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1.
The radiation response of drug-resistant variants of the human tumor breast cancer cell line MCF-7 has been investigated. Two sublines, one resistant to adriamycin (ADRR) and the other to melphalan (MLNR), have been selected by exposure to stepwise increasing concentrations of the respective drugs. ADRR cells are 200-fold resistant to adriamycin and cross-resistant to a number of other drugs and are characterized by the presence of elevated levels of selenium-dependent glutathione peroxidase and glutathione-S-transferase. MLNR cells are fourfold resistant to melphalan and cross-resistant to some other drugs. The only mechanism of drug resistance established for MLNR cells to date is an enhancement of DNA excision repair processes. While the spectrum of drug resistance and the underlying mechanisms differ for the two sublines, their response to radiation is qualitatively similar. Radiation survival curves for ADRR and MLNR cells differ from that for wild-type cells in a complex manner with, for the linear-quadratic model, a decrease in the size of alpha and an increase in the size of beta. There is a concomitant decrease in the size of the alpha/beta ratio which is greater for ADRR cells than for MLNR cells. Analysis of results using the multitarget model gave values of D0 of 1.48, 1.43, and 1.67 Gy for MCF-7 cells are not a consequence of cell kinetic differences between these sublines. Results of split-dose experiments indicated that for both drug-resistant sublines the extent of sublethal damage repair reflected the width of the shoulder on the single-dose survival curve. For MCF-7 cells in the stationary phase of growth, the drug-resistant sublines did not show cross-resistance to radiation; however, delayed subculture following irradiation of stationary-phase cultures increased survival to a greater extent for ADRR and MLNR cells than for wild-type cells.  相似文献   

2.
An Adriamycin-resistant subline of a human breast cancer cell line, MCF-7 ADRR, has been shown to exhibit radioresistance associated with an increase in the size of the shoulder on the radiation survival curve. In the present study, damage to DNA of MCF-7 sublines WT and ADRR by 60Co gamma radiation was measured by filter elution techniques. The initial amount of DNA damage, measured by both alkaline and neutral filter elution, was lower in ADRR cells, suggesting that these cells are resistant to radiation-induced single- and double-strand DNA breaks. In the case of double-strand breaks the difference between WT and ADRR cells was significant only at the lower radiation doses studied (up to 100 Gy). In cells depleted of glutathione (GSH) by L-buthionine sulfoximine (BSO) treatment, ADRR cells were sensitized to radiation-induced DNA damage, while WT cells were unaffected. The rate of repair of single- and double-strand DNA breaks following radiation was the same for both sublines, and repair of radiation damage was not affected by BSO treatment in either cell line. The relative resistance of ADRR cells to initial DNA damage by radiation is the only difference so far detected at the molecular level which reflects radiation survival, and it is possible that other factors are involved in the resistance of ADRR cells to killing by radiation. Sensitization of ADRR cells to radiation-induced DNA damage by GSH depletion, although not likely to involve inhibition of GSH-dependent detoxification enzymes per se (irradiation was done at 4 degrees C), suggests that at the molecular level radioresponse in this subline is related to maintenance of GSH/GSSG redox equilibrium.  相似文献   

3.
Buthionine sulfoximine (BSO) has been used to deplete glutathione (GSH) in V79-379A cells in vitro, and the effect on the efficiency of oxygen and misonidazole (MISO) as radiosensitizers has been determined. Treatment with 50 or 500 microM BSO caused a rapid decline in GSH content to less than 5% of control values after 10 hr of exposure (t1/2 = 1.6 hr). Removal of BSO resulted in a rapid regeneration of GSH after 50 microM BSO, but little regeneration was observed over the subsequent 10-hr period after 500 microM. Treatment with either of these two concentrations of BSO for up to 14 hr did not affect cell growth or viability. Cells irradiated in monolayer on glass had an oxygen enhancement ratio (OER) of 3.1. After 10-14 hr pretreatment with 50 microM BSO, washed cells were radiosensitized by GSH depletion at all oxygen tensions tested. The OER was reduced to 2.6, due to greater radiosensitization of hypoxic cells than aerated ones by GSH depletion. GSH depletion had the effect of shifting the enhancement ratio vs pO2 curve to lower oxygen tensions, making oxygen appear more efficient by a factor of approximately 2, based on the pO2 required to give an OER of 2.0. In similar experiments performed with MISO, an enhancement ratio of 2.0 could be achieved with 0.2 mM MISO in anoxic BSO-pretreated cells, compared to 2.7 mM MISO in non-BSO-treated cells. Thus MISO appeared to be more efficient in GSH-depleted cells by a factor of 13.5. These apparent increases in radiosensitizer efficiency in GSH-depleted cells could be explained on the basis of radiosensitization of hypoxic cells by GSH depletion alone (ER = 1.29-1.41). The effect of GSH depletion was approximately equal at all sensitizer concentrations tested, except at high oxygen tensions, where the effect was insignificantly small. These results are consistent with hypoxic cell radiosensitization by GSH depletion and by MISO or oxygen acting by separate mechanisms.  相似文献   

4.
The hypoxic and euoxic radiation response for Chinese hamster lung and A549 human lung carcinoma cells was obtained under conditions where their nonprotein thiols, consisting primarily of glutathione (GSH), were depleted by different mechanisms. The GSH conjugating reagent diethylmaleate (DEM) was compared to DL-buthionine-S,R-sulfoximine (BSO), an inhibitor of glutathionine biosynthesis. Each reagent depleted cellular GSH to less than 5% of control values. A 2-hr exposure to 0.5 mM DEM or a 4- or 24-hr exposure to BSO at 10 or 1 mM, respectively, depleted cellular GSH to less than 5% of control values. Both agents sensitized cells irradiated under air or hypoxic conditions. When GSH levels are lowered to less than 5% by both agents, hypoxic DEM-treated cells exhibited slightly greater X-ray sensitization than hypoxic BSO-treated cells. The D0's for hypoxic survival curves were as follows: control, 4.87 Gy; DEM, 3.22 Gy; and BSO, 4.30 Gy for the V79 cells and 5.00 Gy versus 4.02 Gy for BSO-treated A549 cells. The D0's for aerobic V79 cells were 1.70 Gy versus 1.13 Gy, DEM, and 1.43 Gy for BSO-treated cells. The D0's for the aerobic A549 were 1.70 and 1.20 for BSO-treated cells. The aerobic and anoxic sensitization of the cells results in the OER's of 2.8 and 3.0 for the DEM- and BSO-treated cells compared to 2.9 for the V79 control A549. BSO-treated cells showed an OER of 3.3 versus 3 for the control. Our results suggest that GSH depletion by either BSO or DEM sensitizes aerobic cells to radiation but does not appreciably alter the OER.  相似文献   

5.
The role of thiols in cellular response to radiation and drugs   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Cellular nonprotein thiols (NPSH) consist of glutathione (GSH) and other low molecular weight species such as cysteine, cysteamine, and coenzyme A. GSH is usually less than the total cellular NPSH, and with thiol reactive agents, such as diethyl maleate (DEM), its rate of depletion is in part dependent upon the cellular capacity for its resynthesis. If resynthesis is blocked by buthionine-S,R-sulfoximine(BSO), the NPSH, including GSH, is depleted more rapidly, Cellular thiol depletion by diamide, N-ethylmaleimide, and BSO may render oxygenated cells more sensitive to radiation. These cells may or may not show a reduction in the oxygen enhancement ratio (OER). Human A549 lung carcinoma cells depleted of their NPSH either by prolonged culture or by BSO treatment do not show a reduced OER but do show increased aerobic responses to radiation. Some nitroheterocyclic radiosensitizing drugs also deplete cellular thiols under aerobic conditions. Such reactivity may be the reason that they show anomalous radiation sensitization (i.e., better than predicted on the basis of electron affinity). Other nitrocompounds, such as misonidazole, are activated under hypoxic conditions to radical intermediates. When cellular thiols are depleted peroxide is formed. Under hypoxic conditions thiols are depleted because metabolically reduced intermediates react with GSH instead of oxygen. Thiol depletion, under hypoxic conditions, may be the reason that misonidazole and other nitrocompounds show an extra enhancement ratio with hypoxic cells. Thiol depletion by DEM or BSO alters the radiation response of hypoxic cells to misonidazole. In conclusion, we propose an altered thiol model which includes a mechanism for thiol involvement in the aerobic radiation response of cells. This mechanism involves both thiol-linked hydrogen donation to oxygen radical adducts to produce hydroperoxides followed by a GSH peroxidase-catalyzed reduction of the hydroperoxides to intermediates entering into metabolic pathways to produce the original molecule.  相似文献   

6.
Depletion of glutathione after gamma irradiation modifies survival   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The relationship between the intracellular glutathione (GSH) concentration and the aerobic radiation response was studied in Chinese hamster ovary cells. Various degrees of GSH depletion were produced by exposure to buthionine sulfoximine (BSO) and/or diethyl maleate (DEM). Diethyl maleate did not act as a classical radiosensitizer under the experimental conditions employed, nor did exposure to DEM/BSO nonspecifically affect protein thiols as measured by thiol blotting. Dose-response curves were obtained using cells irradiated in the absence or presence of DEM/BSO, which decreased GSH levels by 90-95%. Exposure to DEM/BSO did not affect the formation of DNA single-strand breaks or DNA-protein crosslinks measured immediately after irradiation performed at ice temperatures. Analysis of survival curves indicated that the Dq was decreased by 18% when GSH depletion occurred prior to, during, and after irradiation. The DEM/BSO exposure did not affect D0. To study postirradiation conditions, cells were exposed to 10 microM DEM prior to and during irradiation, which was performed at ice temperatures. Levels of GSH were depleted by 75% by this protocol. Immediately after irradiation, the cells were rapidly warmed by the addition of 37 degrees C growth medium containing either 10 or 90 microM DEM. Addition of 10 microM DEM after irradiation did not affect the degree of depletion, which remained constant at 75%. In contrast, GSH depletion was increased to 90% 10 min after addition of the 90 microM DEM. Addition of 90 microM DEM after irradiation produced a statistically significant difference in survival compared to addition of 10 microM DEM. In a second depletion protocol, cells were exposed to 100 microM DEM at room temperature for 5 min, irradiated, incubated at 37 degrees C for 1 h, washed, and then incubated in 50 microM BSO for 24 h. This depletion protocol reduced survival by a factor of 2.6 compared to cells not exposed to the combination of DEM/BSO. Survival was not affected if the cells were exposed to the DEM or BSO alone. This was interpreted to indicate that survival was not affected by GSH depletion occurring after irradiation unless depletion was rapid and sustained. The rate of repair of sublethal and potentially lethal damage was measured and found to be independent of the DEM/BSO exposure. These experimental results in addition to previous ones (Freeman and Meredith, Int. J. Radiat. Oncol. Biol. Phys. 13, 1371-1375, 1987) were interpreted to indicate that under aerobic conditions GSH depletion may alter the expression of radiation damage by affecting metabolic fixation.  相似文献   

7.
We have studied the effect of buthionine sulfoximine (BSO; a gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase inhibitor) administration, either alone or combined with misonidazole (MISO), on five human tumor xenografts (three melanomas: Bell, Mall, and Nall; and two rectocolic adenocarcinomas: HT29 and HRT18) transplanted into mice. Two criteria were used, the nonprotein bound sulfhydryl (NPSH) level (glutathione (GSH) and cysteine (CYS] and the fraction of surviving tumor cells after gamma irradiation. GSH and CYS were estimated by HPLC and cell survival by in vivo-in vitro clonogenic assay. Administration of BSO alone (three injections of 10 mumol/g) prior to irradiation always produced a significant reduction in the GSH level while MISO administration (1 mg/g) did not consistently influence the NPSH level. While BSO had little or no radiosensitizing effect, MISO always induced radiosensitization (enhancement ratio between 1.6 and 1.8). This effect did not depend on the fraction of surviving hypoxic cells. An increase in MISO-induced radiosensitization produced by BSO was cell-line dependent. Results do not seem to support the hypothesis of a relationship between the GSH level at the time of irradiation and the radiosensitization induced by BSO or BSO + MISO. However, BSO treatment may not have been able to reduce endogenous thiols to a low enough level to test the hypothesis.  相似文献   

8.
Cancer cell survival is known to be related to the ability to counteract oxidative stress, and glutathione (GSH) depletion has been proposed as a mechanism to sensitize cells to anticancer therapy. However, we observed that GI-ME-N cells, a neuroblastoma cell line without MYCN amplification, are able to survive even if GSH-depleted by l-buthionine-(S,R)-sulfoximine (BSO). Here, we show that in GI-ME-N cells, BSO activates Nrf2 and up-regulates heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1). Silencing of Nrf2 restrained HO-1 induction by BSO. Inhibition of HO-1 and silencing of Nrf2 or HO-1 sensitized GI-ME-N cells to BSO, leading to reactive oxygen/nitrogen species overproduction and decreasing viability. Moreover, targeting the Nrf2/HO-1 axis sensitized GI-ME-N cells to etoposide more than GSH depletion. Therefore, we have provided evidence that in GI-ME-N cells, the Nrf2/HO-1 axis plays a crucial role as a protective factor against cellular stress, and we suggest that the inhibition of Nfr2/HO-1 signaling should be considered as a central target in the clinical battle against neuroblastoma.  相似文献   

9.
We have assessed the effects of two radiomodifying conditions, glutathione (GSH) depletion and hypoxia, on the formation and repair of radiation-induced chromatin damage, specifically DNA-protein cross-links (DPC). As measured by a nitrocellulose filter-binding assay, untreated V79 cells contain a low level of DPC (1-1.5% of the cellular DNA). The background level of DPC is elevated in cells treated with L-buthionine sulfoximine (BSO), in hypoxic cells, and in cells treated with BSO and made hypoxic (2.98%, 2.82%, and 7.71%, respectively). The dose response for production of radiation-induced DPC is approximately 6.0% DNA bound per 100 Gy for cells irradiated in air, and the dose response is not significantly different for BSO-treated cells but increases by a factor of about 1.4 for hypoxic cells and 1.7 for BSO-pretreated hypoxic cells. DPC were also assayed by alkaline elution with or without proteinase K treatment. By this analysis, the yield of DPC appears to be elevated in irradiated hypoxic and irradiated GSH-depleted cells. It is not possible to assay for background DPC alone in unirradiated cells by alkaline elution. Cells not exposed to BSO repair 70-80% of the radiation-induced DPC in 4 h. BSO-treated cells are considerably less efficient in repair of DPC. As analyzed by alkaline elution, GSH depletion had little or no effect on the yield of radiation-induced single-strand breaks (SSB) but slowed their repair. The data suggest that depletion of GSH impairs an enzyme system(s) responsible for the turnover of both background and radiation-induced DPC and that hypoxia elevates both the background level of DPC and the ratio of radiation-induced DPC to SSB.  相似文献   

10.
Prolonged exposures to misonidazole (MISO) in vitro under hypoxic conditions result in radiosensitization which is characterized by a decrease in the size of the radiation survival curve shoulder for cells irradiated under hypoxic or aerobic conditions after drug removal. Although intracellular glutathione (GSH) was depleted during hypoxic exposures to MISO, this could not account for the dose-additive radiosensitization (decrease in shoulder size) since GSH depletion by diethylmaleate had no effect on the sensitivity of cells irradiated in air. The alkaline elution assay was used to measure DNA strand breaks and their repair after exposure to MISO, graded doses of X rays, and the combination of MISO pretreatment with X rays. The elution rate of DNA from irradiated cells increased linearly with X-ray dose, with and without MISO pretreatment. However, the DNA elution rates measured after MISO pretreatment were greater by a constant amount at all X-ray doses greater than 1 Gy. In terms of both cell survival and DNA elution rate, MISO-pretreated cells behaved as though they had received an extra 1.5 Gy. Although the initial damage after X rays was greater in MISO-pretreated cells, there was no effect of MISO pretreatment on the rate of repair of radiation-induced DNA strand breaks. The agreement between the differences in survival levels and DNA elution rates for irradiated control and MISO-pretreated cells and absence of an effect on DNA repair rates suggest that the pretreatment sensitization is due to an additive interaction of damage at the DNA level.  相似文献   

11.
Dimethyl fumarate (DMF) depletes intracellular glutathione (GSH) by covalent bond formation in a reaction mediated by GSH-S-transferase. Treatment of hypoxic Chinese hamster V79 cells with 5 mM DMF before irradiation radiosensitizes the cells, resulting in an enhancement ratio (ER) of about 2.7 with minimal toxicity, when the end point is clonogenic cell survival. Under the same conditions aerobic cells are sensitized, and ER of about 1.3 is found, and GSH is reduced to about 3% of control. Very similar results were obtained previously with Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. In addition, new data presented here show that DMF treatment of V79 or CHO cells immediately after irradiation under hypoxic conditions sensitizes the cells, resulting in an ER of about 1.5, DMF treatment after irradiation under aerobic conditions results in an ER of 1.3, and this DMF treatment reduces protein thiols (PSH) to about 70% of control. When induction of DNA damage is measured using the neutral elution assay, treatment of V79 or CHO cells with DMF prior to irradiation under hypoxic conditions results in an ER of 1.9-2.0, but there is no enhancement of DNA damage when DMF is added after irradiation under hypoxic conditions or when cells are treated with DMF before or after irradiation under aerobic conditions. Based on these data we postulate that DMF radiosensitizes killing of hypoxic cells by two actions: depletion of GSH interferes with the chemical competition between damage fixation and repair, and depletion of PSH causes an inhibition of enzymatic repair processes. We also suggest that DMF sensitizes aerobic cells only by inhibition of enzymatic repair processes.  相似文献   

12.
We have determined the effect of extended glutathione (GSH) depletion on cis-diamminedichloroplatinum(II) (DDP) cytotoxicity in parent and DDP-resistant human ovarian carcinoma cells. Cells were exposed to 50 microM buthionine sulfoximine (BSO) for 48 h and exposed to DDP for the last 24 h of this time. This treatment protocol sensitized 2008 cells to DDP. The dose modification factor (DMF) defined as IC50 control cells/IC50 GSH depleted cells was 1.6 +/- 0.5 (N = 9). DDP-resistant cells selected by acute, high dose DDP exposure were also sensitized by this treatment; the DMF in the 3-6-fold resistant 2008/DDP cells was 2.4 +/- 1.2 (N = 9). The sensitization was not significantly greater in the resistant cells than in the parent cells (P greater than 0.05). When the rebound of GSH following BSO exposure was reexamined, the GSH levels were found to rise rapidly following trypsinizing and plating. BSO treatment following DDP exposure had no effect on DDP cytotoxicity in 2008 and 2008/DDP cells. These results indicate that simply depleting GSH prior to DDP exposure is not sufficient for sensitizing these cells to DDP. In contrast to the potentiation of nitrogen mustard cytotoxicity, exposure to GSH depletion must be maintained during DDP treatment for enhancement of DDP cytotoxicity to occur.  相似文献   

13.
Hong H  Lu Y  Ji ZN  Liu GQ 《Journal of neurochemistry》2006,98(5):1465-1473
Glutathione (GSH) depletion has been implicated in the pathogenesis of neurological diseases. During GSH depletion, cells of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) are subjected to chronic oxidative stress. In this study, we investigated the effect of such stress, produced with the GSH synthesis inhibitor l-buthionine-(S,R)-sulfoximine (BSO), on expression of P-glycoprotein (Pgp) in primary cultured rat brain microvessel endothelial cells that comprise the blood-brain barrier (BBB). Application of BSO to cell monolayers at concentrations up to 800 microm caused increases in expression of Pgp. Concentrations >or= 400 microm BSO decreased cell viability. Application of 200 microm BSO caused a significant increase in Pgp function activity, as assessed by rhodamine 123 (Rh123) accumulation experiments. At this concentration, BSO produced time-dependent decreases in levels of intracellular GSH and increases in levels of intracellular reactive oxygen species (iROS). The increases were also observed within 48 h following BSO treatment in mdr1a and mdr1b mRNA. Exposure of cells to BSO for 24 h produced maximal effects in the accumulation of iROS, and in expression and function of Pgp. The ROS scavenger N-acetylcysteine prevented ROS generation and attenuated the changes of both expression and activity of Pgp induced by BSO. Therefore, the transport of Pgp substrates may be affected by changing Pgp expression under conditions of chronic oxidative stress induced by GSH depletion.  相似文献   

14.
The effect of changes in both the intracellular glutathione (GSH) concentration and the concentration of extracellular reducing equivalents on the aerobic radiosensitization was studied in three cell lines: CHO-10B4, V79, and A549. Intracellular GSH was metabolically depleted after the inhibition of GSH synthesis by buthionine sulfoximine (BSO), while the extracellular environment was controlled through the replacement of growth medium with a thiol-free salt solution and in some experiments by the exogenous addition of either GSH or GSSG. Each of the cell lines examined exhibited an enhanced aerobic radioresponse when the intracellular GSH was extensively depleted (GSH less than 1 nmol GSH/10(6) cells after 1.0 mM BSO/24 h treatment) and the complexity of the extracellular milieu decreased. Although the addition of oxidized glutathione (5 mM GSSG/30 min) to cells prior to irradiation was without effect, much or all of the induced radiosensitivity was overcome by the addition of reduced glutathione (5 mM GSH/15 min). However, the observation that the exogenous GSH addition restores the control radioresponse without increasing the intracellular GSH concentration was entirely unexpected. These results suggest that a number of factors exert an influence on the extent of GSH depletion and determine the extent of aerobic radiosensitization. Furthermore, the interaction of exogenous GSH with--but without penetrating--the cell membrane is sufficient to result in radiorecovery.  相似文献   

15.
The induction of single-strand breaks (SSBs) in the DNA of Chinese hamster ovary cells by X rays under different irradiation conditions was measured by the alkaline elution technique. The oxygen enhancement ratio (OER) for SSB induction determined for cells irradiated in air versus irradiation of cells made hypoxic by metabolic depletion of O2 was 9.7. However, when proteinase K was included in the cell lysis solution the OER was reduced to 4.2. The proteinase affected the elution rate only of the cells irradiated under hypoxic conditions, suggesting that DNA-protein crosslinks (DPCs) are preferentially produced in hypoxic cells by radiation. The ability to repair these DPCs was compared in two cell lines: the wild-type AA8 line and an excision-repair-deficient mutant line, UV-41. The AA8 line removed about 80% of the DPCs induced by radiation under hypoxic conditions within a 24-h repair incubation. The UV-41 line, on the other hand, removed only about 20% of the DPCs in the same time. The OERs for cell survival of these two lines are 3.1 for AA8 but only 1.9 for UV-41, suggesting that the DPCs preferentially induced in the DNA of cells irradiated under hypoxic conditions may contribute to cell killing when the normal DNA-repair mechanisms are compromised.  相似文献   

16.
A 2-nitroimidazole nucleoside, 1-(2',3'-dideoxy-alpha-D-erythro-hex-2'-enopyranosyl)-2-nitroimida zole (RA-263), has been investigated for its radiosensitization, pharmacokinetics, and toxicity properties. The in vitro radiosensitization tests against hypoxic Chinese hamster (V-79) cells demonstrated that RA-263 was a more potent radiosensitizer than misonidazole and at 2 mM concentration approached the oxic curve. Significant in vitro radiosensitization activity was also observed in EMT6 mammary tumor cells. The in vitro cytotoxicity data suggested that RA-263 is considerably more toxic to hypoxic cells than misonidazole. The increased cytotoxicity may be related to its higher depletion of nonprotein thiols (NPSH) than misonidazole. The combined effects of radiosensitization and hypoxic cell toxicity were measured by preincubation of the V-79 cells for 4 h under hypoxic conditions before irradiation. The results demonstrated a synergistic response by causing a significant decrease in the extrapolation number with loss of shoulder of the radiation survival curves. The in vivo radiosensitization experiments conducted by the in vivo-in vitro cloning assay with the EMT6 mammary tumor indicate that RA-263 is an effective sensitizer. Pharmacokinetic data suggested that RA-263 was eliminated from plasma by a rapid alpha phase and a slower beta phase with T 1/2 of 36 and 72 min, respectively. The concentration in the brain was approximately one-sixth of tumor concentration, suggesting that RA-263 is excluded from the CNS. Moreover, RA-263 was two times less toxic than misonidazole on equimolar basis by acute LD50 tests. This agent was also significantly less mutagenic than misonidazole in a strain of Escherichia coli.  相似文献   

17.
This study was undertaken to investigate the inducibility of glutathione (GSH), glutathione reductase (GR) and glutathione peroxidase (GPx) by 3H-1,2-dithiole-3-thione (D3T) in beta-cells, and the resultant cytoprotection against oxidant injury. Incubation of the insulin-secreting RINm5F cells with D3T led to significant induction of GSH, GR and GPx. D3T-mediated induction of GSH was abolished by buthionine sulfoximine (BSO), suggesting a critical involvement of γ-glutamylcysteine ligase (γGCL). Consistently, incubation of RINm5F cells with D3T resulted in increased expression of γGCL protein and mRNA. Pretreatment of RINm5F cells with D3T provided remarkable protection against oxidant-elicited cytotoxicity. On the other hand, depletion of cellular GSH by BSO sensitized RINm5F cells to oxidant injury. Furthermore, cotreatment of RINm5F cells with BSO to reverse D3T-mediated GSH induction abolished the cytoprotective effects of D3T on oxidant injury. Taken together, this study demonstrates that upregulation of glutathione system by D3T is effective for protecting against oxidative beta-cell injury.  相似文献   

18.
Twenty-six beta-carbolines were evaluated for in vitro cytotoxicity in a human tumor cell line panel. Harmine (3) showed significant activity against several cell lines including three drug-resistant KB sublines with various resistance mechanisms. Alpha-(4-nitrobenzylidine) harmine (16) had a broad cytotoxicity spectrum (ED50 values from 0.3-1.2 microg/mL against 1A9, KB, SaOS-2, A549, SK-MEL-2, U-87-MG, and MCF-7 cells).  相似文献   

19.
Using primary neuronal cultures, we investigated the effects of GSH depletion on the cytotoxic effects of glutamate and NO in dopaminergic neurons. Intracellular GSH was depleted by 24-h exposure to L-buthionine-[S,R]-sulfoximine (BSO), an irreversible inhibitor of GSH synthase. BSO exposure caused concentration-dependent reduction of the viability of both dopaminergic and nondopaminergic neurons. In contrast, 24-h exposure of cultures to glutamate or NOC18, an NO-releasing agent, significantly reduced the viability of nondopaminergic neurons without affecting that of dopaminergic neurons. Pretreatment with N-acetyl-L-cysteine for 24 h ameliorated the NOC18-induced toxicity in nondopaminergic neurons. In dopaminergic neurons, sublethal concentrations of BSO reduced intracellular GSH content and markedly potentiated glutamate- and NOC18-induced toxicity. These results suggested that glutamate toxicity was enhanced in dopaminergic neurons by suppression of defense mechanisms against NO toxicity under conditions of GSH depletion. Under such conditions, free iron plays an important role because BSO-enhanced NO toxicity was ameliorated by the iron-chelating agent, deferoxamine. These results suggest that GSH plays an important role in the expression of NO-mediated glutamate cytotoxicity in dopaminergic neurons. Free iron may be related to enhanced NO cytotoxicity under GSH depletion.  相似文献   

20.
This study was undertaken to investigate the inducibility of glutathione (GSH), glutathione reductase (GR) and glutathione peroxidase (GPx) by 3H-1,2-dithiole-3-thione (D3T) in beta-cells, and the resultant cytoprotection against oxidant injury. Incubation of the insulin-secreting RINm5F cells with D3T led to significant induction of GSH, GR and GPx. D3T-mediated induction of GSH was abolished by buthionine sulfoximine (BSO), suggesting a critical involvement of γ-glutamylcysteine ligase (γGCL). Consistently, incubation of RINm5F cells with D3T resulted in increased expression of γGCL protein and mRNA. Pretreatment of RINm5F cells with D3T provided remarkable protection against oxidant-elicited cytotoxicity. On the other hand, depletion of cellular GSH by BSO sensitized RINm5F cells to oxidant injury. Furthermore, cotreatment of RINm5F cells with BSO to reverse D3T-mediated GSH induction abolished the cytoprotective effects of D3T on oxidant injury. Taken together, this study demonstrates that upregulation of glutathione system by D3T is effective for protecting against oxidative beta-cell injury.  相似文献   

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