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1.
We have examined glucocorticoid effects on CEM-C7 and CEM-C1 subclones of a leukemic human T-cell line using fluorescence photobleaching recovery techniques. Incubation with 10(-5) M triamcinolone acetonide (TA) increased lipid lateral diffusion on steroid-sensitive CEM-C7 cells but had no effect on steroid-resistant CEM-C1 cells. CEM-C7 cells incubated in serum-free medium responded only to TA but, when fetal calf serum was added to the incubation medium, would also respond to 10(-5) M dexamethasone and hydrocortisone. Thus, glucocorticoids can cause increased lipid lateral diffusion in CEM-C7 cells, while having no effect on steroid-resistant CEM-C1 cells.  相似文献   

2.
Summary CEM-C7, a human leukemic CD4+ T-lymphocyte cell line and three of its subclones, CEM-4R4, CEM-3R43, and ICR-27, previously cultured in a medium supplemented with 5 to 10% fetal bovine serum, have been adapted to serum-free media. The best medium of those tested was RPMI 1640 supplemented with 5 μg/ml each transferrin and insulin + 5 ng/ml sodium selinite ± 0.1% bovine serum albumin. While growing either with or without albumin, the several clonal lines of CEM cells displayed growth similar to serum-supplemented cultures. Cell proliferation of CEM-C7 cells cultured in both serum-free media has been sustained for 3 mo, with culture doubling times of about 25 h for both serum-supplemented and serum-free cultures (viability ≥ 90%). Cell morphology remained essentially the same in serum-free or serum containing media. The expression of CD4, a marker for T-derived lymphoid cells, was not significantly different in serum-free medium. When grown in serum-free medium, CEM-C7 cells exhibited increased steroid responsiveness as evidenced by increased glucocorticoid receptor binding sites, increased induction of glutamine synthetase, and cell lysis at lower concentrations of steroid. Receptor mutant subclones of CEM-C7, which are proven to be completely unresponsive to micromolar concentrations of dexamethasone when grown in serum-supplemented medium, become partially sensitive to the hormone after growth in defined medium. The increased sensitivity of CEM-C7 cells and its subclones to dexamethasone in serum-free medium returned to previous levels when these cells were recultured in serum-containing medium. Our results suggest that substances in serum influence steroid effects on these cells and that the molecular details of glucocorticoid hormone action may be pursued more precisely in a clearly defined culture medium. This work was conducted in conjunction with the Walls Medical Research Foundation.  相似文献   

3.
Fifty-four independent dexamethasone-resistant clones were isolated from the clonal, glucocorticoid-sensitive human leukemic T-cell line CEM-C7. Resistance to 1 microM dexamethasone was acquired spontaneously at a rate of 2.6 X 10(-5) per cell per generation as determined by fluctuation analysis. After mutagenesis with N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG), the phenotypic expression time for dexamethasone resistance was determined to be 3 days. Spontaneous acquisition of resistance to 0.1 mM 6-thioguanine appeared to occur at a much slower rate, 1.6 X 10(-6) per cell per generation. However, the expression time after MNNG mutagenesis for this resistant phenotype was greater than 11 days, suggesting that the different rates of acquisition for the two phenotypes measured by fluctuation analysis were the results of the disparate expression times. The mutagens ICR 191 and MNNG were effective in increasing the dexamethasone-resistant fraction of cells in mutagenized cultures; ICR 191 produced a 35.6-fold increase, and MNNG produced an 8.5-fold increase. All the spontaneous dexamethasone-resistant clones contained glucocorticoid receptors, usually less than half of the amount found in the parental clone. They are therefore strikingly different from dexamethasone-resistant clones derived from the mouse cell lines S49 and W7. Dexamethasone-resistant clones isolated after mutagenesis of CEM-C7 contained, on the average, lower concentrations of receptor than did those isolated spontaneously, and one clone contained no detectable receptor. These results are consistent with a mutational origin for dexamethasone resistance in these human cells at a haploid or functionally hemizygous locus. They also suggest that this is a useful system for mutation assay.  相似文献   

4.
Regulation of glucocorticoid receptor (GR) protein and mRNA were examined in the human leukemic T-cell line CEM-C7. Unlike other cells in which GR regulation has been examined, the growth of these cells is inhibited by glucocorticoids, leading to cell death. Treatment of glucocorticoid-sensitive CEM-C7 cells with 1 microM dexamethasone for 18 h resulted in an increase in both cytoplasmic and nuclear GR protein, as determined by immunoblotting with anti-human GR antisera. Analysis of GR mRNA levels by Northern blotting revealed a corresponding increase in mRNA in steroid-treated cells. An increase in GR mRNA was detectable after as little as 3 h of treatment with dexamethasone, and GR mRNA concentration continued to increase for at least 18 h, well before the onset of growth arrest or cell death. GR mRNA concentration was not altered after dexamethasone treatment of the glucocorticoid-resistant mutant cell line ICR27TK.3, which lacks functional GR. Thus, the increase in GR seen in glucocorticoid-sensitive cells is a GR-mediated response. These results are in sharp contrast to the down-regulation of GR reported in other cells and tissues, and suggest that regulation of the GR by its cognate ligand may be tissue-specific.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Glucocorticoids induce growth inhibition and eventually cause cell lysis in certain sensitive leukemic cells. To investigate how glucocorticoids interact with cell growth pathways, we studied the expression of 14 growth-related genes in dexamethasone-treated CEM-C7A cells, a steroid-sensitive clone of the CCRF-CEM cell line, and in several closely related clones. The 14 genes studied were chosen to represent four different levels of mitogenic signal transduction. Detectable mRNA levels were found for 8 of the 14 genes, but among these only c-myc expression was obviously suppressed by dexamethasone. The c-myc mRNA levels declined abruptly during the first 12 h after addition of 1 microM dexamethasone, and maximal suppression occurred by 18 h. This change was not seen in the C7A controls, in the glucocorticoid-resistant, receptor-deficient clone ICR-27, or in the glucocorticoid-resistant, receptor-positive clone C1. H.10, a hybrid clone between C1 and ICR-27, showed restoration of the sensitive phenotype, and in H.10 cells the c-myc mRNA was also suppressed by dexamethasone. Our results suggest that: 1) functional glucocorticoid receptor is required for inducing c-myc suppression. 2) In dexamethasone-resistant cells with functional receptors c-myc is not suppressed. 3) The growth arrest induced by glucocorticoids correlates with, and may be regulated via, suppression of c-myc expression.  相似文献   

7.
8.
9.
31P NMR has been used to study the effects of dexamethasone on phosphorus metabolism in one dexamethasone (dex)-sensitive (CEM-C7) and three different dex-resistant (CEM-C1, CEM-4R4, and CEM-ICR27) human leukemic cell lines. The use of these cell lines, containing widely varying amounts of glucocorticoid receptors, made it possible to evaluate the receptor-mediated contributions to the modes of action of dexamethasone in these cells. To evaluate the effects of dexamethasone without any significant contribution from experimental conditions, all the experiments were done with parallel controls. Results obtained showed: (1) significantly different levels of phosphorylethanolamine (PE) and phosphorylcholine (PC) among cell lines, suggesting significant differences in phospholipid metabolism; (2) the dexamethasone induced reduction of phosphomonoester (PE + PC), ATP, and metabolic rates probably through glucocorticoid receptor mediated mechanisms; (3) the dexamethasone induced stimulation of cellular metabolism in a process which seems to be independent of glucocorticoid receptors; and (4) the dexamethasone induced alkaline shift of intracellular pH in all the cell lines except ICR27. The reduction in PME levels seems to be an earlier step in dexamethasone-induced apoptosis than the reduction in ATP. The degree of alkaline shift was found to correlate with the number of glucocorticoid receptors present. The possible involvement of phospholipid metabolites as second messengers in dexamethasone-induced apoptosis is discussed. © 1994 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Accumulation of isoprenoids was studied in two cell lines derived from acute T-cell leukemia: CEM-C7 cells, whose growth is inhibited by the glucocorticoid dexamethasone, and CEM-C1 cells, which are resistant to this steroid. Isoprenoids were measured by growing the cells in serum-free medium in the presence of lovastatin, which blocks synthesis of mevalonate, and then labeling with exogenous [3H]mevalonolactone. In both cell lines, isoprenoids associated with proteins were detected in cytoplasm, nucleus, and chromatin, and in the chromatin residue that remains after extraction of histone and nonhistone proteins. Differences in labeling were detected after treatment with dexamethasone in the CEM-C7 line, showing a decrease in the cytoplasmic fraction with a corresponding increase in both the nuclear and chromatin fractions as compared with untreated cells. No change was seen in the CEM-C1 line. In both cell lines, 25-30% of the incorporated label was released by treatment with acid or alkali. However, the majority of the label required treatment with methyl iodide for the release of organic-soluble tritiated products. After extraction with chloroform, the lipid fractions contained farnesol, geraniol, dolichols, and possibly nerolidol.  相似文献   

12.
Two glucocorticoid receptor-containing clones of human acute lymphoblastic leukemia, one (CEM-C7) sensitive and one (CEM-C1) resistant to dexamethasone (dex) were studied in an effort to identify the time course of the biochemical changes responsible for dex-induced growth inhibition of CEM-C7 cells. Cells were synchronized by treatment with 0.25 mM (C7) or 0.50 mM (C1) thymidine for 12 h followed by 0.025 micrograms/ml (C7) or 0.050 micrograms/ml (C1) colcemid for 12 h, then released either in the presence or absence of 1 microM dex. The inhibition of cellular proliferation which occurs at 48 h after release in the dex-treated CEM-C7 cells was preceded by an inhibition of acetate incorporation into cholesterol, first evident at 24 h, inhibition of protein synthesis at 30 h, and the development of a cell cycle block in G1 at 36 h. No inhibition of any of these parameters was seen in the resistant CEM-C1 cells. Thus the inhibition of cholesterol synthesis in the sensitive cells may be one of the earliest parameters affected by glucocorticoids.  相似文献   

13.
The purpose of this investigation was to study the mechanism of stimulation of PGE2 output from human amnion epithelial cells by the synthetic glucocorticoid dexamethasone. Cells incubated in serum-free pseudo-amniotic fluid produced very low levels of PGE2, even when arachidonic acid (1 microM) was present. Pretreatment of cells with dexamethasone (50 nM) for 21 h increased the PGE2 output 6- to 7-fold in 2-h incubations only in the presence of arachidonic acid. The RNA synthesis inhibitor, actinomycin D (1 microgram/ml), and the protein synthesis inhibitor, cycloheximide (40 micrograms/ml), each blocked dexamethasone-stimulated arachidonic acid conversion to PGE2. The time course of these events suggests that dexamethasone first initiates RNA synthesis. Acetylsalicylic acid, a specific and irreversible blocker of prostaglandin endoperoxide H synthase (cyclooxygenase), was used to determine whether dexamethasone could stimulate new enzyme synthesis. Cells treated first with acetylsalicylic acid (30 min) then dexamethasone (22 h) produced as much PGE2 in response to 1 microM arachidonate as did cells exposed to dexamethasone only. Exposing cells to acetylsalicylic acid after dexamethasone completely eliminated PGE2 output. These data suggest that dexamethasone stimulates the synthesis of prostaglandin endoperoxide H synthase.  相似文献   

14.
The antifungal drug, ketoconazole, was reported to antagonize the induction of the enzyme tyrosine aminotransferase (TAT) by glucocorticoids in hepatoma tissue culture (HTC) cells, and to compete with glucocorticoids for binding to the glucocorticoid receptor. Since glucocorticoids inhibit the growth of the human leukemia cell line CEM-C7, ketoconazole might be expected to reverse this inhibition. Unexpectedly, ketoconazole inhibited CEM-C7 cell growth without utilizing glucocorticoid receptors. This was confirmed by ketoconazole inhibition of the growth of a receptor-less subline of CEM-C7 cells which are insensitive to glucocorticoids. Ketoconazole competed with triamcinolone acetonide (TA) for binding to the glucocorticoid receptor in cell-free supernatant prepared from CEM-C7 cells, but this was greatly reduced if ketoconazole and TA were incubated with intact cells prior to preparation of the cell-free supernatant. Ketoconazole inhibited induction by TA of the enzyme glutamine synthetase only at concentrations of 45-90 microM. We conclude that ketoconazole antagonism of glucocorticoid activity in CEM-C7 cells is probably not of pharmacologic significance due to the large concentrations required, and its reduced interaction with receptors in intact cells. The growth inhibitory activity of ketoconazole may be of interest in cancer chemotherapy.  相似文献   

15.
The induction of apoptosis in leukemic cells by dexamethasone is well known, but the mechanism of this type of cell death and of dexamethasone resistance by some variants is still poorly understood. Apoptotic cell death is preceded by many changes in cellular properties, such as glucose metabolism, cell size, cell density, and others. In this study, 19F-NMR has been used to characterize changes in cell membrane potential and intracellular accessible volume during dexamethasone induced apoptosis. One dex-sensitive (CEM-C7) and three dex-resistant variants (CEM-C1, CEM-ICR27, and CEM-4R4) were examined. We have observed separate intracellular and extracellular resonances for trifluoroacetate and trifluoroacetamide added to suspended leukemic cells. From the equilibrium distribution of these fluoro-compounds between intra and extracellular spaces, the changes in membrane potential and intracellular accessible volume were calculated. The membrane potential for CEM-C7 cells was found to significantly decrease in the presence of dexamethasone (9-mV decrease within 18 h of dexamethasone treatment), while that of CEM-ICR27 was found in some samples to increase on dexamethasone incubation. The membrane potential for CEM-C1 decreased slightly, while that of CEM-4R4 was not appreciably affected by dexamethasone. The reduction of membrane potential seems to be an early step in the mechanism of dexamethasone induced apoptosis. Although the intracellular volume varied with cell type and dexamethasone incubation (for CEM-C7), the fractional intracellular volume (α = Vin/Vcell was found to be the same (0.82 ± 0.06) for all the cell lines in the presence and absence of dexamethasone. © 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

16.
Glucocorticoids can mediate the destruction of thymocytes and T cell-derived leukemia cells through a mechanism known as apoptosis. The characteristic feature of apoptosis is fragmentation of DNA at internucleosomal linkers through the activity of a specific endonuclease. In this study, an attempt was made to compare dexamethasone-induced apoptosis in two T cell-derived human leukemia lines (CEM-C1 and CEM-C7) to the cell killing brought about by selected cytotoxic agents. In the CEM-C7 cell line (dexamethasone-sensitive), apoptosis was induced not only by dexamethasone but by actinomycin D, cycloheximide, and 25-OH cholesterol. In the CEM-C1 cell line (dexamethasone-resistant) cycloheximide, 25-OH cholesterol, or cell starvation could induce apoptosis. It appears that in leukemic cells apoptosis may be induced by a variety of unrelated toxic agents and is not limited to glucocorticoids.  相似文献   

17.
Prostaglandin E (PGE) receptors in canine small intestinal mucosal and muscle membrane preparations were labeled with [3H] PGE1. Saturable, high affinity binding of [3H] PGE1 was observed in both preparations. The density of binding sites (fmol/mg protein) was 39 for mucosal membranes and 60 for muscle membranes, with corresponding dissociation constants of 10.6 nM and 5.8 nM, respectively. [3H] PGE1 binding sites in both preparations showed stereospecificity and high affinity for natural PGE1 and PGE2, but not for I or F-type PGs. Synthetic PGEs such as misoprostol and enisoprost had lower affinity than PGE1 or PGE2. Several analogs of enisoprost bound weakly to the binding sites. A highly significant correlation (C.C. = 0.9) was demonstrated between mucosal and muscle binding potency for a series of enisoprost analogs. There was also a significant positive correlation between the receptor binding potency and rat diarrheagenic activity for these analogs. These results indicate that PGE receptors in canine intestinal mucosa and muscle can be directly studied with [3H] PGE1 binding. The mucosal and muscle PGE receptors may have similar ligand binding specificity. We speculate that these receptors are likely to be associated with the diarrheagenic activity of PGEs.  相似文献   

18.
Cortivazol is a phenylpyrazolo glucocorticoid of high potency and unusual structure. In both wild-type and highly dexamethasone(dex)-resistant clones of the human leukemic cell line CEM, exposure to cortivazol leads to cell death. It has been shown recently that in wild-type CEM cells but not in a dex-resistant, glucocorticoid receptor(GR)-defective clone ICR-27 TK-3, dex induces GR mRNA. To test the hypothesis that cortivazol acts in dex-resistant cells by making use of the residual GR found there, wild-type and dex-resistant clones were treated with various concentrations of cortivazol and induction of GR mRNA was studied. Cortivazol significantly induced GR mRNA in the normal CEM-C7 as well as in two classes of dex-resistant clones, although the dex-resistant clones needed at least 10 times more cortivazol than the normal cells for significant GR mRNA induction. Increased levels of GR mRNA were noticed as early as 3 h after treatment. A general correlation between induction of GR mRNA and lysis of the normal and dex-resistant cells was found. Positive induction of GR mRNA might be one of the earliest crucial steps in the lysis of normal and dex-resistant CEM cells, or might serve as a marker for the process. However, the lysis pathway in the dex-resistant cells is defective in that dex-resistant clones needed significantly more cortivazol than the normal cells for lysis of the cells.  相似文献   

19.
The mechanisms by which cAMP mediates apoptosis are not well understood. In the current studies, we used wild-type (WT) S49 T-lymphoma cells and the kin(-) variant (which lacks protein kinase A (PKA)) to examine cAMP/PKA-mediated apoptosis. The cAMP analog, 8-CPT-cAMP, increased phosphorylation of the cAMP response element-binding protein (CREB), activated caspase-3, and induced apoptosis in WT but not in kin(-) S49 cells. Using an array of 96 apoptosis-related genes, we found that treatment of WT cells with 8-CPT-cAMP for 24 h induced expression of mRNA for the pro-apoptotic gene, Bim. Real-time PCR analysis indicated that 8-CPT-cAMP increased Bim RNA in WT cells in <2 h and maintained this increase for >24 h. Bim protein expression increased in WT but not kin(-) cells treated with 8-CPT-cAMP or with the beta-adrenergic receptor agonist isoproterenol. Both apoptosis and Bim expression were reversible with removal of 8-CPT-cAMP after <6 h. The glucocorticoid dexamethasone also promoted apoptosis and Bim expression in S49 cells. In contrast, both UV light and anti-mouse Fas monoclonal antibody promoted apoptosis in S49 cells but did not induce Bim expression. 8-CPT-cAMP also induced Bim expression and enhanced dexamethasone-promoted apoptosis in human T-cell leukemia CEM-C7-14 (glucocorticoid-sensitive) and CEM-C1-15 (glucocorticoid-resistant) cells; increased Bim expression in 8-CPT-cAMP-treated CEM-C1-15 cells correlated with conversion of the cells from resistance to sensitivity to glucocorticoid-promoted apoptosis. Induction of Bim appears to be a key event in cAMP-promoted apoptosis in both murine and human T-cell lymphoma and leukemia cells and thus appears to be a convergence point for the killing of such cells by glucocorticoids and agents that elevate cAMP.  相似文献   

20.
Growth of a human leukemic T-cell line (CEM C7) in 10(-6) M dexamethasone results in inhibition of growth and rapid loss of cell viability after a delay of approximately 18 to 24 hours. Analysis of dexamethasone-treated cells by flow-microfluorometry showed that they were arrested in the G1 phase of the cell cycle. Loss of cell viability began at the same time as G1 accumulation was first detectable, and 20% of all cells were found to be blocked in G1 at this time suggesting that loss of viability and G1 arrest were coincident events. Half-maximal and maximal effects on both viability and G1 arrest after 48 hours in steroid were nearly identical with respect to steroid concentration and corresponded to half-maximal and full occupancy of glucocorticoid specific receptor by hormone, consistent with a glucocorticoid receptor mediated mechanism for both phenomena. Most non-viable cells were arrested in G1, and accumulation of cells in G1 was irreversible; removal of steroid in the presence of colcemid did not result in a decreased fraction of G1 cells. Furthermore, dexamethasone treatment did not protect cells against the effects of 33258 Hoechst-amplified killing of bromodeoxyuridine substituted cells exposed to light. These results show that dexamethasone arrests these leukemic cells in G1 and strongly suggest that dexamethasone-treated cells are killed upon entry into G1.  相似文献   

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