Tubulin-destabilizing agent BPR0L075 induces vascular-disruption in human breast cancer mammary fat pad xenografts

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Abstract

BPR0L075, 6-methoxy-3-(3′,4′,5′-trimethoxy-benzoyl)-1H-indole, is a tubulin-binding agent that inhibits tubulin polymerization by binding to the colchicine-binding site. BPR0L075 has shown antimitotic and antiangiogenic activity in vitro. The current study evaluated the vascular-disrupting activity of BPR0L075 in human breast cancer mammary fat pad xenografts using dynamic bioluminescence imaging. A single dose of BPR0L075 (50 mg/kg, intraperitoneally (i.p.)) induced rapid, temporary tumor vascular shutdown (at 2, 4, and 6 hours); evidenced by rapid and reproducible decrease of light emission from luciferase-expressing orthotopic MCF7 and MDA-MB-231 breast tumors after administration of luciferin substrate. A time-dependent reduction of tumor perfusion after BPR0L075 treatment was confirmed by immunohistological staining of the perfusion marker Hoechst 33342 and tumor vasculature marker CD31. The vasculature showed distinct recovery within 24 hours post therapy. A single i.p. injection of 50 mg/kg of BPR0L075 initially produced plasma concentrations in the micromolar range within 6 hours, but subsequent drug distribution and elimination caused BPR0L075 plasma levels to drop rapidly into the nanomolar range within 24 h. Tests with human umbilical vein endothelial (HUVEC) cells and tumor cells in culture showed that BPR0L075 was cytotoxic to both tumor cells and proliferating endothelial cells, and disrupted pre-established vessels in vitro and ex vivo. In conclusion, BPR0L075 caused rapid, albeit, temporary tumor vascular shutdown and led to reduction of tumor perfusion in orthotopic human breast cancer xenografts, suggesting that this antimitotic agent may be useful as a vascular-disrupting cancer therapy. © 2012 Liu et al.

Figures

  • Figure 1. Fluorescence images of mammary breast tumor response to administration of BPR0L075 at successive time points. Sequential images of a single nude mouse with orthotopic MCF7-lacZ and MCF7-luc-GFP-mCherry breast tumors growing in the front right (blue circle) and left mammary fat pad, respectively. Fluorescent signal (mCherry) increased over 24 hours following administration of carrier vehicle (A), but signals diminished 4, 6, and 24 hours after injection of BPR0L075 (B); (C) Variation in normalized fluorescent signal intensity for the group of three MCF7-luc-GFP-mCherry tumors in response to vehicle injection; (D) Variation in normalized fluorescent signal intensity for the group of six MCF7-lucGFP-mCherry tumors in response to injection of BPR0L075. * P,0.05, ** P,0.01, *** P,0.0001; + only three tumors observed at this time point. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0043314.g001
  • Figure 2. MCF7-luc-GFP-mCherry breast tumor response to administration of BPR0L075 observed by bioluminescence. (A, B) BLI of the same mouse as shown in Figure 1 with images obtained within 15 mins after administration of luciferin s.c. immediately after the FLI; (C) Dynamic BLI showing evolution of signal intensity for the MCF7-luc-GFP-mCherry tumor shown in ‘‘A’’ over 40 minutes; respective curves show baseline (blue diamonds), together with 2 (red squares), 4 (green triangles), 6 (open circles) and 24 (yellow circles) hours after administration of drug carrier vehicle; (D) Dynamic BLI with respect to treatment with BPR0L075 (50 mg/kg i.p.): baseline (same as 24 hour time point in ‘‘A’’, yellow circles); 2 hours after drug (red squares), 6 hours after drug (open circles) and 24 hours after drug (green triangles); (E) Normalized maximum bioluminescent signal observed in the first 15 mins post luciferin injection at each time point sequentially for individual mice over 24 hours with respect to carrier vehicle (n = 3, dashed lines) or drug (n = 3; solid lines). Control mice show highly reproducible signal, though with significant increase after 24 hours, whereas treated mice show severely decreased signal at the 2 hour time point, though with progressive recovery over 24 hours; (F) The control mice in ‘‘E’’ (dashed lines same symbol designation) were treated with drug on the second day and maximum light emission is plotted. These data were renormalized to the 24 hour time point in ‘‘E’’. Data look very similar to the mice receiving drug in ‘‘E’’. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0043314.g002
  • Figure 3. Histological validation of temporary vascular shutdown in MCF7-luc-GFP-mCherry mammary fat pad tumors with respect to BPR0L075 administration. (A) Tumor tissues from control mouse 4 hours after vehicle treatment showing H&E staining (original magnification 6100), mCherry fluorescence signals (6100), and luciferase expression stained with anti-luciferase antibody (red) with DAPI (blue) (magnification 6400); (B) Tumor sections from four control tumors showing vascular extent based on anti-CD31 (green) and perfusion marker Hoechst 33342 (blue); and (C) corresponding tumor sections from four tumors in mice treated with BPR0L075 (50 mg/kg i.p.) at different time points (magnification 6400). (D) Whole mount H&E section 24 hrs after administering BPR0L075 showing about 70% necrotic fraction. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0043314.g003
  • Figure 4. Plasma pharmacokinetics of BPR0L075 in CD-1 mice after administration of drug at 50 mg/kg intraperitoneally. (A) LC-MS/ MS analysis of BPR0L075 with chromatogram showing the retention time of internal standard [1-(1H-indol-3-ylcarbonyl)-1H-imidazole] and BPR0L075 as 2.1 and 2.8 min, respectively. (B) The plasma concentration-time curve following BPR0L075 treatment. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0043314.g004
  • Figure 5. Inhibition of cell proliferation by BPR0L075. (A) Proliferating human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC), and breast cancer (MCF7 and MDA-MB-231) cells were treated with BPR0L075 at various concentrations (0–15 nM) for 96 hours and the viable cells were stained with sulforhodamine B. (B) HUVEC and tumor cells were treated with BPR0L075 at various concentrations for 6 hours and 24 hours and cytotoxicity was evaluated by SRB assay. Fraction of cell survival relative to controls represents mean 6 SD of 16 determinations. (C) Representative photomicrographs show the morphology of HUVEC cells in the presence of ethanol vehicle or 10 nM BPR0L075 in medium. All experiments were repeated three times. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0043314.g005
  • Figure 6. BPR0L075 disrupts pre-established HUVEC capillarylike networks. HUVEC cells were seeded in a 96-well tissue culture plate coated with Matrigel for 12 hours before exposure to ethanol vehicle (A) or 10 nM of BPR0L075 (B) and cells were photographed at different time points. BPR0L075 decreased vessel sprouting ex vivo. Incubation of freshly isolated rat aorta (1 mm thick rings) in 1:1 Matrigel and RPMI medium containing 20 ng/mL VEGF generated vessel sprouts after 48 hour (baseline). Medium was replaced with fresh medium containing ethanol vehicle (C) or 10 nM of BPR0L075 (D) for an additional 24 hour. Representative images show massive vessel spouting in control rings, but reduced vessel sprouting in BPR0L075 treated rings. All experiments were repeated three times. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0043314.g006

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Liu, L., Beck, H., Wang, X., Hsieh, H. P., Mason, R. P., & Liu, X. (2012). Tubulin-destabilizing agent BPR0L075 induces vascular-disruption in human breast cancer mammary fat pad xenografts. PLoS ONE, 7(8). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0043314

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