pubmed-article:2196924 | pubmed:abstractText | In this study, we evaluated the inhibitory effects of PTT-119, a new tripeptide which is known to be a bifunctional alkylating agent, on two tumor cell lines with different origins: SK-DHL-2 (B-cell diffuse histiocytic lymphoma cell line) and RPMI 8226 (Multiple myeloma patient cell line) and compared the toxicity of PTT-119 toward normal human bone marrow granulocyte macrophage (CFU-GM), erythroid (BFU-E), and pluripotent (CFU-GEM) progenitors. Reduction of at least four logs was achieved on clonogenic myeloma cells after 1 hr of treatment with 25 micrograms/mL of PTT-119 either in the presence or absence of irradiated bone marrow (BM) cells. More than three and at least four logs of lymphoma cell kill were found after 1 hr of incubation with 25 and 40 micrograms/mL of the tripeptide, respectively. PTT-119 antitumor effects on SK-DHL-2 were only slightly affected in the presence of an excess of BM cells. BM cells treated for 1 hr with 25 micrograms/mL of PTT-119 showed a mean recovery of 4.5, 3.8, and 13.8% of CFU-GM, BFU-E, and CFU-GEM, respectively. The addition of 5- and 10-fold excesses of red blood cells (RBC) produced a slightly higher recovery of these hematopoietic progenitors. These results suggest that PTT-119 may be useful as a chemotherapeutic agent for the ex vivo treatment of bone marrow grafts. | lld:pubmed |