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Inhibition of colony formation in agarose of metastatic human breast carcinoma and melanoma cells by synthetic glycoamine analogs
Authors:Gennadi V. Glinsky  Valeri V. Mossine  Janet E. Price  Diane Bielenberg  Vladislav V. Glinsky  Honnavara N. Ananthaswamy  Milton S. Feather
Affiliation:(1) Cancer Research Center and Metastat, Inc., 3501 Berrywood Dr., Columbia, MO;(2) Department of Cell Biology, The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX;(3) Department of Immunology, The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX;(4) Department of Biochemistry, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO, USA;(5) Cancer Research Center, 3501 Berrywood Dr., 65201 MO, Columbia, USA
Abstract:We studied the influence of 10 synthetic glycoamine analogs on colony formation in 0.3 and 0.9% agarose by metastatic human breast carcinoma (MDA-MB-435) and melanoma (TXM-13) cells. Nine synthetic analogs significantly inhibited the colony formation in 0.9% agarose of MDA-MB-435 human breast carcinoma cells; five compounds caused a 73–83% reduction of colony formation. Seven synthetic glycoamines caused a significant inhibition of colony formation in 0.9% agarose by TXM-13 melanoma cells with the inhibitory effect ranging from 71 to 87%. The 50% inhibition (I50) doses and relative activity rank of the compounds were similar for both breast carcinoma and melanoma cell lines. The murine B16 melanoma cell aggregation assay was employed to elucidate the potential mechanism(s) of the inhibitory activity of synthetic glycoamines. The relative activity ranks of the compounds based on the independently determined I50 doses for both cell aggregation and clonogenic growth assays were very similar for the four most active synthetic analogs and clearly indicated the importance of hydrophobic amino acid in mediating the bioactivity of synthetic glycoamines. In both experimental systems (clonogenic growth in agarose and cell aggregation assay) the leading compound was N-(1-deoxy-d-fructos-1-y1)-d-leucine (Fru-d-Leu) and the least active analog was N-(1-deoxy-d-fructos-1-yl)-glycine (Fru-Gly). These results show that synthetic glycoamines may act by competing for specific carbohydrate-lectin interactions, particularly those involving beta-galactoside-specific lectins expressed on metastatic cells.
Keywords:Amadori compounds  clonogenic growth  metastasis  synthetic glycoamines
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