A newly developed fluoroquinoline, Q-35 (8-OCH3), in which a methoxy group was substituted at the 8 position of the quinoline nucleus, was very stable under irradiation with long-wave UV light (UVA). Derivatives, a fluoroquinolone with no substitution (the 8-H analog) and one in which a fluorine was substituted (the 8-F analog), were degraded in their solutions by the UVA irradiation. The phototoxic inducibility by these derivatives was further studied in a murine model. When mice were dosed orally with 800 mg of Q-35 (8-OCH3) per kg of body weight, the maximum dose given, and exposed to the UVA light, no inflammatory lesions were observed in their ears. Ear redness was marked in mice given more than 12.5 mg of the 8-F analog or 200 mg of the 8-H analog per kg. Histopathological changes, edema, and infiltration of neutrophils were also observed microscopically in groups receiving the 8-H or 8-F analog but not in groups receiving Q-35 (8-OCH3). Similar inflammatory reactions were observed to occur in a dose-dependent manner with other available fluoroquinolone antibacterial agents such as lomefloxacin, enoxacin, norfloxacin, ciprofloxacin and ofloxacin. These results suggest that the introduction of a methoxy group at the 8 position of the quinolone nucleus is important for the reduction of phototoxicity.
The in vitro effect of X-ray irradiation on the human natural killer (NK) system was studied. When K562 cells were irradiated with X-rays and cultured for 18 hours, they showed increased sensitivity to lysis by blood lymphocytes and purified large granular lymphocytes (LGL). The X-ray-induced augmentation was observed as little as 2 Gy irradiation, reaching maximum at 5 to 20 Gy. The doses of X-rays did not influence the viability and spontaneous release of the target cells. On the other hand, irradiation with X-rays of NK cells at 5 to 15 Gy resulted in a transient increase in NK activity at 1 hour, and then the activity declined and was completely lost after 24 hours. However, when LGL were cultured with interferon immediately after irradiation, they maintained elevated NK activity. These results suggest the possible use of low doses of X-ray irradiation in combination with biological response modifiers for treatment of cancer.
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