Articles: oligonucleotides.
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J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. · Apr 1997
Pharmacokinetics of G3139, a phosphorothioate oligodeoxynucleotide antisense to bcl-2, after intravenous administration or continuous subcutaneous infusion to mice.
An 18-mer full-phosphorothioate oligonucleotide with sequence antisense to the first six codons of the open reading frame of bcl-2 (G3139) has shown efficacy against the DoHH2 lymphoma implanted in severe combined immunodeficient mice. This study evaluated the pharmacokinetics of 35S-labeled G3139 in female BALB/c mice after single i.v. bolus administration or s.c. infusion for 1 week. After 100 microg i.v. bolus (approximately 5 mg/kg), the radioactivity was rapidly distributed and eliminated, with low blood levels 6 hr after administration. ⋯ After both routes of administration, most of the radioactivity was eliminated in the urine and to a lesser extent in the feces. Significantly more radioactivity was excreted in the urine after i.v. bolus, compared with s.c. infusion (33% on day 1 and 55% by day 3 for i.v. vs. 7.2% on day 1 and 12.9% by day 3 for s.c.). These data show that s.c. infusion resulted in less excretion and metabolism of the administered dose.
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The systemic toxicity of two phosphorothioate oligonucleotides specific for herpes simplex viruses (ISIS 1082) and human papiloma virus (ISIS 2105) were evaluated following repeated intradermal injections of vehicle control, 0.33, 2.17, or 21.7 mg/kg daily to Sprague-Dawley rats (10/sex/group) for 14 days. Animals were sacrificed 1 day after the last dose, except for a portion of the ISIS 1082-treated animals (5/sex/group) which were maintained for an additional 14-day recovery period. The profile of alterations noted for both compounds was very similar. ⋯ Treatment-related cytopenias were likely related to mild, focal hypocellularity in the bone marrow. Alterations in ISIS 1082-treated animals were only partially reversed following the 14-day treatment-free period. In conclusion, repeated intradermal administration of ISIS 1082 and ISIS 2105 produced a similar spectrum of toxicities, with liver, kidney, spleen, and bone marrow being identified as target tissues.
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Anti-cancer drug design · Jan 1997
Toxicological properties of several novel oligonucleotide analogs in mice.
The toxicological properties of ISIS 3082, a phosphorothioate oligonucleotide, and five structurally related analogs of ISIS 3082, were examined in Balb/c mice. Comparisons were made between the uniform phosphorothioate oligonucleotide (ISIS 3082), and a 2' propoxy modified phosphodiester (ISIS 9044), a 2' propoxy phosphorothioate (ISIS 9045), a chimeric oligonucleotide comprised of 2' propoxy diester wings and phosphorothioate deoxy center (ISIS 9046), a 5' C18 amine phosphorothioate (ISIS 9047), or a 5' cholesterol modified phosphorothioate (ISIS 8005) oligonucleotide. Oligonucleotides were administered at 50 mg/kg by i.v. bolus injection (tail vein) every other day for 14 days. ⋯ Kupffer cell hypertrophy and basophilic inclusions in Kupffer cells were observed in mice treated with ISIS 9045, ISIS 9047 and ISIS 8005, but not in ISIS 3082-treated mice. A unique renal lesions was noted in mice treated with ISIS 9044 only that was characterized as mild atrophy of proximal convoluted tubules associated with interstitial fibrosis. With the exception of the renal lesions observed in ISIS 9044 treated mice, the toxicity profiles of various oligonucleotide analogs examined in this study were similar to that observed for ISIS 3082.
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A 20-mer phosphorothioate oligodeoxynucleotide (ISIS 3521) designed to hybridize sequences in the 3'-untranslated region of human protein kinase C-alpha (PKC-alpha) mRNA has been shown to inhibit the expression of PKC-alpha in multiple human cell lines. In human bladder carcinoma (T-24) cells, inhibition of PKC-alpha was both concentration dependent and oligonucleotide sequence specific. ISIS 3521 had a IC50 of 50-100 nM for PKC-alpha mRNA reduction and was without effect on the expression of other members of the PKC family of genes (PKC-eta and zeta). ⋯ Three control phosphorothioate oligodeoxynucleotides not targeting human PKC-alpha were without effect on the growth of the tumors at doses as high as 6 mg/kg. Recovery of ISIS 3521 from tumor tissue and resolution by capillary gel electrophoresis revealed that 24 It after the final dose of oligodeoxynucleotide, intact, full-length 20-mer material was present as well as some apparent exonuclease degradation products (e.g., n-1 and n-2 mers). These studies demonstrate the in vivo antitumor effects of an antisense oligodeoxynucleotide targeting PKC-alpha and suggest that this compound may be of value as a chemotherapeutic agent in the treatment of human cancers.
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Molecular pharmacology · Aug 1996
Treatment of glioblastoma U-87 by systemic administration of an antisense protein kinase C-alpha phosphorothioate oligodeoxynucleotide.
Glioblastoma multiforme is the most common form of malignant brain cancer in adults and, unfortunately, is not amenable to treatment with current therapeutic modalities. Human glioblastoma U-87 has many of the distinguishing phenotypic features of primary glioblastoma, including an autocrine form of proliferation, high levels of protein kinase C alpha (PKC alpha), and infiltration via white matter tracts. We show that treatment of mice bearing U-87 xenografts with an antisense phosphorothioate oligodeoxynucleotide (S-oligodeoxynucleotide) against the 3'-untranslated region of PKC alpha mRNA results in suppression of tumor growth. ⋯ The intratumoral levels of both antisense and scrambled S-oligodeoxynucleotide in subcutaneous tumors were 2 microM after 21 daily doses of 20 mg/kg S-oligodeoxynucleotide. The antisense S-oligodeoxynucleotide selectively reduced the levels of PKC alpha in subcutaneous tumors but not those of protein kinase C epsilon or protein kinase C zeta. This is the first demonstration that the growth of glioblastoma multiforme can be suppressed by an antisense PKC alpha S-oligodeoxynucleotide and suggests that this may represent an effective therapy for this type of malignancy.