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EXPERIMENTAL STUDY |
Interactions Cellulaires Neuroendocriniennes, UMR6544, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Institut Fédératif Jean Roche, Faculté de Médecine Nord, Boulevard Pierre Dramard, 13916 Marseille Cedex 20, France, 1 Service de Neurochirurgie, CHU Timone, 264, rue Saint-Pierre, 13385 Marseille cedex 05, France and 2 IPSEN, Milford, Massachussetts 01757, USA
(Correspondence should be addressed to P Jaquet; Email: jaquet.p{at}jean-roche.univ.mrs.fr)
| Abstract |
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Materials and methods: The sstr2, sstr5 and DAD2 mRNA levels were determined by RT-PCR. The effect of drugs was tested in cell cultures at various concentrations.
Results: In all tumors, the sstr2, sstr5 and DAD2 mRNA levels were coexpressed (mean levels±S.E.M. 0.4±0.1, 5.3±1.9 and 2.0±0.4 copy/copy ß-glucuronidase). In 13 tumors, the maximal suppression of GH secretion produced by BIM-23A387 (30±3%) and BIM-23244 (28±3%) was greater than that produced by octreotide (23±3%). In six out of 13 tumors, BIM-23A758, BIM-23A760 and BIM- 23A761 produced greater maximal suppression of GH secretion than octreotide (33±5, 38±2 and 41±2 vs 24±2%). Their EC50 values were 10, 2 and 4 pmol/l. BIM-23A761 was more effective than BIM-23A387 in GH suppression (41±2 vs 32±4%). The new chimeric molecules produced maximal PRL suppression greater than octreotide (62±8 to 74±5 vs 46±11%).
Conclusions: Novel dopamine-somatostatin chimeric molecules with differing, enhanced activity at sstr2, sstr5 and DAD2, consistently produced significatly greater suppression of GH and PRL than either octreotide or single-receptor-interacting ligands in tumors from patients classified as only partially responsive to octreotide therapy. The higher efficacy of the chimeric compounds was, at least partially, linked to their high affinity for sstr2 (IC50 110 pmol/l). The other mechanisms by which such molecules produce an enhanced inhibition of GH remain to be elucidated.
| Introduction |
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The initial aim of the present study was to compare the efficacy of the sstr2-sstr5 bispecific SST analog, BIM-23244, and the sstr2-DAD2 chimeric molecule, BIM-23A387, in suppressing GH and PRL in 18 consecutive GH-secreting tumors collected from acromegalic patients previously classified as only partially responsive to long-term octreotide or lanreotide treatment. As the data obtained from this part of the study showed that most of the tumors that are partially responsive to octreotide responded to both dual receptor ligands, a new class of chimeric molecules with differing, enhanced affinities for sstr2, sstr5 and DAD2, was developed and tested in a subset of the GH-secreting tumors from patients partially responsive to octreotide. This latter study demonstrated that the new chimeric molecules with enhanced activity have the greatest efficacy in suppressing both GH and PRL.
| Patients and methods |
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Eighteen acromegalic patients were enrolled in this study which was approved by the Ethics Committee of the University of Aix-Marseille II. They were 15 women and three men aged 37±3 years (mean± S.E.M.). Initially, all the patients presented with invasive macroadenomas and were first treated with either sandostatin LAR (2030 mg i.m., monthly) or with somatuline SR (90120 mg i.m., monthly), for 626 months before surgery. In eight patients, the DA agonist, cabergoline, was added to the SST analog treatment (1.5 3.5 mg per os, weekly). In this series, the mean initial GH plasma value measured before any treatment (82±44 µg/l) was only partially lowered by such long-term medical treatments (37±6 µg/l). In none of the cases did the depot preparations of octreotide or of lanreotide, even with the addition of the DA agonist, cabergoline, normalize either plasma GH or IGF-I values. These treatments were withdrawn at least 1 month before transphenoidal surgery in all patients. After surgery, a portion of each tumor tissue was analyzed for quantitative expression of sstr2, sstr5 and DAD2 mRNAs. The remainder of each tissue was dispersed for cell culture studies.
Hormone assays
GH and PRL were measured using commercial immunoradiometric kits (Immunotech, Marseilles, France). Normal GH values ranged from 0.2 to 2.4 µg/l, normal PRL values ranged from 1 to 24 µg/l in women and from 1 to 17µg/l in men. After an ethanol acid extraction, the plasma IGF-I assay was performed using the IGF-I RIA kit from Nichols Institute Diagnostics (San Juan Capistrano, CA, USA). The normal ranges, according to sex and age, were established by our laboratory.
Compounds
The BIM compounds were produced and provided by IPSEN (Milford, MA, USA). Their affinities for the different human receptors were calculated from saturation binding assays performed on membrane preparations from transfected CHO-K1 cells expressing the different sstr or DAD2 subtypes, according to a previously published method (9). The individual characteristics of these compounds are listed in Table 1
. Octreotide was supplied by Novartis Pharmaceuticals (Basel, Switzerland). The SST analogs were dissolved in 0.01 mol/l acetic acid containing 0.1% purified human serum albumin (Life Technologies Inc., Cergy-Pontoise, France). The DA compounds were initially prepared as 103 mol/l solutions in 0.01 mol/l acetic acid and 70% ethanol. All drugs were stored at 80 °C as 103 mol/l solutions. For each experiment, working solutions were made by diluting a fresh aliquot with culture medium.
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Total RNA was extracted from 3060 mg tissue from each tumor using the RNAeasy isolation system (Qiagen, Courtaboeuf, France). One microgram of total RNA prepared from tumoral pituitary tissues was used for cDNA synthesis, as previously described (8). To quantify sstr and DAD2 mRNAs, a quantitative PCR was performed by TaqMan Gold nuclease assay (Perkin Elmer, Foster City, CA, USA) and the ABI PRISM 7700 sequence Detection System (Perkin Elmer) for real-time amplifications, according to the manufacturers protocol. The sstr and DAD2 mRNA levels were normalized to the ß-glucuronidase (ß-Gus) mRNA levels obtained in the same reaction, as previously described (8). For each measurement, three independent RT-PCR analyses were performed.
Cell culture studies
A portion of each tumor obtained at surgery was dissociated by enzymatic and mechanical methods. Depending on the tumor, 750 x 106 isolated cells were obtained. These cells were plated in multiwell culture dishes (Costar 3524; Costar, Brumath, France) which were coated with extracellular matrix from bovine endothelial corneal cells, as previously described (10), at a density of 2 x 104 cells per well in Dulbeccos minimum Eagles medium supplemented with 1% fetal calf serum, antibiotics, insulin, transferrin and selenium. The pharmacological studies were performed between days 4 and 8 of culture. Octreotide, the biselective sstr2-sstr5 SST analog, BIM-23244, and the SST-DA chimeric molecule, BIM-23A387, were tested at concentrations ranging from 13 to 8 mol/l in order to examine the doseresponse relationship and to determine the EC50 for GH inhibition. In six of these tumor cell cultures, we compared the doseresponse inhibition of GH secretion (and PRL in four GH-PRL tumors) achieved by the four new chimeric molecules with differing, enhanced affinity for sstr2, sstr5 and DAD2 subtypes. In the same experiments, we also directly compared the doseresponses for GH achieved by octreotide and the original SST-DA chimeric molecule, BIM-23A387.
Statistics
The results are presented as the means±S.E.M. Statistical significance between two unpaired groups was determined by the MannWhitney test. To measure the strength of association between the pairs of variables without specifying dependencies, Spearman order correlations were used. P < 0.05 was considered significant for all tests.
| Results |
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Real-time PCR quantitative analysis was performed on 15 out of 18 tumor fragments. The mean sstr2, sstr5 and DAD2 mRNA levels were 0.4±0.1, 5.3±1.9 and 2.0±0.4 copy/copy ß-Gus respectively. The mean sstr2, sstr5 and DAD2 mRNA levels were also measured in nine other GH-secreting adenomas from patients classified as sensitive to octreotide, as they had achieved normal GH and IGF-I values under octreotide or lanreotide. These values were 1.7±0.3, 4.8±0.7 and 4.0±0.5 copy/copy ß-Gus respectively. The mean sstr2 mRNA level in tumors from patients partially responsive to octreotide was markedly lower than that from octreotide-sensitive patients (P < 0.001). Sstr5 and DAD2 mRNA were well expressed in all tumors from patients partially responsive to octreotide and did not differ statistically from the level observed in tumors from octreotide-sensitive patients. No correlation between the response to treatment and the level of sstr5 or DAD2 expression could be established.
Maximal GH suppression by octreotide, SST and DA analogs
The effect of octreotide and selective SST and DA analogs on GH secretion in cultured cells derived from the 18 tumors was measured after a 12-h incubation period. The maximal inhibition of GH release induced by 1 or 10 nmol/l octreotide, as compared with controls (medium alone), was only partial and ranged from 6 to 35% according to the individual tumor (mean GH suppression by octreotide 23±3%). When the 18 cell cultures were treated with the sstr2-selective analog, BIM-23197, the sstr5-selective analog, BIM-23268 or the DAD2 compound, BIM-53097, a mean maximal inhibition of GH release of 24±3, 20±3 and 20±3% respectively was obtained. Of the three compounds, BIM-23197 produced the greatest maximal GH suppression in the majority (12 out of 18) of cases. However, the greatest absolute maximal GH suppression was obtained with the DAD2 analog, BIM-53097, in four tumors and with the sstr5-preferring compound, BIM-23268, in two cases.
Dose-related GH suppression with octreotide, the biselective sstr2-sstr5 analog, BIM-23244, and the chimeric sstr2-DAD2 analog, BIM-23A387
In the 18 octreotide partially responsive tumors, octreotide, BIM-23244 and BIM-23A387 were tested at various concentrations to determine their respective potencies in suppressing GH secretion. Two individual patterns of dose-related inhibition of GH release were identified, as shown in Fig. 1
. In the first group, consisting of 13 out of 18 tumors, the biselective molecules, BIM-23244 and BIM-23A387, at nanomolar concentrations, produced maximal mean GH suppression of 28±3 and 30±3% respectively, greater by 2343% than that obtained with octreotide (21±2%; P < 0.04 and P < 0.01 for BIM-23244 and BIM-23A387 vs octreotide). The EC50 values for octreotide, BIM-23244 and BIM-23A387 were 150 pmol/l (range 6250), 10 pmol/l (range 2100) and 1 pmol/l (range 0.550) respectively. The comparison between the hybrid molecules showed a significantly (P < 0.05) better GH suppressive effect with BIM-23A387. The second group consisted of five tumors that displayed similar doseresponse curves for GH suppression with octreotide, BIM-23244 and BIM-23A387. The differences between the EC50 values for octreotide, BIM-23244 and BIM-23A387 (8020 pmol/l) did not reach statistical significance.
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Cell cultures from six tumors from the first group that displayed enhanced inhibition of GH release with the sstr2-DAD2 compound, BIM-23A387, were used to test a series of four new chimeric molecules with differing, enhanced affinities for sstr2, sstr5 and DAD2 in order to find out if altering the activity ratio of these three receptors could produce a higher suppression of GH secretion than the activation produced by the original sstr2-DAD2 compound, BIM-23A387. As shown in Fig. 2
, the mean maximal GH suppression achieved with the new chimeric compounds, BIM-23A758, BIM-23A760, BIM-23A761 and BIM-23A765, varied between 24±1 and 41±2%. The mean maximal GH suppression obtained with BIM-23A765 was similar to that obtained in the same tumors with octreotide (26±2%). The mean maximal GH suppression obtained with the three other new chimeric compounds was significantly greater than that obtained with octreotide (33±5, 37±1 and 41±2% with BIM-23A758, BIM-23A760 and BIM-23A761; P < 0.05, P < 0.03, and P < 0.03 respectively vs octreotide). The EC50 values for these three compounds ranged from 2 to 10 pmol/l.
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BIM-23A761 vs the combination of sstr2, sstr5 and DAD2 monospecific drugs
In one tumor cell culture, the GH suppressive effect of the chimeric compound, BIM-23A761, was compared with an equimolar combination of the monospecific sstr2-, sstr5- and DAD2-preferential compounds. As shown in Fig. 3
, the mean dose-related pattern of GH suppression produced by BIM-23A761 was markedly distinct from that induced by the combination of BIM-23197 + BIM-23268 + BIM-53097 with a respectively (P < 0.03). Again the superior suppression of GH secretion by the chimeric molecule, as compared with octreotide (maximal suppression 22±2%), was highly significant (P < 0.01).
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Dose-related inhibition of PRL secretion by the trihybrid compounds, BIM-23A758, BIM-23A760, BIM-23A761 and BIM-23A765, was analyzed in cell cultures of four different GH + PRL-secreting tumors. As shown in Fig. 4
, all the compounds were highly effective in suppressing PRL secretion (mean EC-50 values = 210 pmol/l; maximal suppression 68±10 to 74±4%, depending on the compound). In comparison, octreotide and the original, chimeric compound, BIM-23A387, produced only 45±11 and 54±8% maximal inhibition of PRL secretion, with EC50 values of 200 and 5 pmol/l respectively.
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| Discussion |
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DA agonists were the first drugs used in the medical treatment of acromegaly. The efficacy of dopaminergic treatment increased to reach 2939% of patients with the advent of the high affinity D2 analog, cabergoline (3, 4). Until recently, it was believed that only GH-PRL mixed tumors could be controlled by cabergoline; however, a recent study demonstrated that the efficacy of adding cabergoline treatment in 42% of patients partially responsive to octreotide or lanreotide therapy was independent of PRL status (5). In our study, as in previous studies (8, 17), the chimeric molecule, BIM-23A387, displayed enhanced potency in suppressing GH secretion in the 13 out of 18 cell culture studies. In another study, using the antagonists sulpiride and BIM-23454, which antagonize DAD2 and sstr2 respectively, the higher efficacy of BIM-23A387 was attributed in large part to its dopaminergic pharmacophore site (17). We have previously demonstrated that both antagonists were able to partially reverse the activity of BIM-23A387 (8). Such apparently contradictory results can be explained by the different conditions used in the two studies. Because the sstr2 antagonist, BIM-23454 (18), has a low affinity for sstr2 (IC50 32 nmol/l) as compared with that of BIM- 23A387 (IC50 0.16 nmol/l), it can reverse the action of BIM-23A387 when BIM-23A387 is used at picomolar concentrations (8) and not at a higher concentration of 4 nmol/l (17). Finally, when the dose-related inhibition of GH secretion attained with BIM-23A387 and with BIM-23244 were compared, BIM-23A387 displayed an EC50 ten times lower than that of BIM-23244.
The second part of our study explored the possibility of a further enhancement of GH suppression from GH-secreting tumors partially responsive to octreotide by using new chimeric molecules that have differing, enhanced activities at sstr2, sstr5 and DAD2. From 12 different compounds, four such chimeric molecules with variable affinities for each receptor were selected. All four of these compounds displayed an exceptionally high affinity for sstr2 (IC50 10100 pmol/l). In the tumors treated with these compounds, in cell culture, GH secretion was suppressed with an EC50 significantly lower than that achieved with octreotide (110 vs 80 pmol/l). Three of the four new chimeric molecules also induced maximal GH suppression that was significantly greater than that produced by octreotide. Finally, the most potent sstr2-interacting chimeric molecules produced the greatest maximal GH inhibition. An increase in sstr2-binding affinity has previously been achieved with a non-peptide selective agonist, L-054522, which binds to the human sstr2 with a reported Ki of 0.01 nmol/l (19). High binding affinity for sstr2 is apparently a key point in the higher efficacy of the chimeric compounds; however, it does not completely explain the greater GH-suppressing efficacy of the new chimeric compounds since, among our compounds, BIM-23A765, despite its high affinity for sstr2, did not suppress GH secretion more efficiently than octreotide. It has been hypothesized that such multiple ligands could induce receptor homo- and hetero-dimerization as experimentally demonstrated in transfected cell lines (6, 2022). The first evidence that such a heterodimerization process may occur in normal cells was presented in a study using fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) in cortical neurons in culture (23). Another explanation for the greater efficacy of the multi-receptor-interacting chimeric compounds could be due to a different interaction between the ligand and its receptor that allows prolonged stabilization of its active conformation or alternation of the rate of internalization (2426). Accordingly, a ß-arrestin-dependent recycling of the sstr2 to the plasma membrane that may prevent sstr2 but not sstr5 degradation has recently been described using sstr2-transfected HEK293 cells (27). One final explanation for the greater potency of the multi-receptor-interacting chimeric molecules may simply be due to the fact that they can bind and activate multiple receptors. This ability increases the chance that once the ligand is released from one receptor it will rapidly occupy another receptor. Presently, there is no firm explanation for the unique activities of these novel chimeric compounds, and additional studies, such as those using fluorescent SST analogs or FRET, as recently studied in live adrenocorticotropin-secreting AtT20 cells (28), are needed to explain the enhanced efficiency of these ligands.
In conclusion, our present study extends the notion that ligands directed towards both DA and SST receptors can achieve greater hormone (GH and PRL) suppression than that achieved by octreotide in human GH-secreting adenomas. These new chimeric molecules may represent a new concept in drug design allowing greater efficacy in the treatment of a wider range of acromegalic patients. Indeed, clinical studies are needed in order to evaluate the tolerance of such compounds.
| Acknowledgements |
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