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Experimental Therapeutics |
Department of Oncology [S. D., R. D. V., A. J. G.] and Medical Research Council Toxicology Unit [R. E., D. J. J., R. D., J. R., D. D., A. G. S., T. W. G., P. G.], University of Leicester, Leicester LE1 9HN, United Kingdom, and PharmaMar SA, 28760 Tres Cantos, Madrid, Spain [L. L. L.]
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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The mechanism of antineoplastic action of ET-743 is not yet fully understood, and the mechanisms responsible for its hepatotoxic potential are unknown. The drug has been shown to bind to the minor groove of DNA and alkylate the N2 position of guanine at specific sequences (9) . At pharmacologically active concentrations, ET-743 caused perturbations of the cell cycle with a decrease in the rate of progression of S-phase cells toward G2 and a prolonged blockade in G2-M (10) . The drug inhibited the binding of several transcription factors to DNA (11, 12, 13) , prominent among them nuclear factor Y (12 , 13) , which activates transcription of some cell cycle genes. Therefore, the perturbations of the cell cycle machinery exerted by ET-43 may be caused, at least in part, by its ability to inhibit nuclear factor Y transactivation. Cells deficient in nucleotide excision repair ability were resistant to the cytotoxic potential of ET-743 (14) , a finding that suggests that the mode of cytotoxicity of ET-743 is distinctly different from that of other DNA-interactive cytotoxicants.
Taken together, these results characterize ET-743 as a new drug with anticancer activity and a novel, albeit still somewhat obscure, mechanism of antineoplastic activity. In light of the paucity of information available on details of its hepatotoxic potential, we investigated its hepatotoxicity in vivo in the female rat, the rodent species that seems to be most sensitive to this adverse effect of ET-743, by detailed analysis of ET-743-induced changes in liver pathology, biochemistry, and accompanying gene expression profiles. The overall aim of the study was to increase our understanding of the hepatotoxicity of ET-743 and identify biological events underlying the observed hepatic alterations that may ultimately be exploited by novel therapeutic regimens or drug combinations designed to alleviate this adverse effect.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Selected tissues other than liver (including stomach, small intestine, thymus, spleen, heart, lungs, kidneys, and bone marrow) from rats killed at periods of up to 3 days after treatment were taken for histological examination.
Histopathology and Immunocytochemistry.
Tissues were fixed in neutral buffered formalin and embedded in paraffin wax. Sternum samples were decalcified for examination of bone marrow cellularity. Sections (5-µm thick) were cut and stained with H&E. Selected hepatic sections were stained with van Giesons stain for collagen.
Ki-67 was demonstrated in sections of formalin-fixed, paraffin wax-embedded liver tissue at all time points between 6 h and 12 days after dosing. Sections were dewaxed in xylene, immersed in water, and microwaved in citrate buffer (pH 6.0) for 30 min at 700 W. A primary polyclonal rabbit antibody to a 1086-bp Ki-67 motif-containing cDNA fragment (NCL-Ki67p; Novacastra) was applied at a dilution of 1:500 for 3 h at room temperature. Normal rabbit immunoglobulin (X0903; DAKO) was used as a negative control. The primary antibody was detected with the DAKO Duet System (K0492; DAKO). Positive nuclei were visualized using 3,3'-diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride, and sections were lightly counterstained with hematoxylin. The total number of nuclei/unit area was calculated by counting the number of nuclei in a rectangular frame (0.32 x 0.225 mm) using the x40 Diaplan microscope objective on the H&E-stained sections, and counting was repeated in 10 randomly chosen frames. The proliferation index was calculated as the number of Ki-67-stained nuclei/1000 hepatocyte nuclei.
The presence of
-smooth muscle actin was demonstrated using a mouse monoclonal antibody (clone 1A4, IgG2a, DAKO M 0851) against the NH2-terminal decapeptide of human
-smooth muscle actin. Sections were pretreated as described above, and the primary antibody was applied at a dilution of 1:100 for 3 h at room temperature). Mouse IgG2a-negative control antibody (X0943; DAKO) was used as control. The primary antibody was detected as described above. The peroxidase label was visualized using the VIP substrate kit (SK-4600; Vector Laboratories) followed by a light hematoxylin counterstain.
Electron Microscopy.
Livers were fixed by vascular perfusion with 2% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M sodium cacodylate buffer (pH 7.4) and stored overnight (4°C) in the fixative. Slices (<1-mm thick) were postfixed with 1% osmium tetroxide/1% potassium ferrocyanide, stained en bloc with 5% uranyl acetate, and embedded in Taab epoxy resin (Taab Ltd.). Ultrathin sections were examined unstained or after staining with lead citrate and/or uranyl acetate.
Measurement of Liver Enzymes, Bilirubin, and Cytochrome P450 Isoenzymes, and Cell Cycle Distribution.
Plasma levels of ALP, AST, and total plasma bilirubin were measured using commercially available kits and established protocols (Sigma, St. Louis, MO). Total microsomal cytochrome P450 protein content was determined by the method of Adams et al. (15)
, and activities of liver microsomal enzymes associated with cytochrome P450 isoforms CYP1A1/2, CYP2E1, and CYP3A2 were measured according to Burke et al. (16)
, Carlson (17)
, and Chang and Yeung (18)
using ethoxyresorufin, 4-nitrophenol, and 7-benzyloxy-4-trifluoromethylcoumarin, respectively, as substrates.
Cell cycle analysis on liver nuclei from control and ET-743-treated rats was performed as described previously using fluorescence-assisted cell-sorting scan (19) .
Microarray Studies.
In a separate study, female Wistar rats were treated as described above with ET-743, and the liver of each treated rat was paired with liver from an age-matched vehicle-treated control rat. Groups of three ET-743-treated rats paired with three untreated rats were killed 6 h and 1, 2, 3, 6, and 24 days after dosing. Analysis of hepatic gene expression was carried out using cDNA microarrays containing approximately 4700 hybridizable mouse expressed sequence tags derived from IMAGE clones obtained from Research Genetics (Huntsville, AL) or from the MRC Human Gene Mapping Project.4
At each time point, one array was used for each pair of rats, and the individual RNAs were labeled with Cy3 or Cy5. The labels were reversed for subsequent hybridizations. Microarray preparation, RNA labeling, and hybridization were performed as described previously by Turton et al. (20)
. The clones of interest were sequenced to confirm identity. Where differential expression was determined, sequence homology with the appropriate rat gene was assessed to confirm that cross-hybridization between the species could occur. Pixel intensity for both the features and the background was assessed using GenePix software (Axon Instruments, Union City, CA) version 3.0.6 and an Axon 4000A scanner. The data were normalized and processed to a final measure of differential gene expression, quantitated as a ratio of ET-743-treated:control, as described previously (20)
, using ConvertData version 3.4.0c.5
Clustering analysis was performed by determination of the principal components of the score data (20)
using SIMCA-P (Umetrics, Bracknell, United Kingdom). The expression of genes that were significantly altered with reference to all of the other genes on the same array were used for a principal components analysis. Each microarray was kept as a separate entity for this analysis, as were the replicated clones on the microarrays. For the hepatic genes, the expression of which was consistently up- or down-regulated by ET-743 (Cdc2a, Ccnd1, Abcdb1a, Abcb1b, and Car 3, see "Results"), homology between the mouse and the rat was established to be 98% or greater. Data supplementing the microarray results shown in Figs. 4
and 5
are contained on the World Wide Web.5
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| RESULTS |
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smooth muscle actin (Fig. 1F)
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In an orientation experiment, male rats were investigated instead of females. In male rats, 40 µg/kg ET-743, the dose that had elicited the changes described above in female animals, caused only slightly irregular bile duct epithelia and sparse degenerate biliary cells 3 days after dosing and additional mild peribiliary fibrosis at day 12. Nevertheless, 80 µg/kg ET-743 was profoundly toxic in male rats and caused changes to bile ducts and necrosis in liver cells that mimicked in character and extent the liver pathology observed in female rats after administration of 40 µg/kg ET-743.
Effect of ET-743 on Liver Biochemistry.
Plasma levels of total bilirubin started to increase >24 h after female rats had received ET-743, and at 3 days, levels were elevated 7-fold over controls (Fig. 3A)
. This elevation persisted until at least 12 days and returned to basal levels by day 24. Levels of liver enzymes ALP and AST were significantly raised from 48 h after administration of ET-743 onward (Fig. 3A)
. Maximal elevation of ALP and AST levels was approximately 2-fold over control levels by day 3, and the rise in AST activity persisted up to 3 months after administration, the furthest time point examined. In male rats, plasma levels of bilirubin, ALP, and AST were not affected by the dose of ET-743 (40 µg/kg) that elicited marked elevation in females. However 80 µg/kg ET-743 increased the biochemical markers of hepatotoxicity in male rats as dramatically as seen with the lower dose in females.
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Effect of ET-743 on Hepatic Gene Expression.
Gene expression profiles were analyzed using one microarray for each of the three pairs of female rats per time point. A cluster of genes was consistently down-regulated, and this cluster included the cytochrome P450 genes Cyp1a2, Cyp3a11, and Cyp3a13, mirroring the down-regulation in activity of CYP1A1/2, CYP3A2, and CYP2E1 (see Fig. 3
), and Car3, which codes for carbonic anhydrase 3. Car3 expression levels reached a nadir on day 6 after administration of ET-743 (data not shown), past the time point of maximal biochemical manifestation of hepatic damage, which was day 3. Among the cluster of overexpressed genes were the cell cycle genes Cdc2a and Ccnd1 (Fig. 4A)
; the rodent homologues of human CDC2 and cyclin D1, respectively; and the two ABC transport genes Abcb1a and Abcb1b, which are equivalent to human ABCB1 and impart drug resistance. The time course of expression of Abcb1a and Abcb1b (Fig. 5)
mirrors the changes in serum bilirubin concentration (Fig. 3)
. The expression of none of the other 45 ABC genes among the expressed sequence tags on the microarray was altered by ET-743. ABC genes unaffected by ET-743 include Abcb4 (Fig. 5)
, which is implicated in phospholipid excretion.
Effect of ET-743 on Indices of Hepatic Cell Proliferation.
The increase in hepatic expression of Cdc2a determined by DNA microarray peaked on day 3 after administration of ET-743. It remained elevated through at least day 6 and returned to basal levels on day 24 (Fig. 4A)
. Ccnd1 expression followed a similar pattern, except that the elevation was smaller and maintained through day 24 (Fig. 4A)
. The Cdc2a gene expression changes were similar to ET-743-induced changes in hepatic Ki-67 proliferation index. The peak in Ki-67 proliferation and Cdc2a expression occurred at 6 days and 9 days, respectively, before the peak in liver weight (Fig. 4B)
. Staining for Ki-67, a marker of DNA synthesis, in liver nuclei of animals that had received ET-743 was significantly elevated in comparison with that in control rats (Fig. 1, H and I
, and Fig. 4B
). Similar to the results shown here for Ki-67 (Fig. 1, H and I)
, staining for proliferating cell nuclear antigen was substantially elevated in ET-743-treated rats 3 days after dosing compared with control animals (data not shown). The weight of livers of ET-743-treated animals increased from day 2 after dosing onward and reached a zenith on day 12 (Fig. 4B)
. Furthermore, consistent with an ET-743-mediated increase in hepatocyte cycle activity, liver cell cycle distribution underwent significant, albeit subtle, alteration by ET-743. The proportion of S-phase hepatocytes increased from 0% in control rats to 7.3 ± 1.5% (mean ± SD; n = 4) in rats 3 days after administration of ET-743, whereas the number of hepatocytes in G1 and G2-M, respectively, amounted to 62.6 ± 7.2% and 37.4 ± 7.2% in control animals and 61.0 ± 5.2% and 31.4 ± 5.3% in treated rats.
| DISCUSSION |
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It is unknown whether the reduction in CYP3A2, CYP1A1/2, and CYP2E1 levels observed here in the rat also occurs in humans. If it did, it might be important in the planning of sequential combination chemotherapy involving ET-743 and drugs such as Taxol, which undergo cytochrome P450-mediated deactivation. The decrease in CYP activities, if it occurs in humans, probably does not impact the pharmacokinetics of the parent drug because ET-743 pharmacokinetics were unaltered when the drug was administered repeatedly via 24-h infusion (6) .
Experiments in which ET-743 was incubated with isolated hepatocytes from rats or humans suggest that concentrations of the drug as high as 0.011 nmol/ml are required to damage hepatocytes directly (data not shown). In a preliminary study, hepatic drug levels in rats 6 h after i.v. administration of ET-743 (40 µg/kg) were just above 1 pmol/g tissue and declined thereafter.7 These results render it unlikely that concentrations of ET-743 required to elicit toxicity in isolated liver cells in vitro were achieved in liver tissue for time periods sufficient to explain the damage observed after administration of ET-743 in vivo. Instead, it is probable that manifestation of ET-743-mediated hepatic damage in the rat requires the structural integrity of the whole liver. This conclusion is consistent with the fact that the primary and most important lesion was found in the bile ducts. It is conceivable that drug accumulates in the bile duct, thus precipitating the primary lesion. This hypothesis needs experimental validation.
A prominent feature of the ET-743-induced hepatic toxicity described here is the persistence of the damage. Bile duct fibrosis and increased plasma levels of AST were observed as late as 3 months after administration, and levels of ALP were elevated for up to 2 months. In contrast, bilirubin remained elevated until some time between days 12 and 24. It remains to be investigated whether the long-term persistence of liver damage induced by ET-743 is related to continued harmful levels of a ET-743 metabolite in the liver. Nevertheless, it appears more likely that these delayed manifestations are late consequences of the initial bile duct damage and ensuing fibrosis. It is important to note that in contrast to the long persistence of elevation of AST and ALP in the female rat, transaminitis in patients in the Phase I trials of ET-743 was not dose limiting (4, 5, 6, 7) , and it had resolved before the subsequent course of drug was administered after a 3-week drug-free interval. This difference indicates that in relation to humans, the female rat model used in this study exaggerates some aspects of ET-743-induced hepatic lesions. Differences in susceptibility to ET-743-induced hepatotoxicity are also highlighted by the fact that the dose required to elicit damage in livers of male rats was twice as high as that which caused hepatic toxicity in female animals. This finding suggests that at comparable doses, male rats are less sensitive than female animals to the adverse effects of the drug. Nevertheless, qualitatively similar changes in pathology and biochemical marker levels were induced by the drug in animals of either gender. Concentrations of ET-743 that precipitate toxicity in the liver are as yet unknown. Therefore, it is conceivable that the observed gender difference in susceptibility reflects differences in liver exposure to ET-743, perhaps as a consequence of gender-related discrepancies in ability to metabolize the drug.
The most striking result of the DNA microarray analysis of hepatic gene expression precipitated by ET-743 is the increased expression of the cell cycle genes Cdc2a and Ccnd1. The time course of change in expression of the Cdc2a gene resembles the time course of the ET-743-induced alterations in liver weight and Ki-67 labeling. These observations suggest that ET-743 elicits a mitogenic wave in the liver by induction of DNA synthesis, a proposition that is further supported by augmented staining of hepatic nuclei for proliferating cell nuclear antigen, the increased proportion of liver cells in S phase, and the prominent presence of mitotic figures in livers of animals that had received ET-743. To our knowledge, such stimulation of mitogenesis has hitherto not been observed as a generic mechanistic feature of hepatotoxic drugs. Therefore, it is unlikely to be a nonspecific compensatory reaction of the tissue to the ET-743-induced lesion. Instead the mitogenic wave seems to be a ET-743-specific phenomenon, and it is probably the corollary of a direct effect of ET-743 on hepatic Cdc2a transcription, which in turn drives the cell cycle. Whether or not patients exposed to ET-743 experience a similar mitogenic wave and increase in liver mass is not known and should be monitored in future studies.
In conclusion, the toxicity exerted by ET-743 in the rat liver is characterized by a primary insult to the bile duct epithelium, long duration of altered liver pathology, and enhanced liver cell proliferation involving up-regulation of the Cdc2a and Ccnd1 genes. It has to be stressed that the animal model chosen here to study ET-743 hepatotoxicity, the female rat, seems among all species hitherto investigated to be most exquisitely sensitive to the hepatotoxic potential of ET-743. Other species including humans are less likely to experience the adverse effects described here. Nevertheless, manifestations of hepatotoxicity have been observed in the clinical evaluation of the drug, and therefore it is conceivable that some of the features of toxicity delineated here in the female rat are applicable to patients. These features may provide the basis for the design of treatment regimens designed to reduce the hepatotoxic potential of ET-743.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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1 Supported in part by Medical Research Council Toxicology Unit core grant funding and a grant from PharmaMar SA (Madrid, Spain). ![]()
2 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed, at Medical Research Council Toxicology Unit, University of Leicester, Leicester LE1 9HN, United Kingdom. Phone: 44-116-252-5618; Fax: 44-116-252-5616; E-mail: ag15{at}le.ac.uk ![]()
3 The abbreviations used are: ALP, alkaline phosphatase; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; MRC, Medical Research Council; CYP, cytochrome P-450; ABC, ATP binding cassette. ![]()
5 http://www.le.ac.uk/cmht/microarray_lab/Home. ![]()
6 T. W. Gant, P. R. Baus, B. Clothier, J. Riley, R. Davies, D. J. Judah, R. E. Edwards, J. A. Styles, E. George, P. Greaves, and A. G. Smith, unpublished observations. ![]()
7 H. Rosing and J. H. Beijnen, personal communication. ![]()
Received 1/24/02. Accepted 5/24/02.
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