1. Academic Validation
  2. Induction of erythroid differentiation by the anthracycline antitumor antibiotic pyrromycin

Induction of erythroid differentiation by the anthracycline antitumor antibiotic pyrromycin

  • Cell Biol Toxicol. 1988 Mar;4(1):123-33. doi: 10.1007/BF00141291.
G Steinheider 1 A Schaefer J Westendorf H Marquardt
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Toxicology, Hamburg University Medical School, Federal Republic of Germany.
Abstract

The oligosaccharide-anthracyclines, aclacinomycin A, marcellomycin and musettamycin, are potent inducers of erythroid differentiation in hemopoietic cells lines of rodent and human origin. The present studies revealed that pyrromycin, a closely related monosaccharide-anthracycline, induced erythroid differentiation in Friend leukemia cells and in the human leukemia cell line K 562. Pyrromycin, marcellomycin and musettamycin, which possess an identical aglycone structure containing a Cl-hydroxyl group, exhibited relatively low optimal inductive concentrations. In contrast, the optimal inductive concentration of aclacinomycin A, which lacks the Cl-hydroxyl group, was markedly higher, i.e., the differentiation inducing capacity was lower. It should be noted, however, that the yield of differentiated cells following treatment with the monosaccharide-anthracycline pyrromycin was distinctly lower than that after treatment with the oligo-saccharide-anthracyclines, aclacinomycin A, marcellomycin or musettamycin. Thus, our data indicate that the efficacy of anthracyclines to induce erythroid differentiation is related to a) the presence of a Cl-hydroxyl group in the aglycone and b) the presence of an oligosaccharide side chain.

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