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Experimental Therapeutics |
Department of Radiology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104 [R. Z., N. B., J. D. G.], and Department of Radiation Oncology, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19107 [D. B. L.]
| ABSTRACT |
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8 mm diameter),
intracellular pH (pHi, measured by the chemical shift of
the Pi resonance) and extracellular pH (pHe,
measured with 3-aminopropylphosphonate) was reduced by less than 0.2
unit during i.v. infusion of glucose for 40 min. Administration of MIBG
(30 mg/kg) under hyperglycemic conditions (26 mM) reduced
tumor pHi and pHe by
0.4
(P < 0.001) and
0.6
(P < 0.001) unit, respectively;
coincidentally, the nucleoside triphosphates:Pi ratio
decreased
60% (P < 0.004) relative
to the baseline level. Minimal changes in pHi and
pHe and a small decrease in nucleoside
triphosphates:Pi ratio (26%, P = 0.2) were observed in liver in response to MIBG plus
hyperglycemia. These results suggest that under normoglycemic and
hyperglycemic conditions, small human melanoma xenografts (
8 mm) may
exhibit a relatively high level of oxidative phosphorylation that may
be blocked by MIBG. The acidification may result from increased lactate
production as a direct effect of MIBG inhibition of respiration in
mitochondria of tumor cells, or through indirect systemic effects,
which remain to be identified. The synergetic effects of MIBG and
hyperglycemia result in significant acidification of the tumor and a
decrease in tumor bioenergetic status, and the effects are largely
selective for tumors in comparison with normal tissues. | INTRODUCTION |
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In contrast to normal cells, malignant cells have a higher tendency to use glycolysis as their key pathway of energy production, converting glucose to lactate even under aerobic conditions (12 , 13) . Administration of glucose reduces tumor pH to various degrees in many rodent and human tumors (14, 15, 16) . The variability in tumor acidification may be attributed to a dose-dependent response to glucose, to reduction in tumor blood flow, and/or to different levels of oxidative metabolism in various tumors. Although the presence of excessive glucose is necessary for increasing pyruvate production, significant tumor acidification would not be achieved if the tumor exhibited a high level of oxidative metabolism, which competes with lactate production for the available pyruvate. Therefore, inhibition of oxidative phosphorylation at site-1 by administration of MIBG3 has been proposed as a method of increasing lactate production by tumor cells, hence enhancing tumor acidification in vitro and in vivo (17, 18, 19, 20) .
Radiolabeled MIBG, an analogue of the neurotransmitter norepinephrine, is concentrated in neuroectodermal tumors derived from adrenergic tissues and has been used in clinical diagnosis and therapy of these tumors (21) . By inhibiting oxidative phosphorylation, MIBG would be expected to divert glycolytic flux from the TCA cycle into lactate production, resulting in increased uptake of glucose and enhanced glycolytic flux (17) . Kuin et al. (19) showed that the extracellular pH (pHe) of radiation-induced fibrosarcoma-1 (RIF-1) tumors was reduced by 0.24 pH unit during hyperglycemia alone (14 mM blood glucose), whereas a 0.55 pH unit reduction was observed when 100 mg/kg MIBG was combined with hyperglycemia. Whereas MIBG treatment induced a 2- to 3-fold stimulation of 18F-deoxyglucose uptake in tumors, MIBG also reduced up to 5-fold the amount of glucose required to maintain blood glucose levels at 14 mM (i.e., it acted as an analogue of norepinephrine, releasing glucose from glycogen stores in the liver). Therefore, a dual mechanism of MIBG has been proposed in that it blocks respiration via its biochemical mechanism at the cellular level and promotes glucose availability to the tumor via its systemic effect in a stress-related, sympathomimetic response (19) .
For hyperthermia sensitization, reduction of pHi
is more critical than reduction of pHe
(22, 23, 24, 25)
. Acute reduction of pHe
sensitizes tumor cells to heat by virtue of an associated reduction in
pHi. By using Pi (26
, 27)
and 3-APP (28)
resonances as intra- and
extracellular pH markers, respectively, 31P MR
spectroscopy allows noninvasive and simultaneous monitoring of
pHi and pHe as well as the
bioenergetic status in live animals. In most normal tissues, the
Pi resonance is generally thought to be a marker
of pHi. For tumors, if the extracellular volume
does not exceed 55%, the Pi peak primarily
reflects pHi. However, in large tumors that
exhibit extensive necrosis, the extracellular Pi
may become abnormally high and the Pi resonance
would reflect pHe (29)
. Therefore,
we used relatively small xenografts, in which the absence of extensive
necrosis was confirmed by histological analysis. Hence for these
tumors, Pi was a reliable indicator of
pHi. Smaller tumors also tend to have a higher
perfusion rate and greater metabolic activity than larger tumors
(30)
. The longer doubling time (
5 days) and lower
tumor-body burden of these human melanoma xenografts make this tumor
model more pertinent to the clinical situation than many murine tumor
models.
The present study was undertaken to evaluate the feasibility of selective acidification of an early passage human melanoma xenograft (DB-1) by administration of MIBG under hyperglycemic conditions. Using 31P MR spectroscopy, we have measured pHi and pHe profiles, as well as changes in the bioenergetic status of melanoma xenografts in response to hyperglycemia and MIBG. Comparative data on normal liver, skeletal muscle, and brain have been obtained to determine whether MIBG has a selective effects on tumors and possible mechanisms underlying this selectivity have also been considered.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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0.1 ml of 145 mg/ml solution of
3-APP (dissolved in saline and pH adjusted to 7) was administered i.p.
(580 mg/kg).
Human Melanoma Xenografts in SCID Mice.
Human melanoma (DB-1) cells were obtained from a patient of Dr. David
Berd at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital. The metastatic melanoma
was excised before administration of any treatment. Cells were prepared
from the tumor and cryopreserved after the 16th passage. For tumor
inoculation,
2.0 x 106
melanoma cells in 0.10 ml of PBS were injected s.c. into the right
thigh of each animal (34 ± 2 g). Melanoma
xenografts were allowed to grow until they reached 78 mm in diameter
along the long axis of the tumor. All animal protocols were approved by
the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committees at the respective
institutions.
Animal Preparation.
Tumor-bearing mice were anesthetized with ketamine/acepromazine at
66/0.4 mg/kg, a mixture that minimally perturbs blood glucose level or
tumor blood flow (31)
. Animals were maintained under
sedation by administration of one-half of the initial dose of the
anesthetics at 30- to 55-min intervals. A tail vein catheter was placed
for i.v. infusion of glucose to maintain the blood glucose level
between 25 and 27 mM. Intraperitoneal catheters were
placed for delivery of additional anesthetics and MIBG during the MR
experiment without removing the animal from the magnet.
Changes in pH in response to hyperglycemia and MIBG were examined in normal brain, skeletal muscle, and liver of SCID mice. An MR surface coil (described below) was placed over the shaved leg or on top of the shaved skull for data acquisition from muscle and brain, respectively. For MR experiments on liver, a 1-cm incision was made into the abdomen of anesthetized animals to expose the liver, over which the surface coil was placed. A plastic spacer was inserted between the coil and the overlying skin flap to isolate MR signals of the liver from those of skin.
Glucose Infusion.
A stock solution of D-glucose (600 mM) was
delivered through a tail vein catheter with a syringe pump (Harvard
Apparatus, Holliston, MA). An infusion protocol that yielded a blood
glucose concentration of 26 ± 3 mM
(mean ± SD) was developed in separate bench top
experiments using weight- and age-matched tumor-bearing cohorts (which
were not used in the MR studies). Blood samples were obtained from the
orbital sinus of the mice, and the blood glucose level was determined
from Chemstrips mechanically read in a blood glucose analyzer
(Accu-Chek, Boehringer Mannheim Corp., Indianapolis, IN). This infusion
protocol was used in subsequent MR experiments.
MR Experiment and pH Estimation.
The mouse was placed on a water-circulating blanket (42°C) to
maintain core temperature at 37°C (measured with a thermocouple
outside of the magnet). The MR studies were performed on a GE
9.4T/8.9-cm vertical bore Omega system. In vivo31P spectra were acquired with a homemade single
turn solenoidal surface coil (10 mm in diameter) placed over the tumor
with the following parameters: 128 scans with an interpulse delay of
2 s; an rf pulse width of 1520 µs, corresponding approximately
to a 90-degree flip angle; 15 kHz sweep width; and 2048 data points.
Data were processed on a SUN computer using 25-Hz line broadening to
increase the signal:noise ratio and a convolution difference routine to
minimize the broad phospholipid peak underneath the spectrum. A
Lorentzian line-fitting routine (Spectrum Analysis Tool) provided by
the manufacturer was used to resolve peaks and measure their areas. No
corrections for partial saturation of resonances were applied.
Intracellular and extracellular pH were determined from the
Henderson-Hasselbach equation using the chemical shifts of
Pi and 3-APP, respectively, referenced to
-NTP
resonances. For pHe, the
pKa of 6.91, limiting acid chemical shift of
34.30 ppm, and base chemical shift of 31.11 ppm are used, and for
pHi, these parameters are 6.65, 13.25, and 10.85
ppm, respectively (26
, 32
, 33)
. The ratio of the peak
areas of the ß-NTP and Pi resonances
(NTP:Pi) served as an index of tumor bioenergetic
status (26)
. The change of NTP:Pi
ratio relative to its baseline value was determined during
hyperglycemia and MIBG intervention for each animal.
Statistics.
Friedman repeated measures ANOVA (SigmaStat) was used for statistical
analysis. Raw data of pH values or NTP:Pi ratios
during baseline, hyperglycemia alone, and MIBG administration under
hyperglycemic condition were compared. P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
| RESULTS |
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8 mm) is shown in Fig. 1
13 mm) is also shown in Fig. 1
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3.8 g/kg in
1.2 ml. Separate bench top experiments were conducted on four mice
in which MIBG (30 mg/kg) was injected during glucose infusion. No
significant change of blood glucose concentration was observed in
response to MIBG under hyperglycemic conditions (data not shown). It is
possible that the preexisting hyperglycemia induced by glucose infusion
masked a small elevation of blood glucose level by MIBG.
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| DISCUSSION |
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0.4 and
0.6 unit, respectively. Here
we report for the first time that MIBG decreases
pHi in vivo, a more critical parameter for
thermosensitization than pHe. Intracellular
acidification is also responsible for the potentiation of cytotoxicity
of certain chemotherapeutic agents, such as platinum-containing drugs
and alkylating agents (8, 9, 10, 11)
. Response to hyperthermia is
closely related to the extent of tumor pH reduction (35)
.
For example, Hiraoka and Hahn (36)
showed that a reduction
of tumor pHe by 0.15 unit had little effect on
hyperthermia response, a 0.25-unit reduction increased response by a
factor of 1.5, and a 0.35-unit reduction increased response by a factor
of 4. Therefore, with a
0.6 unit decrease in
pHe and a
0.4 decrease in
pHi in DB-1 melanoma xenografts, significant
thermosensitization could be expected. Furthermore, the significant
reduction in tumor bioenergetic status would also sensitize tumor cells
to hyperthermia. Small human melanoma xenografts may be uniformly well perfused and have a relatively high level of oxidative phosphorylation, which can be blocked by MIBG. This is consistent with the observation that pHe was reduced by MIBG in the peripheral regions of RIF-1 tumors, where the density of perfused vessels is 42% higher than in central regions of the tumor (19) . The marked decrease of NTP:Pi, pHi, and pHe of melanoma xenografts following MIBG + hyperglycemia suggests an increase of glycolytic flux, which results in an increase of lactate production, as well as a decrease in NTP production by the tumor. Because only the ratio of NTP to Pi was measured, it is conceivable that Pi increased whereas NTP remained constant. This is highly unlikely because Pi is usually generated by NTP hydrolysis; however, this remote possibility can be excluded by absolute quantitation of NTP concentrations, as has been done by our laboratory in the past (37) . Such experiments are planned in the future. A decrease in steady state levels of NTP could result from inhibition of respiration by MIBG; this would also lead to accumulation of Pi. Both lactate production and NTP hydrolysis generate protons, leading to tumor acidification. The decrease in tumor bioenergetic status can be attributed to the lower efficiency of glycolysis as a pathway for NTP synthesis compared to the TCA cycle (2 versus 36 NTPs per glucose molecule, respectively).
There is, however, an alternate mechanism that could contribute to the observed data. Tissues with higher levels of oxidative metabolism usually exhibit higher NTP:Pi values; in normal tissues, these ratios precipitously decrease during ischemia or hypoxia. The pattern of decreases in pHi and pHe in conjunction with a decrease in NTP:Pi is also reminiscent of ischemia. Preliminary pharmacokinetic measurements with 131I-MIBG suggest that little radiolabeled MIBG is reaching the tumor; most of it goes to the liver and kidneys with significant 131I accumulation in the thyroid gland (suggesting metabolism of MIBG)4 . Preliminary results from their study also suggest that administration of MIBG, at least under some conditions, appears to induce a decrease in blood pressure, presumably because MIBG could act as an antagonist of norepinephrine in the vascular smooth muscle.4 A decrease in blood pressure could produce a steal effect, leading to decreased tumor perfusion. This could explain the decrease in bioenergetic status and pHi and pHe of tumors in this study. Similar effects have been observed with hydralazine (38) . This systemic mechanism could explain the apparent specificity of acidification and bioenergetic decline to the tumor, because most normal tissues (with the possible exception of the kidneys) would be minimally affected by decreased blood pressure.
Definitive conclusions about the mechanism producing tumor acidification cannot be reached from these data. Therefore, we have presented the systemic effect of MIBG as a possible mechanism for tumor selectivity but have also retained our initial hypothesis, that inhibition of oxidative phosphorylation may be responsible for tumor acidification and bioenergetic decline although this mechanism is hard to reconcile with its specificity to tumors. The basis for tumor selectivity is under active investigation in our laboratories, and it could be resolved by measurements of tumor blood flow, which are planned for the future.
Oxygen tension measurements in melanoma xenografts showed that MIBG
combined with hyperglycemia elevated the extracellular
pO2 in tumors significantly, from 9 ± 2 to 21 ± 4 mm Hg. Glucose or MIBG alone,
however, did not alter pO2 in DB-1 melanoma
xenografts (39)
. These observations are more consistent
with the first mechanism (inhibition of respiration). In addition, the
26% decline in NTP:Pi of the liver may be
substantial, although the dose of MIBG was well tolerated (see below).
Whereas a
12% fluctuation in basal NTP:Pi
level measured by MR spectroscopy could be expected (40)
,
a 26% decrease in response to MIBG is well above this level. The
bioenergetic effect of MIBG on the liver is consistent with the
preliminary observation that MIBG accumulates in this organ. The liver
is, however, a very large organ; hence, being distributed over a large
mass may ameliorate the toxic effect of MIBG on the liver.
Stimulation of lactate production in tumors by MIBG is also being examined by 1H MR spectroscopy using lipid and water suppression MR pulse sequence developed in our laboratory (41) . Preliminary results from a human melanoma xenograft in SCID mice showed that during normoglycemia or hyperglycemia tumor lactate was not detected. This suggests a high level of oxidative phosphorylation. Administration of MIBG under hyperglycemic conditions induced an increase in tumor lactate detectable by 1H MR spectroscopy.5 This observation would be consistent with either inhibition of respiration or a steal effect.
The dose of MIBG used in this study (30 mg/kg) was tolerated well
in SCID mice. The animals were not lethargic, and no weight loss was
observed for 1 week after administration, suggesting minimal toxicity.
No acute or cumulative toxicity was observed in liver, kidney, and
other organs in response to oral administration of MIBG to mice at 40
mg/kg for 5 consecutive days (42)
. The maximal effect of
MIBG under hyperglycemic condition occurred
50 min after MIBG
administration (39)
, and no pHi
change was observed 3 h after MIBG injection (19)
,
suggesting that intracellular acidification of tumors induced by MIBG
is most likely transient, probably because tumor cells are able to
maintain pH homeostasis by H+ extrusion
mechanisms. We are now examining the possibility that tumor
acidification induced by MIBG plus hyperglycemia can be enhanced and
maintained longer by inhibition of membrane
Na+/H+ and/or
HCO3-/Cl-
exchange mechanisms (43)
.
MIBG at normoglycemia has no effect on extracellular pH of DB-1
melanoma xenografts measured by pH electrode.4
No response
or a much smaller decrease of tumor pHe was also
observed in response to MIBG alone compared with MIBG + hyperglycemia in other human and rodent tumors (18)
.
Hyperglycemia (473 mg/dl) alone had limited acidifying effect on DB-1
human melanoma xenografts (Table 2)
. Therefore, our results suggest the
synergetic effect of MIBG and hyperglycemia and are consistent with
related studies (19)
. Coadministration of MIBG appeared to
achieve tumor acidification at moderate hyperglycemia, avoiding the
adverse effect of severe hyperglycemia.
In conclusion, 31P MRS allows noninvasive and simultaneous monitoring of pHe, pHi, and cellular energy status. MIBG plus hyperglycemia can significantly acidify human melanoma xenografts in which necrosis is absent, whereas it has only a minimal effect on pH in livers, skeletal muscle and brain. The data suggest that MIBG combined with hyperglycemia could be a nontoxic and effective mechanism for intracellular acidification of tumors, and, hence, for enhancing the effect of hyperthermia. The mechanism underlying tumor acidification by MIBG under hyperglycemic conditions remains to be elucidated. At least two possible mechanisms have been presented, one involving a direct cellular effect on tumor energy metabolism by inhibiting respiration and the other involving indirect induction of ischemia in the tumor.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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1 This study is supported by NIH Grant P01CA56690
and CA83105. ![]()
2 To whom requests for reprints should be
addressed, at B1 Stellar-Chance Labs, 422 Curie Boulevard,
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6100. Phone: (215) 898-1805; Fax: (215)
573-2113; E-mail: zhou{at}rad.upenn.edu ![]()
3 The abbreviations used are: MIBG,
m-iodobenzylguanidine; SCID, severe combined immune
deficiency; pHi, intracellular pH; pHe,
extracellular pH; MR, magnetic resonance; 3-APP,
3-aminopropylphosphonate; rf, radiofrequency; ppm, parts/million; NTP,
nucleoside triphosphates. ![]()
4 R. Burd and D. B. Leeper, unpublished
results. ![]()
5 J. D. Glickson, Q. He, and D. B.
Leeper, unpublished results. ![]()
Received 12/31/99. Accepted 4/26/00.
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1994. New York: American Cancer Society, Inc., 1994.
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