1. Academic Validation
  2. Antitumor activity of L-2,4 diaminobuturic acid against mouse fibrosarcoma cells in vitro and in vivo

Antitumor activity of L-2,4 diaminobuturic acid against mouse fibrosarcoma cells in vitro and in vivo

  • J Cancer Res Clin Oncol. 1980;96(3):259-68. doi: 10.1007/BF00408098.
G Ronquist R Hugosson B Westermark
Abstract

Mouse fibrosarcoma cells were grown in vitro and incubated with L-2,4 diaminobuturic acid, a non-metabolizable amino acid. The tumor cells were irreversibly and totally damaged by incubation with 10 mM DAB for 24 h at 37 degrees C. The cell-destructive effect by DAB was probably due to an osmotic lysis induced by the non-saturated intracellular accumulation of DAB. The harmful effect of DAB could be abolished by concomitant incubation with L-alanine and L-methionine, that compete with DAB for the same transport system, while the D-forms of the same Amino acids as well as sarcosine had a weak effect. The fibrosarcoma cells were also transplanted s.c. into mice that were subsequently treated with i.p. injections of an isotonic 0.1 M DAB solution. The neoplastic cells were transplanted into totally 90 Animals. The mean tumor weight of 42 treated Animals was 1.16 g (+/- 0.77 g) compared with the corresponding figures of the 27 untreated mice, that were 2.05 g (+/- 1.22 g), i.e., a 43.4% reduction of tumor growth. There were, however, 17 drug-related deaths. Treatment with DAB generally resulted in weight reduction, at least partly due to loss of appetite, in Animals. In addition, neurological symptoms of a specific character could develop among several of the treated Animals. The side effects apparently restrict the usefulness of DAB alone as an anti-tumor agent, but since the principle of action of DAB is unique and not shared by other known chemotherapeutics it might offer new possibilities in the combined treatment of neoplastic growth.

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