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1.
Following growth stimulation of rat embryo fibroblast (REF) cells previously arrested in G1 by serum deprivation, there occurs a large increase in the synthesis of the polyamines putrescine, spermidine and spermine. Methylglyoxal bis(guanylhydrazone) (MGBG), a potent inhibitor of S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase can block the accumulation of both spermidine and spermine over a period of several days. Under such conditions REF cells treated with MGBG will approximately double in number and then become growth-arrested again predominantly in the G1 phase of the cell cycle. REF cells therefore appear to contain sufficient spermidine and spermine to progress through one cell cycle before the intracellular levels of these polyamines is reduced sufficiently to arrest growth in the absence of continued polyamine synthesis. Limitation of intracellular polyamine levels is therefore not the mechanism by which deprivation of serum growth factors arrests cell growth. While continued growth is nevertheless dependent on polyamine synthesis, this cell type is capable of limited proliferation in its absence. Addition of spermidine or spermine to MGBG-arrested REF cells results in a rapid resumption of proliferation demonstrating that either polyamine can fulfill the role played by these polyamines in the growth process. Low levels of spermidine and spermine therefore arrest this cell type at a resriction point in G1 at which it is decided whether the intracellular level of these polyamines is sufficiently high to enable a cell to enter into and complete a new cell cycle. This polyamine-sensitive restriction point is considered to be analogous to the restriction point(s) in G1 at which serum and nutrient limitation act.  相似文献   

2.
The polyamines are essential for cancer cell proliferation during tumorigenesis. Targeted inhibition of ornithine decarboxylase (ODC), i.e. a key enzyme of polyamine biosynthesis, by α-difluoromethylornithine (DFMO) has shown anti-neoplastic activity in various experimental models. This activity has mainly been attributed to the anti-proliferative effect of DFMO in cancer cells. Here, we provide evidence that unperturbed ODC activity is a requirement for proper microvessel sprouting ex vivo as well as the migration of primary human endothelial cells. DFMO-mediated ODC inhibition was reversed by extracellular polyamine supplementation, showing that anti-angiogenic effects of DFMO were specifically related to polyamine levels. ODC inhibition was associated with an abnormal morphology of the actin cytoskeleton during cell spreading and migration. Moreover, our data suggest that de-regulated actin cytoskeleton dynamics in DFMO treated endothelial cells may be related to constitutive activation of the small GTPase CDC42, i.e. a well-known regulator of cell motility and actin cytoskeleton remodeling. These insights into the potential role of polyamines in angiogenesis should stimulate further studies testing the combined anti-tumor effect of polyamine inhibition and established anti-angiogenic therapies in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
Growth stimulation of either fetal rat liver cells or rat embryo fibroblasts in culture results in considerable increases in intracellular polyamine levels as cells proceed through the cell cycle. Treatment of such cell cultures with appropriate levels of two inhibitors of polyamine synthesis, namely α-hydrazino ornithine and methylglyoxal bis(guanylhydrazone), can essentially completely block these increases in cellular polyamine content. Under such conditions, where the elevation in intracellular polyamine content is prevented, cell cultures are nevertheless able to initiate DNA synthesis and subsequently synthesize DNA at rates comparable to untreated control cultures that have been growth-stimulated. These two cell types therefore contain sufficient polyamines when in a resting state (G1) to enable them to enter from G1 into S phase and traverse S phase at normal rates in the absence of further polyamine synthesis. The recruitment of cells into the first cell cycle, through serum stimulation of growth, therefore appears not to be mediated or regulated by the increases in intracellular levels of polyamines that occurs under these conditions. Conversely, the arrest of growth of these cell types resulting from serum deprivation is not mediated by a limitation of intracellular polyamine content.  相似文献   

4.
5.
This paper reviews the relationships between the effects of glucocorticoids on rat pancreatic acinar AR42J cell polyamine levels and cellular growth and differentiation. Glucocorticoids inhibit the growth of AR42J cells. Glucocorticoids either stimulate or inhibit the formation of polyamines in a variety of cell types. Cells require polyamines for normal growth. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that polyamines mediate the effects of glucocorticoids on AR42J cells. First, to confirm that AR42J cells required polyamines for growth we examined the effects of inhibiting ornithine decarboxylase (ODC). ODC is the most important and generally rate-limiting enzyme in the synthesis of the polyamines. As expected, the ODC inhibitor difluoromethylornithine (DFMO) inhibited AR42J cell DNA synthesis, and the addition of exogenous putrescine reversed this effect. The levels of growth inhibition by glucocorticoids and DFMO treatment were similar. Second, we examined the effects of glucocorticoids on ODC. Surprisingly, glucocorticoids increased levels of AR42J cell ODC mRNA, ODC activity, and putrescine. Glucocorticoids increased these parameters over a similar time-course as they decreased DNA synthesis. Analog specificity studies indicated that a glucocorticoid receptor mediated both the growth inhibitory and ODC stimulatory effects. Dose-response studies indicated, however, that growth inhibition was more sensitive to dexamethasone (DEX) than were ODC levels. Therefore, polyamines do not account for the effects of glucocorticoids on AR42J cell growth. In these cells, glucocorticoids have opposite and independent effects on ODC and growth.  相似文献   

6.
Plateau-phase V79 Chinese hamster cells induced to reenter the proliferative cell cycle from G1/G0 by dilution in fresh medium showed an early increase in ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) followed by increases in some polyamines and in DNA synthesis. In contrast, cells accumulated in G1/G0 by growth in extreme hypoxia for 60 h and induced to recycle by reoxygenation did not respond with early increases in either ODC or polyamines.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Transgenic mice expressing proteins altering polyamine levels in a tissue-specific manner have considerable promise for evaluation of the roles of polyamines in normal, hypertrophic and neoplastic growth. This short review summarizes the available transgenic models. Mice with large increases in ornithine decarboxylase (ODC), S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase or antizyme, a protein regulating polyamine synthesis by reducing polyamine transport and ODC in the heart, have been produced using constructs in which the protein is expressed from the alpha -myosin heavy-chain promoter. These mice are useful in studies of the role of polyamines in hypertrophic growth. Expression from keratin promoters has been used to target increased synthesis of ODC, spermidine/spermine-N(1)-acetyltransferase (SSAT) and antizyme in the skin. Such expression of ODC leads to an increased sensitivity to chemical and UV carcinogenesis. Expression of antizyme inhibits carcinogenesis in skin and forestomach. Expression of SSAT increases the incidence of skin papillomas and their progression to carcinomas in response to a two-stage carcinogenesis protocol. These results establish the importance of polyamines in carcinogenesis and neoplastic growth and these transgenic mice will be valuable experimental tools to evaluate the importance of polyamines in mediating responses to oncogenes and studies of cancer chemoprevention.  相似文献   

9.
Several studies suggest that polyamines may stabilize chromatin and play a role in its structural alterations. In line with this idea, we found here by chromatin precipitation and micrococcal nuclease (MNase) digestion analyses, that spermidine and spermine stabilize or condense the nucleosomal organization of chromatin in vitro. We then investigated the possible physiological role of polyamines in the nucleosomal organization of chromatin during the cell cycle in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells deficient in ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) activity. An extended polyamine deprivation (for 4 days) was found to arrest 70% of the odc cells in S phase. MNase digestion analyses revealed that these cells have a highly loosened and destabilized nucleosomal organization. However, no marked difference in the chromatin structure was detected between the control and polyamine-depleted cells following the synchronization of the cells at the S-phase. We also show in synchronized cells that polyamine deprivation retards the traverse of the cells through the S phase already in the first cell cycle. Depletion of polyamines had no significant effect on the nucleosomal organization of chromatin in G1–early S. The polyamine-deprived cells were also capable of condensing the nucleosomal organization of chromatin in the S/G2 phase of the cell cycle. These data indicate that polyamines do not regulate the chromatin condensation state during the cell cycle, although they might have some stabilizing effect on the chromatin structure. Polyamines may, however, play an important role in the control of S-phase progression. J. Cell Biochem. 68:200–212, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

10.
The polyamines are essential for cellular growth and differentiation. Ornithine decarboxylase (ODC), which catalyses the first step in the biosynthesis of the polyamines, has a very fast turnover and is subject to a strong feedback control by the polyamines. In the present study, we show that overexpression of a metabolically stable ODC in CHO cells induced a massive cell death unless the cells were grown in the presence of the ODC inhibitor alpha-difluoromethylornithine (DFMO). Cells overexpressing wild-type (unstable) ODC, on the other hand, were not dependent on the presence of DFMO for their growth. The induction of cell death was correlated with a dramatic increase in cellular putrescine levels. Analysis using flow cytometry revealed perturbed cell cycle kinetics, with a large accumulation of cells with sub-G1 amounts of DNA, which is a typical sign of apoptosis. Another strong indication of apoptosis was the finding that one of the key enzymes in the apoptotic process, caspase-3, was induced when DFMO was omitted from the growth medium. Furthermore, inhibition of the caspase activity significantly reduced the recruitment of cells to the sub-G1 fraction. In conclusion, deregulation of polyamine homeostasis may negatively affect cell proliferation and eventually lead to cell death by apoptosis if putrescine levels become too high.  相似文献   

11.
We analyzed changes in polyamine contents and the activities of biosynthetic enzymes during each phase of the cell cycle for a synchronized population of BY-2 cells. Based on our analysis of H3-thymidine incorporation flow cytometry, and the mitotic index, the M and G2 phases seemed to occur at 8 h and from 2.5 to 8 h, respectively, after the release of aphidicolin. The respective activities of arginine decarboxylase (ADC), Ornithine decarboxylase (ODC), and S-adenosyl methionine decarboxylase (SAMDC) at the beginning (7.4, 11.2, and 5.5 nmol mg-1 protein h-1) were increased to 22.6, 22.1, and 15.1 nmol mg-1 protein h-1. However, those increases do not coincide with the general change in polyamines reported from animal cells. In addition, the bi-phasic activation of polyamine biosynthetic enzymes, such as those found in the general animal model, was observed with ADC and ODC but not with SAMDC. These results suggest that the general animal model for explaining polyamine changes and SAMDC activation in the cell cycle cannot be applied to BY-2 cells. Further, our flow-cytometric analysis of cell populations may be a useful tool for evaluating the effects of polyamines on cell cycle progression in BY-2 cells.  相似文献   

12.
It was reported recently that overexpression of human ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) cDNA in transgenic rice plants resulted in increased steady-state concentration of polyamines, i.e., enough biosynthetic control is invested at this step to enable adjustment of polyamine levels. To investigate critically whether constitutive overexpression of ODC is sufficient to control steady-state polyamine levels, we expressed an ODC cDNA from Datura stramonium in transgenic tobacco plants. Transgenic progeny of self-fertilised primary transformants exhibited increases in ODC activity of 25-fold in leaves and 5-fold in flower buds. However, the increase in putrescine levels was only 1.5- to 2.1-fold in leaves and 1.1- to 1.3-fold in flower buds. Emphatically, no changes to spermidine or spermine steady-state levels or to soluble or insoluble hydroxycinnamic acid-conjugated polyamines were observed. Ornithine feeding to cell suspension cultures derived from the transgenic plants indicated that putrescine accumulation was limited in part by ornithine availability. These results demonstrate that a large increase in the capacity of the tobacco plants to decarboxylate ornithine does not result in a comparable increase in the level of free or conjugated polyamines. Plant polyamine homeostatic mechanisms efficiently accommodate increased ODC activity, suggesting that polyamine biosynthetic control is invested at multiple interdependent steps.  相似文献   

13.
A trimodal change in the cellular levels of three major polyamines: spermidine, N,N′-bis(3-aminopropyl)-1, 3-propanediamine (BAP) and 3,3′-diaminodipropylamine (DAD) was observed during two successive cell cycles in synchronously dividing cultures of the algal flagellate, Euglena gracilis Z photoautotrophically grown in a 24-h light-dark cycle. The intracellular levels of these three polyamines decreased as cells divided and then were enhanced as cells exited the G1 phase and proceeded through the S and G2 phases. Spermidine, BAP and DAD concentrations increased about 2.5-fold during the S phase. Putrescine and 1,3-diaminopropane levels did not vary significantly. One peak of polyamine synthesis occurred in the G1 phase prior to DNA synthesis, followed by a second more important peak during the S-G2 phases before cell division; both peaks were observed during the light period. A third minor peak was observed during the pre-G1 (or G0) phase in the dark period after mitosis had been completed. In contrast, when the cells attained the “stationary” phase of growth, there was no significant increase in the content of polyamines during the light period although spermidine and BAP increased slightly twice during the dark period (putrescine and 1,3-diaminopropane and DAD levels remained almost constant). To ascertain whether the synthesis of polyamines was merely a direct effect of the photoperiod, parallel experiments with synchronous cultures were carried out in the presence and absence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethyl urea, a photosynthetic inhibitor. Although a slight decrease in the concentration of polyamines was observed, the three maxima of polyamines synthesis were observed as in normal cultures. These results clearly suggest that polyamine biosynthesis is closely related to DNA replication and cell division in Euglena cells.  相似文献   

14.
Cell growth and differentiation require the presence of optimal concentrations of polyamines. Ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) catalyses the first and rate-controlling step in polyamine synthesis. In studies using cultures of Ehrlich ascites-tumour cells, we have shown that the expression of ODC is subject to feedback regulation by the polyamines. A decrease in the cellular polyamine concentration results in a compensatory increase in the synthesis of ODC, whereas an increase in polyamine concentration results in suppression of ODC synthesis. These changes in ODC synthesis were attributed to changes in the efficiency of ODC mRNA translation, because the steady-state amount of ODC mRNA remained constant. We now show that the number of ribosomes associated with ODC mRNA is low, and that the increase in ODC mRNA translation takes place without a shift in the distribution of ODC mRNA towards larger polysomes. This finding indicates that the polyamines regulate the efficiency of ODC mRNA translation by co-ordinately affecting the rates of initiation and elongation. By analysing ODC mRNA translation in vitro, using a rabbit reticulocyte lysate, polyadenylated RNA from a cell line with an amplified ODC gene, and a monospecific anti-ODC antibody, we also show that spermidine, but not putrescine, exerts a direct regulatory effect on ODC synthesis.  相似文献   

15.
Diamino butanone (DAB), a competitive inhibitor of ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) a key enzyme in polyamine biosynthesis, inhibited the yeast to hyphae transition in Mucor rouxii, induced by transfer from anaerobiosis to aerobiosis, but not the opposite phenomenon. Addition of DAB to anaerobic yeast cells brought about a decrease in ODC and polyamine levels. In these conditions, the aerobic shift produced only a weak increase in ODC activity and no change in polyamine levels. DAB also blocked phorogenesis in M. rouxii and in Phycomyces blakesleeanus. At the effective concentrations DAB did not affect cell growth of either fungus. It is suggested that low, constant levels of ODC and polyamines are necessary for cell growth, and that high transient levels are required during the differentiative steps. DAB, at the concentrations used, affects this last process, but does not interfere with the maintenance level of polyamines.Abbreviations ODC ornithine decarboxylase - DAB 1,4-diamino butanone  相似文献   

16.
Polyamines and the Cell Cycle of Catharanthus roseus Cells in Culture   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Maki H  Ando S  Kodama H  Komamine A 《Plant physiology》1991,96(4):1008-1013
Investigation was made on the effect of partial depletion of polyamines (PAs), induced by treatment with inhibitors of the biosynthesis of PAs, on the distribution of cells at each phase of the cell cycle in Catharanthus roseus (L.) G. Don. cells in suspension cultures, using flow cytometry. More cells treated with inhibitors of arginine decarboxylase (ADC) and ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) were accumulated in the G1 phase than those in the control, while the treatment with an inhibitor of spermidine (SPD) synthase showed no effect on the distribution of cells. The endogenous levels of the PAs, putrescine (PUT), SPD, and spermine (SPM), were determined during the cell cycle in synchronous cultures of C. roseus. Two peaks of endogenous level of PAs, in particular, of PUT and SPD, were observed during the cell cycle. Levels of PAs increased markedly prior to synthesis of DNA in the S phase and prior to cytokinesis. Activities of ADC and ODC were also assayed during the cell cycle. Activities of ADC was much higher than that of ODC throughout the cell cycle, but both activities of ODC and ADC changed in concert with changes in levels of PAs. Therefore, it is suggested that these enzymes may regulate PA levels during the cell cycle. These results indicate that inhibitors of PUT biosynthesis caused the suppression of cell proliferation by prevention of the progression of the cell cycle, probably from the G1 to the S phase, and PUT may play more important roles in the progression of the cell cycle than other PAs.  相似文献   

17.
Diamino butanone (DAB), a competitive inhibitor of ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) a key enzyme in polyamine biosynthesis, inhibited the yeast to hyphae transition in Mucor rouxii, induced by transfer from anaerobiosis to aerobiosis, but not the opposite phenomenon. Addition of DAB to anaerobic yeast cells brought about a decrease in ODC and polyamine levels. In these conditions, the aerobic shift produced only a weak increase in ODC activity and no change in polyamine levels. DAB also blocked phorogenesis in M. rouxii and in Phycomyces blakesleeanus. At the effective concentrations DAB did not affect cell growth of either fungus. It is suggested that low, constant levels of ODC and polyamines are necessary for cell growth, and that high transient levels are required during the differentiative steps. DAB, at the concentrations used, affects this last process, but does not interfere with the maintenance level of polyamines.  相似文献   

18.
Ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) is the rate-limiting enzyme of polyamine synthesis. Polyamines and ODC are connected to cell proliferation and transformation. Resting cells display a low ODC activity while normal, proliferating cells display fluctuations in ODC activity that coincide with changes in the actin cytoskeleton during the cell cycle. Cancerous cells display constitutively elevated ODC activity. Overexpression of ODC in NIH 3T3 fibroblasts induces a transformed phenotype. The cytoskeletal rearrangements during cytokinesis and cell transformation are intimately coupled to the ODC activity but the molecular mechanisms have remained elusive.In this study we investigated how ODC and polyamines influence the organization of the cytoskeleton. Given that the small G-proteins of the rho family are key modulators of the actin cytoskeleton, we investigated the molecular interactions of rhoA with ODC and polyamines. Our results show that transglutaminase-catalyzed polyamination of rhoA regulates its activity. The polyamination status of rhoA crucially influences the progress of the cell cycle as well as the rate of transformation of rat fibroblasts infected with temperature-sensitive v-src. We also show that ODC influences the intracellular distribution of rhoA. These findings provide novel insights into the mechanisms by which ODC and polyamines regulate the dynamics of the cytoskeleton during cell proliferation and transformation.  相似文献   

19.
In previous studies, polyamine depletion by DFMO (α-difluoromethylornithine)-treatment reduced H2O2-induced apoptotic cell death by reduction of ferric ion uptake. In the present study, we analyzed the reduction of radiation-induced cell death by polyamine depletion. Exposure of HT29 cells to radiation induced severe cell death, but when cells were pretreated with DFMO, a specific inhibitor of polyamine biosynthesis, radiation-induced cell death was reduced to 50–60% of control. Cell cycle analysis showed that, in these cells, the time to reach the G2/M phase arrest was delayed for 20–24 h compared to the control cells, at which stage the fate of cells exposed to ionizing radiation is determined. DFMO-treated cells also showed a low level of thioredoxin, which is a high-level determinant of the cellular fate. To investigate the relationship between the G2/M phase arrest and the reduction of thioredoxin caused by polyamine depletion, we also analyzed thioredoxin-antisensed (asTRX) HT29 cells as for DFMO-treated cells. In asTRX-transfected cells, the γ-irradiation-induced G2/M phase arrest was also significantly delayed and radiation-induced cell death was profoundly reduced, as in the DFMO-treated cells. Both sets of cells showed a decrease of cyclin D1 and an increment of HSP25, which are involved in radiation-induced cell cycle progress. Overall, these results suggest that polyamines are essential for normal cell death of HT29 cells triggered by γ-radiation and that this is partially mediated by the regulation of thioredoxin expression.  相似文献   

20.
Ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) is feedback regulated by polyamines. ODC antizyme mediates this process by forming a complex with ODC and enhancing its degradation. It has been reported that polyamines induce ODC antizyme and inhibit ODC activity. Since exogenous polyamines can be converted to each other after they are taken up into cells, we used an inhibitor of S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase, diethylglyoxal bis(guanylhydrazone) (DEGBG), to block the synthesis of spermidine and spermine from putrescine and investigated the specific roles of individual polyamines in the regulation of ODC in intestinal epithelial crypt (IEC-6) cells. We found that putrescine, spermidine, and spermine inhibited ODC activity stimulated by serum to 85, 46, and 0% of control, respectively, in the presence of DEGBG. ODC activity increased in DEGBG-treated cells, despite high intracellular putrescine levels. Although exogenous spermidine and spermine reduced ODC activity of DEGBG-treated cells close to control levels, spermine was more effective than spermidine. Exogenous putrescine was much less effective in inducing antizyme than spermidine or spermine. High putrescine levels in DEGBG-treated cells did not induce ODC antizyme when intracellular spermidine and spermine levels were low. The decay of ODC activity and reduction of ODC protein levels were not accompanied by induction of antizyme in the presence of DEGBG. Our results indicate that spermine is the most, and putrescine the least, effective polyamine in regulating ODC activity, and upregulation of antizyme is not required for the degradation of ODC protein.  相似文献   

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