Title
The role of intracellular oxidation in death induction (apoptosis an necrosis) in human promonocytic cells treated with stress inducers (cadmium, heat, X-rays)
Date Issued
01 January 2001
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Galán A.
García-Bermejo L.
Troyano A.
Vilaboa N.E.
De Blas E.
Aller P.
Consejo Superior De Investigaciones Científicas
Publisher(s)
Elsevier GmbH
Abstract
Treatment of U-937 human promonocytic cells with the stress inducers cadmium chloride (2 h at 200 μM), heat (2 h at 42.5°C) or X-rays (20 Gy), followed by recovery, caused death by apoptosis and stimulated caspase-3 activity. In addition, all stress agents caused intracellular oxidation, as measured by peroxide and/or anion superoxide accumulation. However, while pre-incubation with antioxidants (N-acetyl-L-cysteine or butylated hydroxyanisole) inhibited the induction of apoptosis by cadmium and X-rays, it did not affect the induction by heat-shock. Pre-incubation for 24 h with the GSH-depleting agent L-buthionine-[S,R]-sulfoximine (BSO) switched the mode of death from apoptosis to necrosis in cadmium-treated cells. By contrast, BSO only caused minor modificions in the rate of apoptosis without affecting the mode of death in heat- and X-rays-treated cells. BSO potentiated peroxide accumulation in cells treated with both cadmium and X-rays. However, while the accumulation of peroxides was stable in the case of cadmium, it was transient in the case of X-rays. Moreover, the administration of antioxidants during the recovery period sufficed to prevent necrosis and restore apoptosis in BSO plus cadmium-treated cells. Cadmium and X-rays caused a decrease in intracellular ATP levels, but the decrease was similar in both apoptotic and necrotic cells. Taken together, these results demonstrate that (i) stress inducers cause intracellular oxidation, but oxidation is not a general requirement for apoptosis; and (ii) the duration of the oxidant state seems to be critical in determining the mode of death.
Start page
312
End page
320
Volume
80
Issue
4
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Ciencia forense
Biología celular, Microbiología
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-0035037331
PubMed ID
Source
European Journal of Cell Biology
ISSN of the container
01719335
Sponsor(s)
Acknowledgements. This work was supported by Grant PB97 – 0144 from the Dirección General de EnsenÄ anza Superior e Investigación Científica (Spain) and Grant 08.1/0027/1997 from the Comunidad Autónoma de Madrid (Spain). A. Galán and A. Troyano are recipients of fellowships from the Ministerio de Educación y Cultura, Spain.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus