Oxygen dependency of tumor cell killing in vitro by light-activated Photofrin II.

1991 
Asynchronous populations of mouse EMT-6 tumor cells were treated with Photofrin II and exposed to various doses of 630 nm light in slowly stirred suspensions which had been equilibrated with various concentrations of oxygen. Survival curves were generated with cells exposed to 20 μg/ml Photofrin II in tissue culture medium for 1 h, a procedure which made it possible to remove more than 50% of the drug by washing. It is expected that under these conditions the drug would be loosely bound to cell surface and plasma membranes and in the cellular cytosol. Survival curves were also generated with cells exposed to 5 μg/ml Photofrin II for 20-24 h, a procedure which resulted in >90% of the drug being tightly bound within cells, presumably to cellular lipids and membranes. Oxygen was obligatory for killing cells which had been exposed for both "short term" and "long term" to Photofrin II. After 30-40 min of pregassing cells with nitrogen gas which contained precise levels of oxygen, the concentration required to ...
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