMP also induced apoptosis measured
by morphology assays after 7 days of treatment (data not shown).
Possible cGMP-mediated apoptosis is supported by previous reports in
rat myocytes (29)
, pancreatic B-cells (30)
,
and endothelial cells (31)
and data showing PKG
transfection increased cell sensitivity to apoptosis inducers
(32)
.
The effect of exisulind-induced cGMP on SW480 cell PKG activity
was studied using an affinity bead-bound-specific substrate assay (Fig. 4, A and B)
of supernatants from exisulind and
vehicle-treated cells with or without cGMP added in vitro.
Exisulind (600 µM), but not E4021 (10
µM), increased PKG activity 5-fold, as
determined by phosphorimaging. Exisulind had no effect on activity
in vitro when added directly to purified PKG or cell
supernatants, indicating a mechanism requiring the intact cell. cGMP
added in vitro increased substrate phosphorylation,
confirming that PKG, and not another kinase, was increased by
exisulind. The increased intensity of substrate phosphorylation in the
absence of added cGMP attributable to exisulind treatment (Fig. 4A)
was attributable to increased expression of PKG protein
because Western blots using antibodies to PKG-1ß showed
dose-dependent induction of PKG immunoreactivity by 200% (Fig. 4B)
. Time courses with exisulind showed earliest detectable
induction of PKG between 8 and 24 h of drug treatment (data not
shown).

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Fig. 4. PKG, ß-catenin, and cyclin D1 regulation.
A, PKG is activated by exisulind but not E4021. SW480
cells were treated with DMSO (0.03%), exisulind, or E4021 for 48 h, and PKG activity was measured using a substrate of cloned bovine
PDE5 GST fusion protein bound to GSH-Sepharose affinity beads. Cell
lysate (100 µg), substrate (20 µg), 0.25 µM protein
kinase inhibitor, 4.5 mM magnesium, and
[ -32P]ATP (10 µCi; 190 µM), with or
without added cGMP (8 µM), were mixed and incubated for
30 min. The phosphorylated GST-cGB-PDE5 was resolved on 7.5% SDS-PAGE
and phosphorimaging. B, Western blots of exisulind
increased PKG, decreased ß-catenin, and decreased cyclin D1. SW480
cells were treated for 48 h, lysed with modified RIPA buffer, and
analyzed by Western blots (50 µg lysate/lane; 10% precast Novex
gels) with quantitation by AlphaImager 2000 (Alpha Innotech).
C, confocal microscopy images of exisulind-induced
decreases in ß-catenin in SW480 cells. SW480 cells were treated with
exisulind (600 µM) for 48 h, and cytospin preps were
fixed in 3.7% formaldehyde. Anti-ß-catenin fluorescent images were
obtained by confocal microscopy (LCS Ultraview). D,
in vitro PKG phosphorylation of ß-catenin.
Anti-ß-catenin immunoprecipitates from SW480 cells were incubated
with purified PKG (I , 49 ng, 200 units) in phosphate buffer
containing Mg2+ and [ -32P]ATP (10 µCi;
190 µM) for 10 min and resolved using 7.5% SDS-PAGE and
autoradiography.
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To explore potential substrates of the sustained induction of PKG
by exisulind that might be relevant to the effect of the drug in
patients with APC mutations, we determined whether PKG induces
phosphorylation of ß-catenin in vitro. SDS-PAGE gels of
ß-catenin immunoprecipitates treated with purified PKG for 10 min
show phosphorylation at Mr 97,000,
indicating that the oncogene can serve as substrate for PKG (Fig. 4D)
. Because phosphorylation of ß-catenin leads to
degradation and exisulind-induced PKG and apoptosis, it is possible
that exisulind regulates apoptosis via PKG-mediated ß-catenin
phosphorylation. The effect appears to require nonselective rather than
selective PDE5 inhibitors. Other effects of exisulind-induced PKG
phosphorylation may also contribute to growth inhibition and coordinate
with apoptosis induction, such as decreased raf kinase
(33)
or I
B kinase ß inhibition (34)
.
Because exisulind increased PKG in SW480 cells and PKG can
phosphorylate ß-catenin in vitro, the effect of the drug
on ß-catenin expression and function through cyclin D1 were
determined in the intact cell. Western blots of lysates from
exisulind-treated SW480 cells showed reductions in ß-catenin and
cyclin D1 up to 5080% of control values (Fig. 4B)
at
doses that induce apoptosis and PKG induction, whereas the nonapoptotic
E4021 was inactive (20
, 35
, 36)
. Time courses with
exisulind (600 µM) showed that like PKG
induction, ß-catenin degradation could be seen between 8 and 24 h of drug treatment (data not shown) or before apoptosis was detected.
MG-132, a blocker of ubiquitin-conjugated protein degradation,
effectively inhibited exisulind-induced ß-catenin decreases (Fig. 4B)
without affecting PKG induction by the drug. Confocal
fluorescence microscopy of SW480 cells labeled with anti-ß-catenin
antibodies demonstrated that exisulind reduced both the cytoplasmic and
nuclear pools of ß-catenin (Fig. 4C)
. These data suggest
that exisulind, like wild-type APC protein, causes proteosomal
degradation of ß-catenin via phosphorylation in APC-deficient cells.
These studies have identified cGMP PDEs of SW480 cells as biochemical
targets of the chemopreventive agent exisulind. The drug and its
analogues are novel PDE5/2 inhibitors that cause sustained cellular
cGMP, activation of PKG, proteosomal degradation of ß-catenin, and
induce apoptosis. Direct phosphorylation of ß-catenin by PKG could be
the mechanism of its proteosomal degradation. Recent studies have
suggested that ß-catenin-regulated peroxisome proliferator-activated
receptor
may be a noncyclooxygenase NSAID target (37)
.
The applicability of a cGMP regulatory mechanism to non-colon cancer
cells and its integration to this other potential target of exisulind
remains to be established, but screening with cGMP PDE inhibition and
apoptosis induction has been used to produce a new class of
proapoptotic drugs to prevent and treat cancer.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
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We thank Dr. S. Tarpey for assistance and W. Gresh, Jr., E.
Wang, M. Lloyd, M. David, J. Liberati, H. Turchin, S. Xu, T. Underwood,
and L. Ayers for technical contributions. We also appreciate the many
chemists that contributed to the development of CP461 under the
direction of Dr. P. Gross (University of Pacific, Stockton, CA).
 |
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 To whom requests for reprints should be
addressed, at Cell Pathways, Inc., 702 Electronic Drive, Horsham, PA
19044. 
2 The abbreviations used are: NSAID,
nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug; cGMP PDE, guanosine 3',5'-cyclic
monophosphate phosphodiesterase; PKG, protein kinase G; FAP, familial
adenomatous polyposis; GST, glutathione S-transferase;
APC, adenomatous polyposis coli. 
Received 2/ 3/00.
Accepted 5/18/00.
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