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Clinical Cancer Research Vol. 11, 1990-1998, March 2005
© 2005 American Association for Cancer Research


Cancer Therapy: Preclinical

Antitumor Efficacy of bcl-2 and c-myc Antisense Oligonucleotides in Combination with Cisplatin in Human Melanoma Xenografts: Relevance of the Administration Sequence

Gabriella Zupi1, Marco Scarsella1, Sean C. Semple4, Marcella Mottolese2, Pier G. Natali3 and Carlo Leonetti1

1 Experimental Chemotherapy Laboratory, 2 Pathology Department, and 3 Immunology Laboratory, Regina Elena Cancer Institute, Rome, Italy; and 4 Inex Pharmaceuticals, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada

Requests for reprints: Gabriella Zu Experimental Chemotherapy Laboratory, Regina Elena Cancer Institute, Via delle Messi d'Oro 156, 00158 Rome, Italy. Phone: 39-65266-2537; Fax: 39-65266-2592; E-mail: zupi{at}ifo.it.

Purpose: bcl-2 and c-myc oncogenes are frequently overexpressed in different human tumors, including melanoma. Here, we evaluate the combined efficacy of two antisense oligonucleotides targeting bcl-2 mRNA (ODN bcl-2) and c-myc mRNA (ODN c-myc) in combination with cis-diammine dichloroplatinum (cisplatin, DDP) on three human melanoma lines (LM, NG, and M20).

Experimental Design: Two different sequences were designed to treat tumor-bearing mice: in the first one, ODN bcl-2 at a dose of 0.2 mg/day x4, followed by DDP given i.p. at a dose of 3.3 mg/kg/day x3 and ODN c-myc i.v. at 0.5 mg/day x7, whereas the other sequence consisted of ODN c-myc given as first agent followed by DDP and ODN bcl-2 at the same doses. Mice received three complete cycles of treatment in 1-week intervals.

Results: The treatment sequence with ODN bcl-2/DDP/ODN c-myc combination completely inhibited growth in NG tumor and induced a 35-day delay in LM tumor growth. In contrast, the M20 tumor growth was unaffected by the combination. A discrete amount of c-Myc and bcl-2 protein expression in both LM and NG tumors was detected, whereas no detectable levels of the two proteins were observed in M20 tumors. Compared with the other combination, the sequence (ODN bcl-2/DDP/ODN c-myc) produced the most effective results, producing a significant decrease in bcl-2 and c-Myc protein expression, which in turn significantly increased the survival of NG- and LM-bearing mice, with 4 mice out of 11 and 1 out of 7 mice being cured, respectively. Finally, this combination increased the apoptotic rate and produced an antiangiogenetic effect.

Conclusions: These results show that an antisense approach to the treatment of melanoma xenografts overexpressing either bcl-2 or c-myc oncogenes represents a successful strategy to improve the response to chemotherapy in melanoma, with particular attention to the treatment sequence.

Key Words: mice • chemotherapy • apoptosis • angiogenesis • survival




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[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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Copyright © 2005 by the American Association for Cancer Research.