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1.
Oxidative stress, growth factor starvation, and activation of the Fas/APO-1/CD95 receptor all induce apoptosis in a variety of cell-types, including the established human Jurkat T-cell line. Oxidative stress, in the form of exposure of the cells to a bolus dose of hydrogen peroxide, results in intralysosomal, iron-catalyzed oxidative reactions. This is accompanied by a time- and dose-dependent lysosomal destabilization--as evaluated by a decreased lysosomal uptake of the metachromatic fluorochrome, and weak base, acridine orange--in combination with leakage to the cytosol of lysosomal contents, including hydrolytic enzymes. Moderate lysosomal rupture is followed by apoptosis within initially intact plasma membranes, while necrosis and cell lysis are associated with a more complete lysosomal breach. Prior endocytosis of the potent iron-chelator desferrioxamine, resulting in binding of intralysosomal low molecular weight iron in a non-redox active form, largely prevents not only oxidative stress-induced lysosomal labilization, but apoptosis as well. When apoptosis is induced by the use of a monoclonal IgM anti-human Fas/APO-1/CD95 receptor antibody, the apoptotic process is again found to be accompanied by lysosomal leak. It is, however, not prevented by a preceding endocytosis of desferrioxamine and, consequently, could not be a function of intralysosomal iron-catalyzed oxidative reactions, but must be due to other mechanisms. Growth factor starvation of Jurkat cultures for a few days results in a high proportion of apoptotic cells, which contain lysosomes many of which have lost their proton gradient and appear to have released their contents. Overall, our results indicate that lysosomal leakage/rupture precedes apoptosis in Jurkat cells regardless of the initiating agent, but that such rupture may occur through multiple mechanisms. Lysosomal enzymes, leaking out of their normal vacuolar compartment, may then induce apoptosis, perhaps by proteolytic activation of the caspase-family of enzymes. Regardless of the precise mechanism, these observations suggest that partial rupture of the acidic vacuolar compartment may be one of the final pathways in apoptosis.  相似文献   

2.
Kurz T  Gustafsson B  Brunk UT 《The FEBS journal》2006,273(13):3106-3117
Oxidant-induced cell damage may be initiated by peroxidative injury to lysosomal membranes, catalyzed by intralysosomal low mass iron that appears to comprise a major part of cellular redox-active iron. Resulting relocation of lytic enzymes and low mass iron would result in secondary harm to various cellular constituents. In an effort to further clarify this still controversial issue, we tested the protective effects of two potent iron chelators--the hydrophilic desferrioxamine (dfo) and the lipophilic salicylaldehyde isonicotinoyl hydrazone (sih), using cultured lysosome-rich macrophage-like J774 cells as targets. dfo slowly enters cells via endocytosis, while the lipophilic sih rapidly distributes throughout the cell. Following dfo treatment, long-term survival of cells cannot be investigated because dfo by itself, by remaining inside the lysosomal compartment, induces apoptosis that probably is due to iron starvation, while sih has no lasting toxic effects if the exposure time is limited. Following preincubation with 1 mM dfo for 3 h or 10 microM sih for a few minutes, both agents provided strong protection against an ensuing approximately LD50 oxidant challenge by preventing lysosomal rupture, ensuing loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, and apoptotic/necrotic cell death. It appears that once significant lysosomal rupture has occurred, the cell is irreversibly committed to death. The results lend strength to the concept that lysosomal membranes, normally exposed to redox-active iron in high concentrations, are initial targets of oxidant damage and support the idea that chelators selectively targeted to the lysosomal compartment may have therapeutic utility in diminishing oxidant-mediated cell injury.  相似文献   

3.
Oxidized low density lipoprotein (oxLDL) is believed to play a central role in atherogenesis. LDL is oxidized in the arterial intima by mechanisms that are still only partially understood. OxLDL is then taken up by macrophages through scavenger receptor-mediated endocytosis, which then leads to cellular damage, including apoptosis. The complex mechanisms by which oxLDL induces cell injury are mostly unknown. This study has demonstrated that oxLDL-induced damage of macrophages is associated with iron-mediated intralysosomal oxidative reactions, which cause partial lysosomal rupture and ensuing apoptosis. This series of events can be prevented by pre-exposing cells to the iron-chelator, desferrioxamine (DFO), whereas it is augmented by pretreating the cells with a low molecular weight iron complex. Since both DFO and the iron complex would be taken up by endocytosis, and thus directed to the lysosomal compartment, the results suggest that the normal contents of lysosomal low molecular weight iron may play an important role in oxLDL-induced cell damage, presumably by catalyzing intralysosomal fragmentation of lipid peroxides and the formation of toxic aldehydes and oxygen-centered radicals.  相似文献   

4.
Oxidized low density lipoprotein (oxLDL) is believed to play a central role in atherogenesis. LDL is oxidized in the arterial intima by mechanisms that are still only partially understood. OxLDL is then taken up by macrophages through scavenger receptor-mediated endocytosis, which then leads to cellular damage, including apoptosis. The complex mechanisms by which oxLDL induces cell injury are mostly unknown. This study has demonstrated that oxLDL-induced damage of macrophages is associated with iron-mediated intralysosomal oxidative reactions, which cause partial lysosomal rupture and ensuing apoptosis. This series of events can be prevented by pre-exposing cells to the iron-chelator, desferrioxamine (DFO), whereas it is augmented by pretreating the cells with a low molecular weight iron complex. Since both DFO and the iron complex would be taken up by endocytosis, and thus directed to the lysosomal compartment, the results suggest that the normal contents of lysosomal low molecular weight iron may play an important role in oxLDL-induced cell damage, presumably by catalyzing intralysosomal fragmentation of lipid peroxides and the formation of toxic aldehydes and oxygen-centered radicals.  相似文献   

5.
Abstract

Oxidative stress has been found to cause lysosomal rupture due to iron-catalyzed intralysosomal oxidative reactions.1,2 Moderate rupture induces apoptosis, while necrosis follows a more complete relocation of this type.2 We have suggested that lysosomal cysteine proteases may directly activate the caspase cascade and, together with other lysosomal hydrolases, induce mitochondrial release of cytochrome c with ensuing further activation of the cascade.  相似文献   

6.
Summary

Glucose and amino acid starvation of cells in culture generally enhances their sensitivity to oxidative stress. This is explained by compensatory autophagocytosis, which results in increased amounts of lysosomal low-molecular-weight, redox-active iron, due to the degradation of metallo-proteins, with a potential increase in iron-catalyzed, intralysosomal oxidative reactions. Such reactions diminish the stability of lysosomal membranes, with resultant leakage of hydrolytic enzymes into the cytosol and ensuing cellular degeneration, often of apoptotic type. However, starvation of NIT insulinoma cells, which are normally remarkably sensitive to oxidative stress, actually attenuated the sensitivity to such stress. We found that starved NIT cells rapidly synthesized ferritin. Moreover, ferritin was found to be autophagocytosed, and the lysosomes were stabilized, as assayed by the acridine orange relocation test. We hypothesize that compensatory autophagocytosis during starvation increases the cytosolic pool of redox-active iron, as a reflection of enhanced transportation of low-molecular-weight iron from autophagic lysosomes to the cytosol, resulting in ferritin induction. The newly formed ferritin would, in turn, become autophagocytosed and bind redox-active lysosomal iron in a non-redox-active form. We also suggest that the proposed mechanism may be a way for oxidative stress-sensitive cells to compensate partly for their failing capacity to degrade hydrogen peroxide before it leaks into the acidic vacuolar apparatus and induces intralysosomal oxidative stress. The insulin-producing beta cell may belong to this type of cells.  相似文献   

7.
Macrophages have a great capacity to take up (eg. by endocytosis and phagocytosis) exogenous sources of iron which could potentially become cytotoxic, particularly following the intralysosomal formation of low-molecular weight, redox active iron, and under conditions of oxidative stress. Following autophago-cytosis of endogenous ferritin/apoferritin, these compounds may serve as chelators of such lysosomal iron and counteract the occurrence of iron-mediated intralysosomal oxidative reactions. Such redox-reactions have been shown to lead to destabilisation of lysosomal membranes and result in leakage of damaging lysosomal contents to the cytosol. In this study we have shown: (i) human monocyte-derived macrophages to accumulate ferritin in response to iron exposure; (ii) iron to destabilise macrophage secondary lysosomes when the cells are exposed to H2O2; and (iii) endocytosed apoferritin to act as a stabiliser of the acidic vacuolar compartment of iron-loaded macrophages. While the endogenous ferritin accumulation which was induced by iron exposure was not sufficient to protect cells from the damaging effects of H2O2, exogenously added apoferritin, as well as the potent iron chelator desferrioxamine, afforded significant protection. It is suggested that intralysosomal formation of haemosiderin, from partially degraded ferritin, is a protective strategy to suppress intralysosomal iron-catalysed redox reactions. However, under conditions of severe macrophage lysosomal iron-overload, induction of ferritin synthesis is not enough to completely prevent the enhanced cytotoxic effects of H2O2.  相似文献   

8.
Aging (senescence) is characterized by a progressive accumulation of macromolecular damage, supposedly due to a continuous minor oxidative stress associated with mitochondrial respiration. Aging mainly affects long-lived postmitotic cells, such as neurons and cardiac myocytes, which neither divide and dilute damaged structures, nor are replaced by newly differentiated cells. Because of inherent imperfect lysosomal degradation (autophagy) and other self-repair mechanisms, damaged structures (biological "garbage") progressively accumulate within such cells, both extra- and intralysosomally. Defective mitochondria and aggregated proteins are the most typical forms of extralysosomal "garbage", while lipofuscin that forms due to iron-catalyzed oxidation of autophagocytosed or heterophagocytosed material, represents intralysosomal "garbage". Based on findings that autophagy is diminished in lipofuscin-loaded cells and that cellular lipofuscin content positively correlates with oxidative stress and mitochondrial damage, we have proposed the mitochondrial-lysosomal axis theory of aging, according to which mitochondrial turnover progressively declines with age, resulting in decreased ATP production and increased oxidative damage. Due to autophagy of ferruginous material, lysosomes contain a pool of redox-active iron, which makes these organelles particularly susceptible to oxidative damage. Oxidant-mediated destabilization of lysosomal membranes releases hydrolytic enzymes to the cytosol, eventuating in cell death (either apoptotic or necrotic depending on the magnitude of the insult), while chelation of the intralysosomal pool of redox-active iron prevents these effects. In relation to the onset of oxidant-induced apoptosis, but after the initiating lysosomal rupture, cytochrome c is released from mitochondria and caspases are activated. Mitochondrial damage follows the release of lysosomal hydrolases, which may act either directly or indirectly, through activation of phospholipases or pro-apoptotic proteins such as Bid. Additional lysosomal rupture seems to be a consequence of a transient oxidative stress of mitochondrial origin that follows the attack by lysosomal hydrolases and/or phospholipases, creating an amplifying loop system.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract

-Lipoic acid (LA) and its corresponding derivative, -lipoamide (LM), have been described as antioxidants, but the mechanisms of their putative antioxidant effects remain largely uncharacterised. The vicinal thiols present in the reduced forms of these compounds suggest that they might possess metal chelating properties. We have shown previously that cell death caused by oxidants may be initiated by lysosomal rupture and that this latter event may involve intralysosomal iron which catalyzes Fenton-type chemistry and resultant peroxidative damage to lysosomal membranes. Here, using cultured J774 cells as a model, we show that both LA and LM stabilize lysosomes against oxidative stress, probably by chelating intralysosomal iron and, consequently, preventing intralysosomal Fenton reactions. In preventing oxidant-mediated apoptosis, LM is significantly more effective than LA, as would be expected from their differing capacities to enter cells and concentrate within the acidic lysosomal compartment. As previously reported, the powerful iron-chelator, desferrioxamine (Des) (which also locates within the lysosomal compartment), also provides protection against oxidant-mediated cell death. Interestingly, although Des enhances the partial protection afforded by LA, it confers no additional protection when added with LM. Therefore, the antioxidant actions of LA and LM may arise from intralysosomal iron chelation, with LM being more effective in this regard.  相似文献   

10.
The prevailing opinion on lysosomal endurance is that, as long as the cells are still alive, these organelles are generally quite stable and, thus, do not induce cell damage by leaking their numerous powerful hydrolytic enzymes to the cytosol. We suggest that this opinion is basically wrong and consider that many lysosomes are quite vulnerable, especially to oxidative stress. Moreover, we suggest that cellular degeneration, including apoptosis as well as necrosis, follows upon lysosomal disruption. We have found differing stability of lysosomal membranes to oxidative stress, not only among different cell types, but also between cells of the same type and between lysosomes of individual cells. We suggest that cellular resistance to oxidative stress is mainly a function of three parameters: (i) the capacity to degrade hydrogen peroxide before it reaches, and may diffuse into, the acidic vacuolar compartment; (ii) the resistance to reactive oxygen species of lysosomal membranes; and (iii) the intralysosomal amounts of redox-active, low molecular weight iron. Iron-catalysed intralysosomal reactions, if pronounced enough, result in peroxidation and destabilization of the lysosomal membrane. Owing to differences in the cellular synthesis of hydrogen peroxide-degrading enzymes, degree of autophagocytotic degradation of iron-containing metalloproteins, lysosomal localization within the cytoplasm and intralysosomal iron chelation, the above three parameters may vary between both different and similar cells and between lysosomes of individual cells as well, explaining their observed variability with respect to resistance against oxidative stress  相似文献   

11.
The prevailing opinion on lysosomal endurance is that, as long as the cells are still alive, these organelles are generally quite stable and, thus, do not induce cell damage by leaking their numerous powerful hydrolytic enzymes to the cytosol. We suggest that this opinion is basically wrong and consider that many lysosomes are quite vulnerable, especially to oxidative stress. Moreover, we suggest that cellular degeneration, including apoptosis as well as necrosis, follows upon lysosomal disruption. We have found differing stability of lysosomal membranes to oxidative stress, not only among different cell types, but also between cells of the same type and between lysosomes of individual cells. We suggest that cellular resistance to oxidative stress is mainly a function of three parameters: (i) the capacity to degrade hydrogen peroxide before it reaches, and may diffuse into, the acidic vacuolar compartment; (ii) the resistance to reactive oxygen species of lysosomal membranes; and (iii) the intralysosomal amounts of redox-active, low molecular weight iron. Iron-catalysed intralysosomal reactions, if pronounced enough, result in peroxidation and destabilization of the lysosomal membrane. Owing to differences in the cellular synthesis of hydrogen peroxide-degrading enzymes, degree of autophagocytotic degradation of iron-containing metalloproteins, lysosomal localization within the cytoplasm and intralysosomal iron chelation, the above three parameters may vary between both different and similar cells and between lysosomes of individual cells as well, explaining their observed variability with respect to resistance against oxidative stress This revised version was published online in November 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

12.
The prevailing opinion on lysosomal endurance is that, as long as the cells are still alive, these organelles are generally quite stable and, thus, do not induce cell damage by leaking their numerous powerful hydrolytic enzymes to the cytosol. We suggest that this opinion is basically wrong and consider that many lysosomes are quite vulnerable, especially to oxidative stress. Moreover, we suggest that cellular degeneration, including apoptosis as well as necrosis, follows upon lysosomal disruption. We have found differing stability of lysosomal membranes to oxidative stress, not only among different cell types, but also between cells of the same type and between lysosomes of individual cells. We suggest that cellular resistance to oxidative stress is mainly a function of three parameters: (i) the capacity to degrade hydrogen peroxide before it reaches, and may diffuse into, the acidic vacuolar compartment; (ii) the resistance to reactive oxygen species of lysosomal membranes; and (iii) the intralysosomal amounts of redox-active, low molecular weight iron. Iron-catalysed intralysosomal reactions, if pronounced enough, result in peroxidation and destabilization of the lysosomal membrane. Owing to differences in the cellular synthesis of hydrogen peroxide-degrading enzymes, degree of autophagocytotic degradation of iron-containing metalloproteins, lysosomal localization within the cytoplasm and intralysosomal iron chelation, the above three parameters may vary between both different and similar cells and between lysosomes of individual cells as well, explaining their observed variability with respect to resistance against oxidative stress This revised version was published online in November 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

13.
Intralysosomal iron: a major determinant of oxidant-induced cell death   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
As a result of continuous digestion of iron-containing metalloproteins, the lysosomes within normal cells contain a pool of labile, redox-active, low-molecular-weight iron, which may make these organelles particularly susceptible to oxidative damage. Oxidant-mediated destabilization of lysosomal membranes with release of hydrolytic enzymes into the cell cytoplasm can lead to a cascade of events eventuating in cell death (either apoptotic or necrotic depending on the magnitude of the insult). To assess the importance of the intralysosomal pool of redox-active iron, we have temporarily blocked lysosomal digestion by exposing cells to the lysosomotropic alkalinizing agent, ammonium chloride (NH(4)Cl). The consequent increase in lysosomal pH (from ca. 4.5 to > 6) inhibits intralysosomal proteolysis and, hence, the continuous flow of reactive iron into this pool. Preincubation of J774 cells with 10 mM NH(4)Cl for 4 h dramatically decreased apoptotic death caused by subsequent exposure to H(2)O(2), and the protection was as great as that afforded by the powerful iron chelator, desferrioxamine (which probably localizes predominantly in the lysosomal compartment). Sulfide-silver cytochemical detection of iron revealed a pronounced decrease in lysosomal content of redox-active iron after NH(4)Cl exposure, probably due to diminished intralysosomal digestion of iron-containing material coupled with continuing iron export from this organelle. Electron paramagnetic resonance experiments revealed that hydroxyl radical formation, readily detectable in control cells following H(2)O(2) addition, was absent in cells preexposed to 10 mM NH(4)Cl. Thus, the major pool of redox-active, low-molecular-weight iron may be located within the lysosomes. In a number of clinical situations, pharmacologic strategies that minimize the amount or reactivity of intralysosomal iron should be effective in preventing oxidant-induced cell death.  相似文献   

14.
In the present study, we used mitochondrial DNA-depleted Jurkat subclones (rho0 cells) to demonstrate that Fas agonistic Ab (CH-11), at the concentrations that evoke apoptotic death of the parental Jurkat cells, induced necrosis mainly through generation of excess reactive oxygen species, lysosomal rupture, and sequential activation of cathepsins B and D, and in minor part through activation of receptor-interacting protein (RIP). In the rho0 cells treated with CH-11, ATP supplementation converted necrosis into apoptosis by the formation of the apoptosome and subsequent activation of procaspase-3. In these ATP-supplemented rho0 cells (ATP-rho0), generation of excess ROS and lysosomal rupture were still seen, yet cathepsins B and D were inactivated and RIP was degraded. The conversion of necrosis to apoptosis, RIP degradation, and cathepsin inactivation in ATP- rho0 cells were blocked by caspase-3 inhibitors. Activities of cathepsins B and D in the lysate of necrotic rho0 cells were inhibited by the addition of apoptotic parental Jurkat cell lysate. Thus, apoptosis may supercede necrosis.  相似文献   

15.
Neuzil J  Svensson I  Weber T  Weber C  Brunk UT 《FEBS letters》1999,445(2-3):295-300
Alpha-Tocopheryl succinate (alpha-TOS), but not a-tocopherol, triggered apoptosis in Jurkat T cells. Apoptosis was induced by alpha-TOS in a time- and concentration-dependent mode, and signs of apoptosis were visible at concentrations of alpha-TOS as low as 30 microM, and within 3-5 h after addition of the ester. Employing a specific fluorogenic substrate, caspase-3 was found to be activated rapidly in response to alpha-TOS at 50 microM. We also found that Jurkat T cells challenged with alpha-TOS, when exposed to the lysosomotropic weak base acridine orange, showed decreased lysosomal uptake of the dye. This is suggestive of the involvement of lysosomal destabilisation in apoptosis of the cells. Apoptosis of Jurkat T cells induced with alpha-TOS also involved a drop in the mitochondrial membrane potential, although this phenomenon occurred after the initiation of lysosomal rupture. All apoptotic features observed with alpha-TOS were very similar to those found when cross-linking of the Fas receptor triggered apoptosis. These findings are consistent with the recent idea that vitamin E can contribute to elimination of malignant cells by the induction of apoptosis, and can be of (patho)physiological significance.  相似文献   

16.
The early signals generated following cross-linking of Fas/APO-1, a transmembrane receptor whose engagement by ligand results in apoptosis induction, were investigated in human HuT78 lymphoma cells. Fas/APO-1 cross-linking by mAbs resulted in membrane sphingomyelin hydrolysis and ceramide generation by the action of both neutral and acidic sphingomyelinases. Activation of a phosphatidylcholine-specific phospholipase C (PC-PLC) was also detected which appeared to be a requirement for subsequent acidic sphingomyelinase (aSMase) activation, since PC-PLC inhibitor D609 blocked Fas/APO-1-induced aSMase activation, but not Fas/APO-1-induced neutral sphingomyelinase (nSMase) activation. Fas/APO-1 cross-linking resulted also in ERK-2 activation and in phospholipase A2 (PLA2) induction, independently of the PC-PLC/aSMase pathway. Evidence for the existence of a pathway directly involved in apoptosis was obtained by selecting HuT78 mutant clones spontaneously expressing a newly identified death domain-defective Fas/APO-1 splice isoform which blocks Fas/APO-1 apoptotic signalling in a dominant negative fashion. Fas/APO-1 cross-linking in these clones fails to activate PC-PLC and aSMase, while nSMase, ERK-2 and PLA2 activates are induced. These results strongly suggest that a PC-PLC/aSMase pathway contributes directly to the propagation of Fas/APO-1-generated apoptotic signal in lymphoid cells.  相似文献   

17.
Zheng L  Marcusson J  Terman A 《Autophagy》2006,2(2):143-145
Intraneuronal accumulation of amyloid beta-protein (Abeta) is believed to be responsible for degeneration and apoptosis of neurons and consequent senile plaque formation in Alzheimer disease (AD), the main cause of senile dementia. Oxidative stress, an early determinant of AD, has been recently found to induce intralysosomal Abeta accumulation in cultured differentiated neuroblastoma cells through activation of macroautophagy. Because Abeta is known to destabilize lysosomal membranes, potentially resulting in apoptotic cell death, this finding suggests the involvement of oxidative stress-induced macroautophagy in the pathogenesis of AD.  相似文献   

18.
Abstract

Amifostine (2-[(3-aminopropyl)amino]ethane-thiol dihydrogen phosphate ester; WR-2721) is a radioprotective agent used clinically to minimize damage from radiation therapy to adjacent normal tissues. This inorganic thiophosphate requires dephosphorylation to produce the active, cell-permeant thiol metabolite, WR-1065. The activation step is presumably catalyzed by membrane-bound alkaline phosphatase, activity of which is substantially higher in the endothelium of normal tissues. This site-specific delivery may explain the preferential protection of normal versus neoplastic tissues. Although it was developed several decades ago, the mechanisms through which this agent exerts its protective effects remain unknown. Because WR-1065 is a weak base (pKa = 9.2), we hypothesized that the drug should preferentially accumulate (via proton trapping) within the acidic environment of intracellular lysosomes. These organelles contain abundant 'loose' iron and represent a likely initial target for oxidant- and radiation-mediated damage. We further hypothesized that, within the lysosomal compartment, the thiol groups of WR-1065 would interact with this iron, thereby minimizing iron-catalyzed lysosomal damage and ensuing cell death. A similar mechanism of protection via intralysosomal iron chelation has been invoked for the hexadentate iron chelator, desferrioxamine (DFO; although DFO enters the lysosomal compartment by endocytosis, not proton trapping). Using cultured J774 cells as a model system, we found substantial accumulation of WR-1065 within intracellular granules as revealed by reaction with the thiol-binding fluorochrome, BODIPY FL L-cystine. These granules are lysosomes as indicated by co-localization of BODIPY staining with LysoTracker Red. Compared to 1 mM DFO, cells pre-treated with 0.4 μM WR-1065 are protected from hydrogen peroxide-mediated lysosomal rupture and ensuing cell death. On a molar basis in this experimental system, WR-1065 is approximately 2500 times more effective than DFO in preventing oxidant-induced lysosomal rupture and cell death. This increased effectiveness is most likely due to the preferential concentration of this weak base within the acidic lysosomal apparatus. By electron spin resonance, we found that the generation of hydroxyl radical, which normally occurs following addition of hydrogen peroxide to J774 cells, is totally blocked by pretreatment with either WR-1065 or DFO. These findings suggest a single and plausible explanation for the radioprotective effects of amifostine and may provide a basis for the design of even more effective radio- and chemoprotective drugs.  相似文献   

19.
Amifostine (2-[(3-aminopropyl)amino]ethane-thiol dihydrogen phosphate ester; WR-2721) is a radioprotective agent used clinically to minimize damage from radiation therapy to adjacent normal tissues. This inorganic thiophosphate requires dephosphorylation to produce the active, cell-permeant thiol metabolite, WR-1065. The activation step is presumably catalyzed by membrane-bound alkaline phosphatase, activity of which is substantially higher in the endothelium of normal tissues. This site-specific delivery may explain the preferential protection of normal versus neoplastic tissues. Although it was developed several decades ago, the mechanisms through which this agent exerts its protective effects remain unknown. Because WR-1065 is a weak base (pKa = 9.2), we hypothesized that the drug should preferentially accumulate (via proton trapping) within the acidic environment of intracellular lysosomes. These organelles contain abundant 'loose' iron and represent a likely initial target for oxidant- and radiation-mediated damage. We further hypothesized that, within the lysosomal compartment, the thiol groups of WR-1065 would interact with this iron, thereby minimizing iron-catalyzed lysosomal damage and ensuing cell death. A similar mechanism of protection via intralysosomal iron chelation has been invoked for the hexadentate iron chelator, desferrioxamine (DFO; although DFO enters the lysosomal compartment by endocytosis, not proton trapping). Using cultured J774 cells as a model system, we found substantial accumulation of WR-1065 within intracellular granules as revealed by reaction with the thiol-binding fluorochrome, BODIPY FL L-cystine. These granules are lysosomes as indicated by co-localization of BODIPY staining with LysoTracker Red. Compared to 1 mM DFO, cells pre-treated with 0.4 microM WR-1065 are protected from hydrogen peroxide-mediated lysosomal rupture and ensuing cell death. On a molar basis in this experimental system, WR-1065 is approximately 2500 times more effective than DFO in preventing oxidant-induced lysosomal rupture and cell death. This increased effectiveness is most likely due to the preferential concentration of this weak base within the acidic lysosomal apparatus. By electron spin resonance, we found that the generation of hydroxyl radical, which normally occurs following addition of hydrogen peroxide to J774 cells, is totally blocked by pretreatment with either WR-1065 or DFO. These findings suggest a single and plausible explanation for the radioprotective effects of amifostine and may provide a basis for the design of even more effective radio- and chemoprotective drugs.  相似文献   

20.
Lysosomal membrane permeabilization (LMP) induced by oxidative stress has recently emerged as a prominent mechanism behind TNF cytotoxicity. This pathway relies on diffusion of hydrogen peroxide into lysosomes containing redox-active iron, accumulated by breakdown of iron-containing proteins and subcellular organelles. Upon oxidative lysosomal damage, LMP allows relocation to the cytoplasm of low mass iron and acidic hydrolases that contribute to DNA and mitochondrial damage, resulting in death by apoptosis or necrosis. Here we investigate the role of lysosomes and free iron in death of HTC cells, a rat hepatoma line, exposed to TNF following metallothionein (MT) upregulation. Iron-binding MT does not normally occur in HTC cells in significant amounts. Intracellular iron chelation attenuates TNF and cycloheximide (CHX)-induced LMP and cell death, demonstrating the critical role of this transition metal in mediating cytokine lethality. MT upregulation, combined with starvation-activated MT autophagy almost completely suppresses TNF and CHX toxicity, while impairment of both autophagy and MT upregulation by silencing of Atg7, and Mt1a and/or Mt2a, respectively, abrogates protection. Interestingly, MT upregulation by itself has little effect, while stimulated autophagy alone depresses cytokine toxicity to some degree. These results provide evidence that intralysosomal iron-catalyzed redox reactions play a key role in TNF and CHX-induced LMP and toxicity. The finding that chelation of intralysosomal iron achieved by autophagic delivery of MT, and to some degree probably of other iron-binding proteins as well, into the lysosomal compartment is highly protective provides a putative mechanism to explain autophagy-related suppression of death by TNF and CHX.  相似文献   

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