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1.
Methylmercury effects on cell cycle kinetics   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Methylmercury (MeHg) effects on cell cycle kinetics were investigated to help identify its mechanisms of action. Flow cytometric analysis of normal human fibroblasts grown in vitro in the presence of BrdU allowed quantitation of the proportion of cells in G1, S, G2 and the next G1 phase. This technique provides a rapid and easily performed method of characterizing phase lengths and transition rates for the complete cell cycle. After first exposure to MeHg the cell cycle time was lengthened due to a prolonged G1. At 3 microM MeHg the G1 phase length was 25% longer than the control. The G1/S transition rate was also decreased in a dose-related manner. Confluent cells exposed to MeHg and replated with MeHg respond in the same way as cells which have not been exposed to MeHg before replating. Cells exposed for long times to MeHg lost a detectable G1 effect, and instead showed an increase in the G2 percentage, which was directly related to MeHg concentration and length of exposure. After 8 days at 5 microM MeHg, 45% of the population was in G2. The G2 accumulation was reversible up to 3 days, but at 6 days the cells remained in G2 when the MeHg was removed. Cell counts and viability indicated that there was not a selective loss of cells from the MeHg. MeHg has multiple effects on the cell cycle which include a lengthened G1 and decreased transition probability after short term exposure of cycling cells, and a G2 accumulation after a longer term exposure. There were no detectable S phase effects. It appears that mitosis (the G2 accumulation) and probably synthesis of some macromolecules in G1 (the lengthened G1 and lowered transition probability) are particularly susceptible to MeHg.  相似文献   

2.
We have investigated the effect of mild hyperthermia (42°C) on the cytotoxic activity of a 1 h melphalan exposure in human melanoma cell lines. Hyperthermia did not affect cell growth of any culture, but it increased, to a different extent, melphalan cytotoxicity in all cell lines, with a reduction in the IC50 of 1.7 to 2.6-fold. Flow cytometric analysis showed that in normal temperature conditions melphalan caused S phase cell accumulation, which was evident only at 24 h in JR8, M14 and 2/21 cell lines and was still persistent at 72 h in 2/60 cells. Moreover, in all cell lines, the delay in S phase was paralleled, or followed, by an accumulation of cells in G2+ M, which was transient in JR8 and M14 cells and persisted until 72 h in 2/21 and 2/60 melanoma clones. Hyperthermia caused a stabilization and prolongation of melphalan induced G2+ M accumulation in JR8 and M14 cells. Conversely, in 2/21 and 2/60 clones, cell cycle perturbations induced by the drug were similar under normothermic or hyperthermic conditions. Specifically, in JR8, for which the maximum enhancement by hyperthermia on melphalan cytotoxicity was observed, cell accumulation in G2+ M was still present 120 h after treatment. The accumulation was accompanied by an inhibition in the G2 - M transition, as demonstrated by the significant reduction in the mitotic index of cells exposed to combined treatment compared to controls. Moreover, a bivariate distribution of cells stained for DNA and cyclin B1 showed that, following melphalan and hyperthermia treatment, the fraction of cyclin B1-expressing cells paralleled the fraction of G2+ M phase cells, thus indicating that the inability of cells to enter mitosis was not ascribable to a reduction of cyclin B1 expression. On the whole, our results indicate that hyperthermia can stabilize the G2 accumulation induced by melphalan in human melanoma cells. Such a stabilization could contribute to the enhancement of melphalan cytotoxicity by heat, even though a strict correlation was not observed between the magnitude and persistence of the cell cycle perturbations and the extent of melphalan activity.  相似文献   

3.
Most cell lines that lack functional p53 protein are arrested in the G2 phase of the cell cycle due to DNA damage. It was previously found that the human promyelocyte leukemia cells HL-60 (TP53 negative) that had been exposed to ionizing radiation at doses up to 10 Gy were arrested in the G2 phase for a period of 24 h. The radioresistance of HL-60 cells that were exposed to low dose-rate gamma irradiation of 3.9 mGy/min, which resulted in a pronounced accumulation of the cells in the G2 phase during the exposure period, increased compared with the radioresistance of cells that were exposed to a high dose-rate gamma irradiation of 0.6 Gy/min. The D0 value (i.e. the radiation dose leading to 37% cell survival) for low dose-rate radiation was 3.7 Gy and for high dose-rate radiation 2.2 Gy. In this study, prevention of G2 phase arrest by caffeine (2 mM) and irradiation of cells with low dose-rate irradiation in all phases of the cell cycle proved to cause radiosensitization (D0=2.2 Gy). The irradiation in the presence of caffeine resulted in a second wave of apoptosis on days 5–7post-irradiation. Caffeine-induced apoptosis occurring later than day 7 post-irradiation is postulated to be a result of unscheduled DNA replication and cell cycle progress.  相似文献   

4.
Cyclin D1 is a mitogenic sensor that responds to growth signals from the extracellular environment and regulates the G1-to-S cell cycle transition. When cells are acutely irradiated with a single dose of 10 Gy, cyclin D1 is degraded, causing cell cycle arrest at the G1/S checkpoint. In contrast, cyclin D1 accumulates in human tumor cells that are exposed to long-term fractionated radiation (0.5 Gy/fraction of X-rays). In this study we investigated the effect of fractionated low-dose radiation exposure on cyclin D1 localization in 3 strains of normal human fibroblasts. To specifically examine the nuclear accumulation of cyclin D1, cells were treated with a hypotonic buffer containing detergent to remove cytoplasmic cyclin D1. Proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) immunofluorescence was used to identify cells in S phase. With this approach, we observed S-phase nuclear retention of cyclin D1 following low-dose fractionated exposures, and found that cyclin D1 nuclear retention increased with exposure time. Cells that retained nuclear cyclin D1 were more likely to have micronuclei than non-retaining cells, indicating that the accumulation of nuclear cyclin D1 was associated with genomic instability. Moreover, inhibition of the v-akt murine thymoma viral oncogene homolog (AKT) pathway facilitated cyclin D1 degradation and eliminated cyclin D1 nuclear retention in cells exposed to fractionated radiation. Thus, cyclin D1 may represent a useful marker for monitoring long-term effects associated with exposure to low levels of radiation.  相似文献   

5.
This study evaluated the in vitro effect of L-canavanine on cell cycle progression in the two human pancreatic cancer cells lines PANC-1 and MIA PaCa-2. After 72 h of exposure to L-canavanine, the percentage of cells in the radiosensitive G2/M phase of the cell cycle increased 6-fold in PANC-1 cells and 4-fold in MIA PaCa-2 cells, when compared to untreated cells. The capacity of L-canavanine to redistribute cells into the G2/M phase of the cell cycle was both concentration- and time-dependent. Since many drugs that cause cells to accumulate in the G2/M phase of the cell cycle are effective radiosensitization agents, the potential of L-canavanine to synergistically enhance the effects of ionizing radiation also was evaluated. The interaction between these treatment modalities was quantified using the median-effect equation and combination index analysis. L-Canavanine was found to be synergistic with radiation when either PANC-1 or MIA PaCa-2 cells were exposed to L-canavanine for 72 h prior to irradiation. These results suggest that L-canavanine in combination with radiation may have clinical potential in the treatment of pancreatic cancer.  相似文献   

6.
We have examined the sensitivity of proliferating lymphoid cells in different phases of the cell cycle to macrophage-mediated cytostatic activity. These studies evaluated the ability of target cells enriched in individual cell cycle phases to pass into the next phase during brief (2–6 hr) periods of coculture with activated or nonactivated peritoneal macrophages. Both normal (concanavalin A-stimulated spleen cells) and neoplastic (Gross virus-induced thymic lymphoma) cells were analyzed. Spleen cells or lymphoma cells were first separated by centrifugal elutriation into populations highly enriched for G1, S, or G2/M phases of the cell cycle and cultured in the presence of nonactivated or activated macrophages for periods of 2, 4, or 6 hr. The cellular DNA content of recovered nonadherent target cells was then analyzed by flow cytometry after staining with propidium iodide. Macrophage contamination of target cell populations was insignificant under these conditions. Nonactivated macrophages did not affect target cell cycle traverse when compared with target cells cultured alone. Activated macrophage mediated cytostatic activity resulted in complete block of the transition of cells in G1 phase into S phase and of the further accumulation of DNA by cells in early S phase. Cells already in mid to late S phase were able to continue DNA replication at rates nearly equivalent to control cells. There was no inhibition of the passage of cells through G2 or mitosis. These effects were seen by as early as 2 hr of macrophage-target cell coculture and both normal and neoplastic cells exhibited identical patterns of cell cycle phase sensitivity.  相似文献   

7.
Rates of accumulation of immunoglobulin proteins have been determined using flow cytometry and population balance equations for exponentially growing murine hybridoma cells in the individual G1, S and G2+M cell cycle phases. A producer cell line that secretes monoclonal antibodies, and a nonproducer clone that synthesizes only -light chains were analyzed. The pattern for the kinetics of total intracellular antibody accumulation during the cell cycle is very similar to the previously described pattern for total protein accumulation (Kromenaker & Srienc 1991). The relative mean rate of heavy chain accumulation during the S phase was approximately half the relative mean rate of light chain accumulation during this cell cycle phase. This indicates an unbalanced synthesis of heavy and light chains that becomes most pronounced during this cell cycle phase. The nonproducer cells have on average an intracellular light chain content that is 42% lower than that of the producer cells. The nonproducer cells in the G1 phase with low light chain content did not have a significantly higher rate of light chain accumulation relative to other G1 phase nonproducer cells. This is in sharp contrast to what was observed for the G1 phase producer cells. In addition, although the relative mean rate of accumulation of light chain was negative for G2+M phase nonproducer cells, the magnitude of this relative mean rate was less than half that observed for the producer cells in this cell cycle phase. This suggests that the mechanisms that regulate the transport of fully assembled antibody molecules through the secretion pathway differ from those which regulate the secretion of free light chains. The results reported here indicate that there is a distinct pattern for the cell cycle dynamics of antibody synthesis and secretion in hybridomas. These results are consistent with a model for the dynamics of secretion which suggests that the rate of accumulation of secreted proteins will be greatest for newborn cells due to an interruption of the secretion pathway during mitosis.  相似文献   

8.
The induction of DNA synthesis in Datura innoxia Mill. cell cultures was determined by flow cytometry. A large fraction of the total population of cells traversed the cell cycle in synchrony when exposed to fresh medium. One hour after transfer to fresh medium, 37% of the cells were found in the process of DNA synthesis. After 24 hours of culture, 66% of the cells had accumulated in G2 phase, and underwent cell division simultaneously. Only 10% of the cells remained in G0 or G1. Transfer of cells into a medium, 80% (v/v) of which was conditioned by a sister culture for 2 days, was adequate to inhibit this simultaneous traverse of the cell cycle. A large proportion of dividing cells could be arrested at the G0 + G1/S boundary by exposure to 10 millimolar hydroxyurea (HU) for 12 to 24 hours. Inhibition of DNA synthesis by HU was reversible, and when resuspended into fresh culture medium synchronized cells resumed the cell cycle. Consequently, a large fraction of the cell population could be obtained in the G2 phase. However, reversal of G1 arrested cells was not complete and a fraction of cells did not initiate DNA synthesis. Seventy-four percent of the cells simultaneously reached 4C DNA content whereas the frequency of cells which remained in G0 + G1 phase was approximately 17%. Incorporation of radioactive precursors into DNA and proteins identified a population of nondividing cells which represents the fraction of cells in G0. The frequency of cells entering G0 was 11% at each generation. Our results indicate that almost 100% of the population of dividing cells synchronously traversed the cell cycle following suspension in fresh medium.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract. Objectives: Trabectedin (ET‐743, Yondelis®) is a natural marine product, with antitumour activity, currently in phase II/III clinical trials. Previous studies have shown that cells hypersensitive to ultraviolet (UV)‐rays because of nucleotide excision repair (NER) deficiency, were resistant to trabectedin. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether this resistance was associated with different drug‐induced cell cycle perturbations. Materials and Methods: An isogenic NER‐proficient cellular system (CHO‐AA8) and a NER‐deficient one (CHO‐UV‐96), lacking functional ERCC‐1, were studied. Flow cytometric assays showed progressive accumulation of cells in G2 + M phase in NER‐proficient but not in NER‐deficient cells. Applying a computer simulation method, we realized that the dynamics of the cell cycle perturbations in all phases were complex. Results: Cells exposed to trabectedin during G1 and G2 + M first experienced a G1 block, while those exposed in S phase were delayed in S and G2 + M phases but eventually divided. In the presence of functional NER, exit from the G1 block was faster; then, cells progressed slowly through S phase and were subsequently blocked in G2 + M phase. This G2 + M processing of trabectedin‐induced damage in NER‐proficient cells was unable to restore cell cycling, suggesting a difficulty in repairing the damage. Conclusions: This might be due either to important damage left unrepaired by previous G1 repair, or that NER activity itself caused DNA damage, or both. We speculate that in UV‐96 cells repair mechanisms other than NER are activated both in G1 and G2 + M phases.  相似文献   

10.
Runx2 regulates osteogenic differentiation and bone formation, but also suppresses pre‐osteoblast proliferation by affecting cell cycle progression in the G1 phase. The growth suppressive potential of Runx2 is normally inactivated in part by protein destabilization, which permits cell cycle progression beyond the G1/S phase transition, and Runx2 is again up‐regulated after mitosis. Runx2 expression also correlates with metastasis and poor chemotherapy response in osteosarcoma. Here we show that six human osteosarcoma cell lines (SaOS, MG63, U2OS, HOS, G292, and 143B) have different growth rates, which is consistent with differences in the lengths of the cell cycle. Runx2 protein levels are cell cycle‐regulated with respect to the G1/S phase transition in U2OS, HOS, G292, and 143B cells. In contrast, Runx2 protein levels are constitutively expressed during the cell cycle in SaOS and MG63 cells. Forced expression of Runx2 suppresses growth in all cell lines indicating that accumulation of Runx2 in excess of its pre‐established levels in a given cell type triggers one or more anti‐proliferative pathways in osteosarcoma cells. Thus, regulatory mechanisms controlling Runx2 expression in osteosarcoma cells must balance Runx2 protein levels to promote its putative oncogenic functions, while avoiding suppression of bone tumor growth. J. Cell. Physiol. 228: 714–723, 2013. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
Double-strand DNA breaks detected in different phases of the cell cycle induce molecularly distinct checkpoints downstream of the ATM kinase. p53 is known to induce arrest of cells in G1 and occasionally G2 phase but not S phase following ionizing radiation, a time at which the MRN complex and cdc25-dependent mechanisms induce arrest. Our understanding of how cell cycle phase modulates pathway choice and the reasons certain pathways might be favored at different times is limited. In this report, we examined how cell cycle phase affects the activation of the p53 checkpoint and its ability to induce accumulation of the cdk2 inhibitor p21. Using flow cytometric tools and centrifugal elutriation, we found that the p53 response to ionizing radiation is largely intact in all phases of the cell cycle; however, the accumulation of p21 protein is limited to the G1 and G2 phase of the cell cycle because of the activity of a proteasome-dependent p21 turnover pathway in S-phase cells. We found that the turnover of p21 was independent of the SCFskp2 E3 ligase but could be inhibited, at least in part, by reducing hdm2, although this depended on the cell type studied. Our results suggest that there are several redundant pathways active in S-phase cells that can prevent the accumulation of p21.  相似文献   

12.
Ornithine decarboxylase, an important enzyme in growth regulation, is increased in CHO cells in G1 phase of the cell cycle and decreases as the cells progress into S phase. S-adenosyl-L-methionine decarboxylase activity, which is dependent on either the presence of putrescine or spermidine for the synthesis of spermidine and spermine respectively, shows a maximal increase in late G1/early S phase which corresponds very closely with the cell cycle phase specific accumulation of spermidine and spermine during S phase. Total culture evaluation of spermidine and spermine, which included extracellular as well as intracellular concentrations, indicated that extracellular accumulations of these polyamines occurred only in G1 and that entry into S phase was concomitant with intracellular accumulation patterns. Hyperthermia (43°C for 1 hour) in mid-G1 phase of the cell cycle resulted in rapid decreases in the activities of ornithine decarboxylase and S-adenosyl-L-methionine decarboxylase. In these cells, DNA replication was also not detectable until nine hours after mitosis, a time at which there had been recovery of ornithine decarboxylase and S-adenosyl-L-methionine decarboxylase activities. Previous data have further indicated a requirement for polyamine reaccumulation before control DNA replication rates are resumed. We therefore suggest that polyamine biosynthesis and intracellular accumulation are both temporal and quantitative prerequisites for transition through S phase.  相似文献   

13.
Multifunctional trans-cinnamaldehyde (CA) and its analogs display anti-cancer properties, with 2-benzoyloxycinnamaldehyde (BCA) and 5-fluoro-2-hydroxycinnamaldehyde (FHCA) being identified as the ortho-substituted analogs that possess potent anti-tumor activities. In this study, BCA, FHCA and a novel analog 5-fluoro-2-benzoyloxycinnamaldehyde (FBCA), were demonstrated to decrease growth and colony formation of human colon-derived HCT 116 and mammary-derived MCF-7 carcinoma cells under non-adhesive conditions. The 2-benzoyloxy and 5-fluoro substituents rendered FBCA more potent than BCA and equipotent to FHCA. The cellular events by which these cinnamaldehydes caused G2/M phase arrest and halted proliferation of HCT 116 cells were thereby investigated. Lack of significant accumulation of mitosis marker phospho-histone H3 in cinnamaldehyde-treated cells indicated that the analogs arrested cells in G2 phase. G2 arrest was brought about partly by cinnamaldehyde-mediated depletion of cell cycle proteins involved in regulating G2 to M transition and spindle assembly, namely cdk1, cdc25C, mad2, cdc20 and survivin. Cyclin B1 levels were found to be increased, which in the absence of active cdk1, would fail to drive cells into M phase. Concentrations of cinnamaldehydes that brought about dysregulation of levels of cell cycle proteins also caused tubulin aggregation, as evident from immunodetection of dose-dependent tubulin accumulation in the insoluble cell lysate fractions. In a cell-free system, reduced biotin-conjugated iodoacetamide (BIAM) labeling of tubulin protein pretreated with cinnamaldehydes was indicative of drug interaction with the sulfhydryl groups in tubulin. In conclusion, cinnamaldehydes treatment at proapoptotic concentrations caused tubulin aggregation and dysegulation of cell cycle regulatory proteins cdk1 and cdc25C that contributed at least in part to arresting cells at G2 phase, resulting in apoptotic cell death characterized by emergence of cleaved forms of caspase 3 and poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP). Results presented in this study have thus provided further insights into the intricate network of cellular events by which cinnamaldehydes induce tumor cell death.  相似文献   

14.
The influence of cisplatin, an anticancer agent, on DNA synthesis and cell cycle progression of a cisplatin-resistant cell line was investigated. Cell cycle analysis using flow cytometry showed that cytotoxic concentrations of cisplatin caused a transient inhibition of parental HeLa cells at S phase, followed by accumulation at G2 phase. In contrast, the resistant cells progressed through the cell cycle without being affected by the same treatment. However, cell cycle distributions were the same in the resistant and the parental cells at IC50, the drug concentration inhibiting cell growth by 50%. Studies using a [3H]thymidine incorporation technique also demonstrated a transient inhibition of DNA synthesis in HeLa cells by cisplatin; such inhibition was greatly reduced in the resistant cells. These data argue for the hypothesis that the inhibition of DNA synthesis is important in determining cisplatin-induced cytotoxicity. In addition, the accumulation of cells at G0/G1 by serum starvation was not effective in the resistant cells compared to the parental cells, suggesting that the control of cell cycle exiting is also altered in the resistant cells. Taken together, these results support the notion that alterations in cell cycle control, in particular G2 arrest, are important in determining the sensitivity or resistance of mammalian cells to cisplatin and may have a role in clinical protocols.  相似文献   

15.
Cytotoxic T lymphocytes secrete a pore-forming cytolysin, perforin, that damages membranes of target cells. They also ligate Fas receptors on target cells and provoke apoptotic death. A20 (B lymphoma) and P815 (mastocytoma) cell lines were examined for their susceptibility to perforin-mediated lysis and to Fas-induced apoptosis after blockade of the cell cycle at the G1/S interface. Cells were arrested at the G1/S interface by inhibition of DNA synthesis with thymidine or aphidicolin. Subsequently, the treated cells were incubated either with CTL cytotoxic granules or the Fas-specific monoclonal antibody Jo-2. We show that arrest of the cell cycle at the G1/S interface markedly reduced the susceptibility of target cells to perforin-mediated lysis. In contrast, growth arrest with thymidine or aphidicolin increased susceptibility of A20 and P815 cells to Fas-mediated apoptosis. Susceptibility to lysis by intact CTLs was not affected significantly by blockade of target cells with aphidicolin or thymidine. When cells surviving exposure to perforin-containing granules were isolated on Ficoll density gradients and cell-cycle profiles were examined by flow cytometry, the ratio of G1 to G2cells increased among the survivors exposed to granules in contrast to controls incubated with buffer alone. The data suggest that cells in G1 phase of the cell cycle are less susceptible to the perforin pathway than cells in G2and S phases but are more susceptible to the Fas pathway. J. Cell. Biochem. 69:425–435, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of sodium butyrate on cell proliferation was studied in eight human urothelial cell lines differing in transformation grade (TGr): Hu 1752 (mortal, TGr I); HCV29 (immortal and tumorigenic, TGr II); HCV29T, T24, T24A, T24B, Hu 961A and Hu 1703He (tumorigenic, TGr III). In all cell lines, except Hu 1752, addition of 4 mm sodium butyrate at 18 h after replating resulted in a significantly decreased population of adherent cells after a further 24–48 h. This might partially be explained by detachment of cells, probably mainly S phase cells, from the substrate in the lines HCV 29, HCV29T, Hu 961A and Hu 1703He. Flow cytometric DNA analysis of the adherent cell population showed that all TGr II and III urothelial cell lines were DNA aneuploid, and that butyrate perturbed the cell cycle distribution in these cell lines, mainly by a decrease of the S phase fraction. Flow cytometric bromodeoxyuridine (BrdUrd)/DNA analysis of continuously BrdUrd labelled cultures, using a ‘washless’ BrdUrd/DNA staining technique, showed that butyrate inhibited the G0/1-S phase transition, indicated by a delayed depletion of BrdUrd negative G0/1 cells in the cell lines HCV29, HCV29T, T24B, Hu 961A and Hu 1703He. BrdUrd/DNA analysis further showed that butyrate inhibited the G2M-G0/1 phase transition, indicated by a pronounced accumulation of BrdUrd positive G2M cells in the cell lines HCV29T, T24B, Hu 961A and Hu 1703He. Microscopy of HCV29T and Hu 961A cells indicated that this block did not occur in mitosis. The parental cell line T 24 and the cell line T 24 A did not show an accumulation of BrdUrd negative G0/1 cells or BrdUrd positive G2M cells like that occurring in the derived cell line T 24B.  相似文献   

17.
We investigated 1,2-dibromo-3-chloropropane (DBCP)-induced DNA damage, cell cycle alterations and cell death in two cell lines, the human leukemia HL-60 and the pig kidney LLCPK1, both of which are derived from potential target sites for DBCP-induced toxicity. DBCP (30–300 µmol/L) caused a concentration-dependent increase in the levels of DNA single-strand breaks in both cell lines as well as in cultured human renal proximal tubular cells. After extended DBCP exposure in LLCPK1 cells (100 µmol/L, 30 h), the level of DNA breaks returned almost to control values. Incubation for 48 h showed a clear reduction of growth with DBCP concentrations as low as 10 µmol/L. Flow cytometric analysis showed that DBCP (1–10 µmol/L) exposure for 24 h caused an accumulation of LLCPK1 cells in the G2/M-phase. In HL-60 cells the accumulation in G2/M-phase was less marked, and at higher concentrations the cells accumulated in S-phase. Flow cytometric studies of HL-60 and LLCPK1 cells exposed to 100–500 µmol/L DBCP showed increased number of apoptotic cells/bodies with a lower DNA content than that of the G1 cells. Microscopic studies revealed that there were increased numbers of cells with nuclear condensation and fragmentation, indicating that apoptosis was the dominant mode of death in these cell lines, following exposure to DBCP. The characteristic ladder pattern of apoptotic cells was observed when DNA from DBCP-treated HL-60 cells and LLCPK1 cells was electrophoresed in agarose. The finding that DBCP can cause an accumulation of cells in G2/M-phase and induce apoptosis in vitro may be of importance for the development of DBCP-induced toxicity in vivo.  相似文献   

18.
Macroautophagy/autophagy protects against cellular stress. Renal sublethal injury-triggered tubular epithelial cell cycle arrest at G2/M is associated with interstitial fibrosis. However, the role of autophagy in renal fibrosis is elusive. Here, we hypothesized that autophagy activity in tubular epithelial cells is pivotal for inhibition of cell cycle G2/M arrest and subsequent fibrogenic response. In both renal epithelial cells stimulated by angiotensin II (AGT II) and the murine kidney after unilateral ureteral obstruction (UUO), we observed that occurrence of autophagy preceded increased production of COL1 (collagen, type I). Pharmacological enhancement of autophagy by rapamycin suppressed COL1 accumulation and renal fibrosis. In contrast, genetic ablation of autophagy by proximal tubular epithelial cell-specific deletion of Atg5, with reduction of the LC3-II protein level and degradation of SQSTM1/p62, showed marked cell cycle arrest at the G2/M phase, robust COL1 deposition, and severe interstitial fibrosis in a UUO model, as compared with wild-type mice. In vitro, AGT II exposure triggered autophagy preferentially in the G1/S phase, and increased COL1 expression in the G2/M phase in renal epithelial cells. Stimulation of Atg5-deficient primary proximal tubular cells with AGT II also resulted in elevated G2/M arrest and COL1 production. Pharmacological or genetic inhibition of autophagy increased AGT II-mediated G2/M arrest. Enhanced expression of ATG5, but not the autophagy-deficient ATG5 mutant K130R, rescued the G2/M arrest, suggesting the regulation of cell cycle progression by ATG5 is autophagy dependent. In conclusion, Atg5-mediated autophagy in proximal epithelial cells is a critical host-defense mechanism that prevents renal fibrosis by blocking G2/M arrest.  相似文献   

19.
Centrifugal elutriation was used to separate 9L rat brain tumour cells into fractions enriched in the G1, S, or G2/M phases of the cell cycle. Cells enriched in early G1, phase were recultured, grown in synchrony, and harvested periodically for analysis of their DNA distribution and polyamine content. Mathematical analysis of the DNA distributions indicated that excellent synchrony was obtained with low dissersion throughout the cell cycle. Polyamine accumulation began at the time of seeding, and intracellular levels of putrescine, spermidine, and spermine increased continuously during the cell cycle. In cells in the G2/M phase of the cell cycle, putrescine and spermidine levels were twice as high as in cells in the G1, phase. DNA distribution and polyamine levels were also analysed in cells taken directly from the various elutriation fractions enriched in G1, S, or G2/M. Because we did not obtain pure S or G2/M populations by elutriation or by harvesting synchronized cells, a mathematical procedure—which assumed that the measured polyamine levels for any population were linearly related to the fraction of cells in the G1, S, and G2/M phases times the polyamine levels in these phases and that polyamine levels did not vary within these phases—was used to estimate ‘true’ phase-specific polyamine levels (levels to be expected if perfect synchrony were achieved). Estimated ‘true’ phase-specific polyamine levels calculated from the data obtained from cells either sorted by elutriation or obtained from synchronously growing cultures were very similar.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Cyclin proteins and cyclin-dependent kinases play a key role in the regulation of cell division. We have therefore studied the relationship of the level of four mitotic cyclin proteins and the Cdc2a kinase protein to cell division in maize root tissue with respect to cessation of division as cells leave the primary meristem region, resumption of division in formation of lateral-root primordia, and induced division following wounding. All four mitotic cyclins and Cdc2a were most abundant in dividing cells. The only examined cell cycle protein which was restricted to dividing tissue was cyclin ZmCycB1;2 (previously ZmIb) and may thus be a limiting factor for cell division. All other cyclin proteins, i.e., ZmCycB1;1 (previously ZmIa), ZmCycA1;1 (previously ZmII), and ZmCycB2;1 (previously ZmIII), and the Cdc2a kinase declined shortly after cells had ceased division. The distance from the root tip at which cells ceased division was tissue-specific and reflected the distance at which decrease of cell cycle proteins was detected. Whereas cyclin ZmCycB1;2 rapidly declined to a hardly detectable level in either nucleus or cytoplasm, in the nuclei of nondividing cells there was persistence of Cdc2a and of cyclins ZmCycB1;1, ZmCycCA1;1, and ZmCycB2;1, indicating that there are plant cyclins which are tightly linked to cell division and others that persist, especially in the nuclei, in nondividing cells. The transition from division to differentiation may thus partly be triggered and enforced by the decrease of the cell cycle proteins and especially the decline of cyclins in the cytoplasm. In the resumption of cell division, both in lateral-root formation and in wound response, high nuclear and low cytoplasmic accumulation of cyclin ZmCycB2;1 was the first visible sign of cell dedifferentiation, implying a role for cyclin ZmCycB2;1 in the G0–G1 phase transition. Next, cytoplasmic accumulation of cyclin ZmCycA1;1, followed by a rearrangement of cortical microtubules, was observed and since both the cyclins ZmCycA1;1 and ZmCycB2;1 were found at places of high tubulin concentration, they may function in the microtubule rearrangement for cell division. When the nuclei of dedifferentiating cells had visibly enlarged, all cyclins and Cdc2a accumulated there, possibly contributing to DNA replication and preparation for mitosis. Later, presumably during G2 phase, cytoplasmic accumulation was observed for Cdc2a at low levels, as observed in G2 phase cells of the primary meristem, and for cyclins ZmCycB1;1 and ZmCycB1;2 accumulation was observed above the levels found in undisturbed meristems, suggesting special contributions to late dedifferentiation processes in both wound-induced and lateral meristems.Abbreviations CDK cyclin-dependent kinase - LRP lateral-root primordium - Mt microtubule - FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - TRITC tetramethylrhodamine isothiocyanate Dedicated to Professor Walter Gustav Url on the occasion of his 70th birthday  相似文献   

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