To explore the effect of the Auger electron emitter 125I attached to a DNA intercalator, we have synthesized 125I- and 127I-labeled 3-acetamido-5-iodoproflavine (AIP) and have examined the uptake, intracellular distribution, and radiotoxicity of A125IP in Chinese hamster V79 cells. After incubation with AIP, the nuclei of V79 cells become fluorescent. Uptake of A125IP is directly proportional to its extracellular radioactive concentration and reaches a plateau at about 10 h. Of the cell-associated radioactivity, 60% is retained by the cells after extensive washing. When the survival of V79 cells is plotted as a function of radioactive cell content, the curve has no shoulder with a mean lethal dose (DN) of about 1.3 Gy to the cell nucleus. Because the DN of these cells when irradiated with 250 kVp X rays is 5.8 Gy, the relative biological effectiveness (RBE) of A125IP is about 4.5. The dependence of the RBE values on the localization of the Auger emitter is discussed on the basis of our extended studies on the same cell line.
Rhodamine 123, a mitochondrial stain that preferentially accumulates in certain cancer cells, has been reduced and iodinated by using NaI in the presence of N-chlorosuccinimide. The various mono-, di-, and triiodo derivatives have been isolated and characterized. These nonfluorescent compounds are taken up by mammalian cells, become fluorescent within the cytoplasm (presumably following oxidation), and show the same pattern of localization as the parent compound. Iodination with no-carrier-added Na125I yields the same mixture of compounds. All 125I derivatives accumulate preferentially in PC3 adenocarcinoma cells compared with V79 lung fibroblasts, with the differential being greatest for the monoiodo compound, followed by the di- and triiodo derivatives.
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