The Mechanism of Action of Cyclophosphamide and Its Consequences for the Development of a New Generation of Oxazaphosphorine Cytostatics

Although cyclophosphamide (CP) has been used successfully in the clinic for over 50 years, it has so far not been possible to elucidate the mechanism of action and to use it for improvement. This was not possible because the basis of the mechanism of action of CP, which was found by lucky coincidenc...

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Main Author: Georg Voelcker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Österreichische Apotheker-Verlagsgesellschaft m. b. H. 2020-09-01
Series:Scientia Pharmaceutica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2218-0532/88/4/42
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spelling doaj-38c01b7c0bb3416c88287cd19153c63b2020-11-25T03:20:03ZengÖsterreichische Apotheker-Verlagsgesellschaft m. b. H.Scientia Pharmaceutica0036-87092218-05322020-09-0188424210.3390/scipharm88040042The Mechanism of Action of Cyclophosphamide and Its Consequences for the Development of a New Generation of Oxazaphosphorine CytostaticsGeorg Voelcker0Institute of Biochemistry II, Goethe University Frankfurt Medical School, 60590 Frankfurt, GermanyAlthough cyclophosphamide (CP) has been used successfully in the clinic for over 50 years, it has so far not been possible to elucidate the mechanism of action and to use it for improvement. This was not possible because the basis of the mechanism of action of CP, which was found by lucky coincidence, is apoptosis, the discovery of which was honored with the Nobel Prize only in 2002. Another reason was that results from cell culture experiments were used to elucidate the mechanism of action, ignoring the fact that in vivo metabolism differs from in vitro conditions. In vitro, toxic acrolein is formed during the formation of the cytotoxic metabolite phosphoreamidemustard (PAM), whereas in vivo proapoptotic hydroxypropanal (HPA) is formed. The CP metabolites formed in sequence 4-hydroxycyclophosphamide (OHCP) are the main cause of toxicity, aldophosphamide (ALDO) is the pharmacologically active metabolite and HPA amplifies the cytotoxic apoptosis initiated by DNA alkylation by PAM. It is shown that toxicity is drastically reduced but anti-tumor activity strongly increased by the formation of ALDO bypassing OHCP. Furthermore, it is shown that the anti-tumor activity against advanced solid P388 tumors that grow on CD2F1 mice is increased by orders of magnitude if DNA damage caused by a modified PAM is poorly repairable.https://www.mdpi.com/2218-0532/88/4/42cyclophosphamidethiazolidine and perhydrothiazine derivatives of aldophosphamide and I-aldophosphamideanti-tumor activitytoxicitymechanism of action
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Georg Voelcker
spellingShingle Georg Voelcker
The Mechanism of Action of Cyclophosphamide and Its Consequences for the Development of a New Generation of Oxazaphosphorine Cytostatics
Scientia Pharmaceutica
cyclophosphamide
thiazolidine and perhydrothiazine derivatives of aldophosphamide and I-aldophosphamide
anti-tumor activity
toxicity
mechanism of action
author_facet Georg Voelcker
author_sort Georg Voelcker
title The Mechanism of Action of Cyclophosphamide and Its Consequences for the Development of a New Generation of Oxazaphosphorine Cytostatics
title_short The Mechanism of Action of Cyclophosphamide and Its Consequences for the Development of a New Generation of Oxazaphosphorine Cytostatics
title_full The Mechanism of Action of Cyclophosphamide and Its Consequences for the Development of a New Generation of Oxazaphosphorine Cytostatics
title_fullStr The Mechanism of Action of Cyclophosphamide and Its Consequences for the Development of a New Generation of Oxazaphosphorine Cytostatics
title_full_unstemmed The Mechanism of Action of Cyclophosphamide and Its Consequences for the Development of a New Generation of Oxazaphosphorine Cytostatics
title_sort mechanism of action of cyclophosphamide and its consequences for the development of a new generation of oxazaphosphorine cytostatics
publisher Österreichische Apotheker-Verlagsgesellschaft m. b. H.
series Scientia Pharmaceutica
issn 0036-8709
2218-0532
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Although cyclophosphamide (CP) has been used successfully in the clinic for over 50 years, it has so far not been possible to elucidate the mechanism of action and to use it for improvement. This was not possible because the basis of the mechanism of action of CP, which was found by lucky coincidence, is apoptosis, the discovery of which was honored with the Nobel Prize only in 2002. Another reason was that results from cell culture experiments were used to elucidate the mechanism of action, ignoring the fact that in vivo metabolism differs from in vitro conditions. In vitro, toxic acrolein is formed during the formation of the cytotoxic metabolite phosphoreamidemustard (PAM), whereas in vivo proapoptotic hydroxypropanal (HPA) is formed. The CP metabolites formed in sequence 4-hydroxycyclophosphamide (OHCP) are the main cause of toxicity, aldophosphamide (ALDO) is the pharmacologically active metabolite and HPA amplifies the cytotoxic apoptosis initiated by DNA alkylation by PAM. It is shown that toxicity is drastically reduced but anti-tumor activity strongly increased by the formation of ALDO bypassing OHCP. Furthermore, it is shown that the anti-tumor activity against advanced solid P388 tumors that grow on CD2F1 mice is increased by orders of magnitude if DNA damage caused by a modified PAM is poorly repairable.
topic cyclophosphamide
thiazolidine and perhydrothiazine derivatives of aldophosphamide and I-aldophosphamide
anti-tumor activity
toxicity
mechanism of action
url https://www.mdpi.com/2218-0532/88/4/42
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