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Doxorubicin distribution in multicellular prostate cancer spheroids evaluated by confocal laser scanning microscopy and the “optical probe technique”

✍ Scribed by Maria Wartenberg; Jürgen Hescheler; Helmut Acker; Heike Diedershagen; Heinrich Sauer


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
249 KB
Volume
31
Category
Article
ISSN
0196-4763

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✦ Synopsis


Multicell-mediated drug resistance is a major impediment for the effectiveness of chemotherapeutic approaches and has been shown to be a feature of many solid tumors. We used confocal laser scanning microscopy to evaluate the depth distribution of the fluorescent cytostatic drug doxorubicin (Dox) in two size classes of multicellular cancer spheroids (MCS) (psi150+/-50 microm and 350+/-50 microm). MCS (psi150+/-50 microm) solely consist of proliferating cells, whereas in MCS (psi350+/-50 microm) peripheral proliferating cell layers are followed in the depth of the tissue by drug resistant quiescent cell areas. A technique was developed which allows noninvasively to trace fluorescence distributions down to a depth of approximately 180 microm in living MCS. This was achieved by confocal radial recordings of the mean Dox fluorescence in 600 microm2 regions of interest (ROI), equidistantly spaced (10 microm) from the center of MCS towards their periphery. The resulting fluorescence intensity profiles were subsequently corrected for absorbtion and light scattering in the depth of the tissue by a convenient algorithm. A 10 min incubation of MCS (psi150+/-50 microm) with Dox (10 microM) led to a peripheral accumulation, after 2 h Dox was homogeneously distributed within the whole MCS. In contrast, after Dox treatment of MCS (psi350+/-50 microm) for 2 h, the drug was accumulated within the peripheral proliferating cell rim of 78+/-8 microm, whereas deeper, quiescent cell layers remained unstained. When MCS were incubated with verapamil, cyclosporin A, orthovanadate, and quinidine, which are known to reverse P-glycoprotein (Pgp)-mediated multidrug resistance (MDR), Dox accumulated also in deeper cell layers. Genistein and indometacin which reverse multidrug resistance mediated by the multidrug resistance-associated protein (MRP) were without effects. The optical probe technique proved to be well suited to study MDR in a living three dimensional tissue context.