Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1908890 Free Radical Biology and Medicine 2011 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

We investigated the efficacy and mechanism of dimethylaminoparthenolide (DMAPT), an NF-κB inhibitor, to sensitize human lung cancer cells to X-ray killing in vitro and in vivo. We tested whether DMAPT increased the effectiveness of single and fractionated X-ray treatment through inhibition of NF-κB and/or DNA double-strand break (DSB) repair. Treatment with DMAPT decreased plating efficiency, inhibited constitutive and radiation-induced NF-κB binding activity, and enhanced radiation-induced cell killing by dose modification factors of 1.8 and 1.4 in vitro. X-ray fractionation demonstrated that DMAPT inhibited split-dose recovery/repair, and neutral DNA comet assays confirmed that DMAPT altered the fast and slow components of X-ray-induced DNA DSB repair. Knockdown of the NF-κB family member p65 by siRNA increased radiation sensitivity and completely inhibited split-dose recovery in a manner very similar to DMAPT treatment. The data suggest a link between inhibition of NF-κB and inhibition of DSB repair by DMAPT that leads to enhancement of X-ray-induced cell killing in vitro in non-small-cell lung cancer cells. Studies of A549 tumor xenografts in nude mice demonstrated that DMAPT enhanced X-ray-induced tumor growth delay in vivo.

► Dimethylamino-parthenolide (DMAPT) inhibits the growth of human NSCL lung cancer cells. ► DMAPT enhanced X-ray induced cell killing both in vitro & in vivo. ► DMAPT inhibited constitutive & radiation-induced NF-κB binding activity. ► DMAPT inhibited split dose recovery & altered X-ray-induced DNA double strand break repair. ► DMAPT sensitizes NSCL cells to X-rays through inhibition of NF-κB & DNA double strand break repair.

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