Chloroquine as a hyperthermia potentiator.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
The antimalarial agent chloroquine (CQ) inhibits DNA and RNA polymerase and interferes with lysosomal function. We sought to determine if these properties make chloroquine effective as a hyperthermia sensitizer. B16F10 melanoma cells were treated for 180 min at 37 or 41 degrees C with 0.005 mM CQ, 0.01 mM CQ, 0.05 mM CQ, or 0.1 mM CQ and colony formation evaluated at 7 days. CQ was cytotoxic at 37 or 41 degrees C in a dose-dependent fashion. A significant increase in cytotoxicity was seen with 0.5 and 0.1 mM CQ at 41 degrees C compared to 37 degrees C (P less than 0.01). The influence of treatment time on CQ cytotoxicity was examined by treating cells with 0.05 mM CQ at 37 or 41 degrees C for 30-min intervals from 30 to 180 min. Increasing length of exposure to CQ increased cytotoxicity at both 37 and 41 degrees C. For each interval studied treatment at 41 degrees C significantly decreased colony formation compared to treatment at 37 degrees C (P less than 0.01). Complete cell kill was achieved after 180 min of 41 degrees C treatment compared to 80% cell kill at 37 degrees C. We conclude that in this model CQ is an effective potentiator of hyperthermia.