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  • Experimental Oncology
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Nitroimidazole adducts as markers for tissue hypoxia: mechanistic studies in aerobic normal tissues and tumour cells

Abstract

Two aspects of the aerobic metabolism of nitroimidazole markers for hypoxia were investigated. Several normal murine tissues which are likely to be well oxygenated bind misonidazole at rates comparable to those of hypoxic regions in tumours. The possibility that this aerobic activation occurs via an oxygen independent process such as an initial two electron reduction was studied. Binding to the oesophageal mucosa of mice which occurred under hypoxia in vitro was inhibited by at least 95% in the presence of 10% oxygen. Dicoumarol, an inhibitor of DT-diaphorase, was shown to cause only small reductions in misonidazole binding to oesophageal epithelium and smooth muscle in vitro and to EMT6 tumours, liver, oesophageal and tracheal epithelium, parotid gland and smooth muscle in vivo. Thus an oxygen-insensitive process is not a major cause of the high binding rate in oesophageal mucosa, and may not contribute significantly to the observed binding in other normal tissues. It has been suggested that metabolism of nitroimidazoles by aerobic cells in tumours might be sufficient to minimise access of these compounds to hypoxic regions, particularly at the micromolar concentrations currently in use clinically. The uptake of 125I-iodoazomycin arabinoside by RIF-1 and EMT6 tumours was found to be directly proportional to injected dose over concentrations between 0.5 and 50 microM. Labelling of hypoxic regions in EMT6 tumours by high specific activity 3H-misonidazole at 1 microM was found to be similar to that obtained at 50 microM.

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Parliament, M., Wiebe, L. & Franko, A. Nitroimidazole adducts as markers for tissue hypoxia: mechanistic studies in aerobic normal tissues and tumour cells. Br J Cancer 66, 1103–1108 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1992.418

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1992.418

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